
BEREAVEMENT Counselling in Edinburgh
Grief can affect every part of life, often in ways that feel unexpected or difficult to explain. While grief is commonly associated with bereavement, people can also experience loss through relationship endings, changes in health, identity, work, family roles or life circumstances. Grief can feel emotional, physical and deeply personal, and there is no single “right” way to experience it.
Therapy can provide space to process loss at your own pace without pressure to move on or cope in a particular way. Many people find it helpful to have somewhere safe to explore emotions, memories, anger, numbness, guilt or the wider impact that loss may be having on daily life and relationships.
What it can feel like..
Grief can affect people very differently. Some people experience intense sadness, longing or emotional overwhelm, while others feel numb, disconnected or unable to fully process what has happened. Emotions can shift unpredictably, and many people find themselves moving between sadness, anger, guilt, confusion, relief or exhaustion.
Loss can also affect concentration, sleep, energy levels and physical wellbeing. Everyday tasks may begin to feel difficult or meaningless, particularly during periods of shock, adjustment or emotional exhaustion. Some people withdraw socially or struggle with feeling disconnected from others, especially if they feel misunderstood in how they are grieving.
Grief is not always linked to death alone. People may grieve the ending of relationships, changes in identity, fertility difficulties, health conditions, childhood experiences, missed opportunities or life paths that no longer feel possible. These losses can still carry deep emotional impact even when they are less visible to other people.
For some people, grief can bring up earlier experiences, unresolved emotions or fears around safety, abandonment or loneliness. Others may feel pressure to “cope better” or return to normal quickly, even while struggling privately underneath.
Grief often changes over time rather than simply disappearing. Many people find that therapy helps them make space for loss while gradually finding ways to reconnect with themselves, relationships and life around them.
How therapy can help..
Therapy can offer a supportive space to process grief without judgement or expectations around how you “should” feel. Grief affects people differently, and many people find it helpful to have somewhere they can speak openly about emotions that may feel difficult to express elsewhere.
For some people, therapy involves processing sadness, anger, guilt or regret connected to loss. Others may want support with adjustment, identity changes, loneliness or the emotional impact grief is having on relationships, work or daily functioning.
Therapy can also help people understand that grief does not always move in a straight line. Emotional responses may shift over time, and difficult feelings can re-emerge unexpectedly around anniversaries, reminders or life changes.
Different therapeutic approaches may support grief in different ways. Some people benefit from practical emotional support and coping strategies, while others find it meaningful to explore deeper emotional patterns, attachment or unresolved experiences connected to the loss.
Rather than “moving on”, therapy often helps people gradually learn how to carry loss differently while rebuilding connection, stability and emotional support around themselves.
Different approaches to therapy..
Different therapists approach grief and loss in different ways, and no single process suits everyone. Grief therapy is often less about finding quick solutions and more about creating space for emotions, adjustment and support at a manageable pace.
CBT (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy)
CBT may help people recognise thought patterns linked to guilt, anxiety, hopelessness or avoidance following loss. Some people find CBT helpful for managing overwhelm, sleep difficulties or the practical emotional impact grief may be having day to day.
Psychodynamic Therapy
Psychodynamic therapy explores how loss may connect to earlier experiences, attachment patterns and deeper emotional responses. This approach can help people better understand the wider emotional meaning and impact of grief over time.
Person-Centred Counselling
Person-centred therapy focuses on creating a compassionate and non-judgemental space where people can process emotions openly. For many people experiencing grief, feeling genuinely heard and emotionally supported can be deeply important.
Integrative Therapy
Integrative therapists draw from different approaches depending on the person and their experiences. Grief work often benefits from flexibility, allowing therapy to support both emotional processing and practical coping where needed.
Somatic Therapy
Somatic approaches recognise that grief can also affect the body and nervous system. Grief may involve heaviness, exhaustion, tension, numbness or physical overwhelm. Somatic therapy can help people develop grounding, nervous system awareness and a greater sense of emotional safety gradually over time.

KIRSTY HARRINGTON FERNÁNDEZ
testing blah
testing blah
testing blab blah blah

Dr. CARA WHITTAKER
testing testing
testing testing
testing testing testing testing

RACHEL SMITH
blah boah
blah blah
blah blah blah
THERAPIST PERSPECTIVES ON ANXIETY
Finding the right therapist..
Finding the right therapist after loss can feel especially important because grief is often deeply personal and emotionally vulnerable. Different therapists work in different ways, and it’s okay to take time finding someone whose approach feels supportive and comfortable for you.
Some people prefer a gentle and open space to talk about emotions and memories, while others want more structured support around coping, adjustment or daily functioning. You do not need to have clear answers or know exactly what you need in order to begin therapy.
Many people worry about becoming overwhelmed emotionally or feel unsure whether their grief is “valid enough” for therapy. A supportive therapist will understand that grief affects everyone differently and will not expect you to process loss in a particular way or timeframe.
At Armchair Therapies, you can explore therapist profiles, approaches and specialisms to find someone who feels like a good fit for you and your experiences.
THERAPISTS WHO SPECIALISE IN THIS FIELD
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Will therapy try to make me “less autistic”?
A neurodivergent-informed therapist should not approach therapy as trying to remove autistic traits or force neurotypical behaviour. Therapy is more about understanding yourself, supporting wellbeing and developing ways of coping that feel sustainable and authentic to you.
Can therapy help with relationships and communication?
Yes. Therapy can support people exploring communication styles, boundaries, emotional expression, social anxiety and relationship patterns in ways that feel supportive rather than judgemental.
What is masking?
Masking refers to consciously or unconsciously adapting behaviour in order to fit social expectations or avoid judgement. While masking can help people cope socially, it can also become emotionally exhausting over time.
Can therapy help with autistic burnout?
Yes. Therapy can help people better understand burnout, overwhelm, shutdown and the emotional impact of long-term stress, masking or sensory overload while exploring more sustainable ways of coping and recovering.
Do I need an autism diagnosis to seek therapy?
No. Many people seek therapy because they relate to autistic experiences or are exploring whether autism may help explain certain patterns in their life, even without a formal diagnosis.



