Divorce grief might be the most misunderstood, most minimized, and most complicated grief there is — and the thing almost no one warns you about is that it doesn't follow the rules. In this solo episode of Divorce Happens, Olivia Howell takes on the quiet, disorienting experience of grieving a divorce: why it refuses to behave the way we expect grief to behave, and why that can make you feel like something is wrong with you when absolutely nothing is. We're all handed some version of the stages of grief — denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance — and we absorb the idea that grief has a shape, a direction, a tidy end. Divorce grief doesn't move like that. And as Olivia gently insists, the sooner we stop expecting it to, the more compassion we can offer ourselves when it doesn't. What makes divorce grief so different starts with a wrenching truth: you are grieving someone who is still alive. There's no funeral. There's no casserole on the doorstep. There's no moment where the world stops to acknowledge that you've lost something enormous — in fact, the person you're grieving might be texting you about the electric bill or showing up at Saturday's soccer game. That's disenfranchised grief: real, profound, life-altering loss that goes socially unrecognized, and it has its own particular ache. Layered on top is that you're not grieving one thing but many at once — the person, the relationship, the future you imagined, your identity as a spouse, your home, your finances, your in-laws, your friendships. Each is its own loss, and they arrive in waves: sometimes one at a time, sometimes all at once, sometimes out of nowhere. Which leads to the part that ambushes people most — divorce grief is not linear. You can feel fine for two weeks, then hear a song in a grocery store and be undone. You can reach what feels like acceptance and get hit with rage six months later. You can grieve the end of a marriage you desperately wanted out of, miss someone you know was wrong for you, and feel relieved and devastated in the same hour. All of it is normal. All of it is grief doing what grief actually does. The mindset shift at the heart of this episode is freeing: instead of something you move through in stages, picture grief as something that moves through you — in waves, on its own timeline, without asking permission. Your job isn't to manage it perfectly or to reach acceptance on schedule; it's to let it move, to not dam it up so tightly it has nowhere to go. Practically, that looks like letting yourself cry in the car, refusing to perform okayness for people who can't hold your grief, and finding at least one person or one space where you don't have to edit yourself. It also means being patient on the days you thought you were over something and discover you're not — that's not regression or failure, just the layered nature of this particular loss. If you're walking through divorce recovery, healing after divorce, or simply trying to make sense of why you still hurt, hold on to this: you don't have to be over it yet. You don't have to be anywhere other than exactly where you are. Grief is not a problem to be solved — it's love with nowhere to go, and it deserves your tenderness. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/