People talk about grief as if it moves in a straight line.
First devastation.
Then healing.
Then acceptance.
But real grief behaves nothing like that.
Real grief waits.
It hides itself inside ordinary afternoons and unsuspecting places. In grocery store aisles when someone laughs with the wrong voice. In hospital corridors carrying the same antiseptic smell from years ago. In songs you forgot existed until they suddenly split you open in traffic. Sometimes it waits quietly for years before stepping out from behind the face of a stranger who smiles exactly the way someone you loved once smiled.
Seven years after losing Emily and our son, I thought I understood the rules of surviving.
Not healing exactly.
Surviving.
There’s a difference.
Healing implies closure, some clean emotional ending where pain finally releases its grip. What I learned instead was adaptation. I learned how to carry grief without collapsing beneath it publicly. I learned which restaurants to avoid, which anniversaries to work through silently, which photographs I could look at without losing entire evenings afterward.
Eventually the ache stopped feeling temporary.
It became structural.
Like an old injury woven permanently into the body.
And after long enough, you stop imagining life without it.
Then one Saturday afternoon, everything shifted because I looked across a park and recognized my former mother-in-law sitting alone on a bench.
For a second I genuinely thought I was mistaken.
Time had aged both of us harshly since the funeral. Her.