Grief and Your Relationship: How to Support Each Other Through Loss

Woman grieves on porch swing, comforted by a supporting hand.

How to Help a Grieving Spouse: Concrete Actions of Support

The question “how to help a grieving spouse” often brings people to articles like this. Beyond emotional support, practical help is a powerful language of love when someone is grieving. Grief decimates executive function—the part of your brain responsible for planning, organizing, and making decisions. Taking these burdens off your partner’s plate can be a profound act of care.

Take Over Practical Tasks—Without Being Asked

The question “What can I do to help?” while well-intentioned, puts the burden on the grieving person to identify a need and delegate a task, which requires energy they don’t have. A more helpful approach is to gently take initiative.

Observe what needs doing and do it. Make a pot of coffee in the morning. Fill up their car with gas. Take the dog for a walk. Handle the laundry from start to finish. These small, consistent actions create a scaffold of support that holds them up when they feel they might collapse.

Instead of saying, “Let me know if you need anything from the store,” try, “I’m making a grocery list. I’m putting milk, bread, and your favorite yogurt on it. What else can I add?”

Be the Gatekeeper

After a loss, the griever is often inundated with phone calls, text messages, and visitors. While the support is appreciated, managing it can be exhausting. Offer to be the point person. You can create a system, like a caring friends website or a group text, to provide updates to concerned family and friends. You can screen calls and let your partner know who called so they can return the call when they feel up to it. Shielding them from this administrative and emotional labor is a huge gift.

Remember and Honor Key Dates

The world moves on, but for your partner, the calendar is now dotted with landmines: the deceased’s birthday, their anniversary, holidays, and the anniversary of the death. These dates can trigger fresh waves of grief, often called an “anniversary reaction.”

Mark these dates on your own calendar. Don’t be afraid to bring them up. Ignoring them often feels more painful, as if the person has been forgotten. A few days before, you might gently say, “I know Tuesday is your mom’s birthday. I’ve been thinking about her. How are you feeling about that day? Is there anything you’d like to do?”

Even a simple acknowledgment on the day itself—”I’m thinking of you and your dad today. I love you.”—can make your partner feel seen and supported in their ongoing grief.

Recognize and Respond to Attachment Cues

An attachment cue is a small, often nonverbal, signal for connection. It might be a deep sigh, a lingering look, or the way your partner reaches out to touch your arm as you walk by. In the fog of grief, these cues can be subtle. Your partner may not have the energy for a full conversation, but they might be desperate for a moment of connection.

When you notice a cue, respond with a small, gentle gesture. Meet their eyes and offer a soft smile. Put your hand over theirs. Stop what you’re doing for a moment and give them a hug. These micro-moments of connection reinforce your bond and remind them they are not alone, even when words fail.

One Response

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