Learn about the most recognized types of grief, including complicated, anticipatory, and disenfranchised grief, and what sets them apart.
May 22, 2026
Clinically reviewed by Caitlin Pugh, LCSW
6 min read
Clinically reviewed by Caitlin Pugh, LCSW
Grief is one of the most human experiences there is — and yet it rarely looks the same from person to person (or the way we expect it to).
Maybe you lost someone close to you and feel numb instead of devastated. Maybe you’re mourning the end of a relationship, a job you loved, or a version of your life you thought you’d have. Maybe your grief came in waves months after the loss, long after everyone else seemed to move on. Or maybe you feel guilty for not feeling sadder.
Whatever you’re carrying, it’s completely valid — even if it doesn’t line up with the cultural script of what grief “should” look like.
That’s because there are many different types of grief, and none of them follow a neat, predictable path. Understanding the different forms of grief won’t make your pain disappear, but it can help you make sense of what you’re experiencing and recognize when it might be time to reach out for support.
Grief is the natural response to loss. It’s emotional, physical, and behavioral, meaning it can show up in all sorts of ways — such as sadness, anger, or numbness, but also as fatigue, changes in appetite, difficulty concentrating, or withdrawing from the people around you.
While grief is most commonly associated with the death of someone close, it isn’t limited to that. People grieve the end of relationships, the loss of a job, a serious health diagnosis, a miscarriage, or even a major life transition that requires you to part ways with your old self or your comfortable routines. Put simply, any significant loss can trigger grief.
There’s no single “normal” way to grieve. How grief shows up (and how long it lasts) varies widely from person to person, and even from loss to loss. Your experience is legitimate and worth acknowledging, no matter what it looks like or how it compares with your expectations.
There isn’t a single mold here, and examples of grief can range from the expected to the surprising. Below are some of the most recognized types of grief, and a look at what sets each apart.
Just because “normal” is in the name doesn’t mean this is the right or only way to grieve. It’s simply a clinical term for the natural grieving process many people experience after a significant loss. Normal grief typically includes a range of emotions — like sadness, anger, guilt, or even relief. While it can be intense, it gradually softens over time as you adjust to life after the loss.
Anticipatory grief happens before a loss actually occurs. For example, it’s common when someone close to you is diagnosed with a terminal illness. But it can also show up before other upcoming losses, such as a divorce you can see coming, a child leaving home, or a job you know is coming to an end. It’s your mind and body’s way of beginning to process a loss, even if it hasn’t fully arrived yet.
Complicated grief — now often referred to clinically as prolonged grief disorder — is what happens when grief doesn't follow its natural course. Rather than gradually easing over time, it stays intense and consuming, making it difficult to function in daily life.
Research from the American Psychiatric Association estimates that between 4% and 15% of bereaved adults experience prolonged grief disorder. It's generally recognized in four forms:
When grief feels unrelenting or is getting in the way of daily functioning, it’s often worth speaking with a mental health professional.
This type of grief isn’t openly acknowledged or socially recognized. It often affects people who are mourning losses that others don’t fully validate — such as the death of a pet, a miscarriage, the end of a friendship, or the loss of someone with whom you had a complicated relationship. Even when the pain is just as real as any other loss, that lack of external recognition can make disenfranchised grief feel isolating.
Collective grief is shared grief that happens across a community, group, or society in response to a common loss. It might follow a tragedy, a natural disaster, a public figure’s death, or a widespread event like a pandemic. Collective grief can create a sense of solidarity, but it can also be disorienting when your sense of personal loss gets swallowed up by the scale of the shared one.
This grief occurs when a loss happens suddenly, violently, or under circumstances that are shocking or deeply distressing — such as an accident, a suicide, a homicide, or an unexpected death with no warning. The trauma of how the loss happened can complicate the grieving process, making it hard to move through it in a typical way. This type of grief frequently benefits from professional support.
Sometimes called grief overload, cumulative grief happens when multiple losses pile up before you’ve had a chance to fully process each one. This can happen when several people in your life die within a short period, but it can also build from a series of smaller losses over time. This type of grief can feel overwhelming and hard to untangle, largely because it’s hard to identify and understand which loss you’re grieving at any given moment.
This happens when the emotional response to a loss is postponed — sometimes for months or even years. This generally happens when someone needs to stay functional in the immediate aftermath of a loss to manage logistics, support others, or simply survive. The grief doesn’t disappear. It waits. When it does surface, it can feel sudden and confusing, especially if it’s triggered by something that seems unrelated to the original loss.
When someone is grieving but doesn’t recognize the connection between their symptoms and their loss, that’s masked grief. Instead of emotional distress, it tends to show up as physical complaints like chronic headaches, fatigue, or digestive issues or as behavioral changes that seem unrelated on the surface. Inhibited grief is a related pattern, where someone consciously or unconsciously suppresses their grief and shows few outward signs of mourning, sometimes because expressing emotion doesn’t feel safe or acceptable.
This refers to when someone shows no outward signs of grief following a significant loss. Distinguishing genuine resilience from suppression, guilt, or emotional blunting is difficult, as all appear as a lack of overt emotional expression. For some people, absent grief reflects a resilient response rather than avoidance. However, if grief seems completely absent and the loss was significant, it might be worth exploring with a mental health professional.
Regardless of the type of grief a person is dealing with, there’s no shortcut through it. However, there are several ways to support yourself while you process a loss. Here are a few strategies to help:
The most widely known framework is the five stages of grief, developed by psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. These stages aren’t meant to be a linear checklist — people move through them in different orders, revisit them, or skip some entirely. Put another way, the stages are a useful lens, but they're not a roadmap everyone follows the same way.
Grief is the emotional and physical response to a loss — the feelings themselves. Grieving is the active process of moving through those feelings over time. Grief is what you feel, but grieving is what you do with it.
Grief is your internal experience of loss — the emotions, thoughts, and physical responses that happen within you. Mourning is the outward expression of that grief, which can include cultural or religious rituals, funerals, wearing certain clothing, or simply talking about the person you lost. Both are part of how people process loss, and they can look different across individuals and cultures.
There isn’t a one-size-fits-all timeline. For most people, the intensity of grief softens over the course of months to a year, but it rarely disappears entirely. It tends to become more manageable over time rather than completely going away. Grief that remains severely disruptive to daily life beyond 12 months may indicate prolonged grief disorder, which is worth discussing with a mental health professional.
Grief can show up in many different ways, and finding the right support depends on what you’re experiencing. Whether you’re navigating a loss that others don’t fully understand, processing grief that keeps coming up, or simply struggling to move forward, you don’t have to figure it out on your own.
A licensed therapist who specializes in grief or bereavement can help you make sense of what you’re dealing with and find a path through it. With Headway, finding the right fit is as straightforward as possible. You can search for a provider by specialty, insurance, and availability, so you can get the support you need and deserve.
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.
© 2026 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
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