Iโll go first. I survived cancer, and then learned that surviving comes with its own kind of grief nobody warns you about. The โyou should be gratefulโ grief. The โshouldnโt you be over this by nowโ grief. The body that doesnโt feel like yours anymore. Iโm losing my father slowly, right now, while writing this. And Iโm losing him with a backdrop of family who has spent my whole life trying to make sure he believed lies about me before he died. Thatโs a layered, complicated, ugly grief most people donโt have words for. And under all of it, Iโm grieving versions of myself that didnโt survive what I survived. The girl I was before. The trust I had before. The family I thought I had. If youโve ever been told your grief โdoesnโt countโ โ yours counts. All of it counts. If youโre grieving someone who hasnโt died yet, thatโs real grief, and itโs allowed. If youโre grieving a version of yourself, a relationship, a future, a parent whoโs still alive but never showed up, you belong here. Iโm not โhealed.โ Iโm not on the other side. Iโm still in it. I built this community FROM inside it, not from a safe distance after. Thatโs why I get it. And thatโs why this space exists. Your turn, only if you want to: What kind of loss are you carrying? One word, one name, one sentence โ whatever feels true. Youโre not alone here. ๐ โ Megan