Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Tracy

GS
Grief school

2 members • Free

Grief support, guidance and understanding. A safe place to explore how you’re feeling. A place where others actually do understand how you feel

Memberships

Free Skool Course

60.7k members • Free

Synthesizer

38.1k members • Free

Your First $5k Club w/ARLAN

22.3k members • Free

The SKOOL Directory

561 members • Free

Skoolers

189.8k members • Free

BuildUp Bootcamp

11.2k members • Free

4 contributions to Grief school
Available now
Following the death of my father I wrote how it felt navigating after the funeral. It’s available on Amazon I’ll pop the link in case your tempted (Florence was my nan) https://amzn.eu/d/00uxn6ed
0
0
Available now
Understanding loss
The Day Everything Changed It doesn’t matter how expected it was. It doesn’t matter how many days you told yourself to prepare. When someone you love dies, something inside you shifts. The world tilts. And nothing is ever quite the same again. People might say, “At least they’re not suffering,” or “They lived a good life,” or “You were lucky to have them.” Maybe all of that is true — but in the moment, it doesn’t matter. Because they’re gone. And you're still here. You might remember the exact moment. A phone call. A still hospital room. A message that felt surreal. Or maybe you don’t remember much at all — just a blur of movement and numbness and noise. Grief doesn’t always look how people expect. Some people sob. Some go silent. Some become painfully efficient. Some just sit and stare. This chapter isn’t here to tell you how you should have felt. It’s here to say: however it was for you — that’s okay. Maybe the day they died felt like a dream. Maybe it felt like falling. Maybe it felt like nothing at all. Maybe it hasn’t even hit you yet. Grief has no rules. Only waves. This chapter marks the beginning of your life after. The life that keeps going, even when you’re not sure how. “Sometimes, the bravest thing you can do is wake up and keep going.” — Unknown
1 like • 12h
You’re very welcome the thought behind this comes from losing my dad to liver cancer on his birthday in October 2023. It’s changed me, it’s a strange feeling, an internal battle between being sometimes still overwhelmed at him no longer being here, angry he has left us and the pain of seeing my mum navigate in a world where he was her constant for over 60 years. I hope it will help you x
0 likes • 10h
It does seem you were meant to be here. Hopefully some posts will support how you are experiencing watching your dad change and life becoming different 🤍
You just have to give it time.” (And other things people say when they don’t understand grief)
When I think about my dad, it still catches me off guard. Sometimes it just overwhelms me—tears will fall from absolutely nowhere, and I have to take a minute just to compose myself. I get angry that he’s not here. And honestly, I get so upset seeing my mum try to navigate life without him. Watching her is like watching someone torn between two worlds: not wanting to carry on without him, but not wanting to not be here. And yet, through all of that, she has been a beacon of light through this darkness. That takes a strength most people will never fully understand. If you’ve lost someone, you probably know exactly what I mean. People love to tell you that “time heals” or that you just need to “move on.” But the truth is, you don’t move on from losing a piece of yourself. You don’t get over it. You are changed by it, forever. When my dad died, my whole world shifted. Through that mess of trying to figure out how to breathe again, I ended up finding what I was meant to do. I became a funeral celebrant to help families say goodbye with the dignity their people deserve. I started making memorial jewellery so people could carry a physical piece of comfort with them. Working with death and bereavement every day—and living with my own—showed me that there is a huge gap in how we handle the “after.” Society expects us to go back to normal once the funeral is over. But that’s exactly when the real, quiet struggle starts. That’s why I built The Grief School. I wanted a place where we don’t have to pretend we’re okay. A place to figure out how to live in this new reality. Right now, we are just getting started, and the doors to the main community are wide open and completely free. It’s a safe, no-pressure space to just be real. No toxic positivity, no timelines. Just people who actually get it, figuring out life after loss together. (Later on, I’ll be launching an optional “Inner Circle” for those who want deeper, guided support and practical tools for the really heavy days. But right now, I just want to build a solid foundation of people who support each other.)
0
0
The physicality of grief
Grief isn’t just a heavy emotion; it’s a literal rewiring of your brain and a massive shock to your body. When we deeply love someone, they become physically hardwired into our brain’s attachment networks. We get so used to them being around that our mind constantly predicts their presence, looks for them even when they’re no longer there. When they pass away, it throws our brain into total chaos. While our logical memory knows they are gone, our deep attachment wiring still expects them to walk through the front door. That disconnect creates an agonizing, heartbreaking sense of yearning. Healing actually requires the grueling process of “learning” their permanent absence, forcing your brain to slowly build new neural connections over countless days of living without them. This rewiring doesn’t just mess with your head—it takes a brutal physical toll on your body. The brain can see the loss of a loved one as a massive threat to your survival, which can throw your body into a relentless “fight or flight” mode. This stress response is so intense that your risk of a heart attack shoots up to 21 times the normal rate within the first 24 hours of losing a loved one. In extreme cases, this flood of stress hormones can actually cause “broken heart syndrome” (Takotsubo cardiomyopathy), a sudden and very real weakening of your heart muscle. We could therefore say “ Grief is the ultimate price we pay for love.” It feels like losing a piece of yourself because, neurologically speaking, you actually are References [1] Scientific American. (2024). How the Brain Copes with Grief. [2] American Heart Association. (2021). How grief rewires the brain. [3] Harvard Health. (2012). Heart attack risk soars. [4] Cleveland Clinic. Broken Heart Syndrome.
0 likes • 11h
@Sharon Andrea I think we sometimes forget the actual impact of grief and loss and expect people to be able to “ just get on with it” we seem to have forgotten we are changed emotionally and physically, but we need to heal from those changes in our own way and in our own time
1-4 of 4
Tracy Coleman
1
2points to level up
@tracy-coleman-2857
Grief has a profound impact on us, we never truly fully heal, but we learn to move through life differently. Offering support through understanding

Active 1h ago
Joined Mar 18, 2026
United Kingdom