The “five stages of grief” are often used as a framework for understanding how people process significant loss, transition, or major life change. These stages are commonly described as denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Denial can involve shock or emotional numbness. Anger may appear as frustration, resentment, or pain. Bargaining often shows up through “what if” thinking, while depression can involve sadness, withdrawal, or emotional heaviness. Acceptance is not about forgetting or eliminating the loss, but about finding a way to move forward.
At the same time, grief is rarely linear, so people do not move through these emotions in a fixed sequence or within a predictable timeframe. I think grief is far more fluid and deeply personal than a checklist of stages. Individuals may revisit emotions multiple times, experience several at once, or process them in entirely different ways depending on context and experience. Understanding this is important because it allows us to approach both ourselves and others with greater patience, empathy, and compassion.
