How To Deal With Grief and Trauma

183 Preconceptions About Grief: The Beliefs You Bring Before Loss (Part 2 of 3)

Nathalie Himmelrich Season 18 Episode 183

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0:00 | 33:56

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Before a loss happens, most people already hold a set of beliefs about what grief will look like. These are not myths absorbed from the culture in general — they are something more personal: internalised convictions, absorbed through upbringing, family, religion, and lived experience, that then shape how a person enters and moves through grief.

These are preconceptions. In Part 2 of this three-part series, Nathalie examines the ten most common preconceptions about grief and makes a precise distinction between preconceptions, grief myths, and presumptions that is crucial for understanding why each causes harm differently.

What's covered in this episode

  • The definition of a preconception and how it differs from a grief myth and a presumption
  • Why preconceptions are harder to challenge than myths, because they feel personal, not cultural
  • How preconceptions relate to grief myths: myths are the cultural source; preconceptions are the individual's internalised version
  • The 10 most common preconceptions, each examined through: where it originates and what it aims to achieve, how it harms, a relatable example, and a reframe

The 10 preconceptions covered

  1. Grief follows predictable stages
  2. Grief has a timeline
  3. Not crying means not grieving
  4. You must achieve "closure"
  5. Grief is only about death
  6. Staying strong protects others
  7. Time heals all wounds
  8. Grief is a private matter
  9. Returning to normal functioning means you are healed
  10. Trauma and grief are separate experiences

The distinction explained in this episode 

A grief myth is a culturally shared false belief, something the culture transmits without adequate evidence. A preconception is personal: it is the individual's internalised version of that myth, often absorbed before they have any direct experience of loss.

Myths can be corrected with information. Preconceptions require something more: recognising that the belief exists, tracing where it came from, and examining whether it still holds in the face of actual experience.

A presumption (covered in Part 3) is different again: it is a real-time assumption made about someone else's grief, in the moment. Preconceptions are formed before. Presum

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