Category Archives: Meditation

Understanding the Stages of Grief: A Gentle Guide Through Loss

It’s the end of October and the beginning of November with Halloween and Dia de los Muertos behind us. I love the idea of having a time of the year dedicated to thinking of the after life and of honoring our ancestors. However, with all the reminders of death during this particular holiday season, grief can be stirred up. There may be those who have been triggered and wondering what is going on with their swings in emotional states. I thought I would take this time to review the stages of grief in order to offer some support and understanding if you find yourself in the grief process.

The Five Stages of Grief

The idea of the “five stages of grief” was introduced by psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross in her groundbreaking 1969 book On Death and Dying. She initially developed the model while studying people facing terminal illness, but it has since been applied more broadly to all types of loss (Kübler-Ross, 1969; Kübler-Ross & Kessler, 2005).

1. Denial

Denial serves as an emotional buffer. It helps the mind process loss at a pace it can handle. People might say things like, “This can’t be happening,” or find themselves moving through daily routines on autopilot. Denial gives us space to absorb shock before deeper feelings surface.

2. Anger

As reality sets in, anger often arises — directed at oneself, others, or even at life itself. Anger is sometimes easier to express than pain, and it provides a temporary sense of control. Recognizing anger as a natural part of healing prevents guilt from compounding the emotion (Worden, 2009).

3. Bargaining

In this stage, the mind searches for meaning or tries to negotiate away pain: “If only I had done this differently…” or “Maybe if I change something, things will return to normal.” Bargaining often reflects our struggle to regain a sense of agency in an uncontrollable situation.

4. Depression

When the full weight of the loss sinks in, sadness, fatigue, or withdrawal may appear. This is not necessarily clinical depression but rather a reflection of the profound emptiness that loss brings. Allowing these feelings without judgment helps us integrate grief rather than resist it (Stroebe & Schut, 2010).

5. Acceptance

Acceptance does not mean being “okay” with the loss. It means acknowledging reality and finding a new way to live alongside it. This stage is about integration — learning to carry love and memory forward in a new way (Neimeyer, 2019).

Beyond the Five Stages

In my most recent yoga therapist training at Purusha Yoga School  (San Francisco, CA), I took a class “Aging Gracefully”.  The Primary teacher and founder of this school, Joy Ravelli,  had compiled an excellent class on death and dying.  From her research and practice she shared a different “version” of the grief stages that I feel have changed my perspective on this process, particularly with the addition of the stage of “wisdom”. Here they are:

1.Denial/ Shock 

 Denial and Shock help us survive and cope.  This stage helps us pace our grief.

Shock and denial are defense mechanisms.

2. Exploring Emotional

(Otherwise known as “Anger” and “Bargaining”)

The stage of searching and yearning leads to feeling in the body.  Those feelings may be anger, sadness, panic, hurt, loneliness, despair, depression.  Each of these feelings has a story.  Each of these feelings has an energy.

3. Conscious Rest

(Also known as “depression” – Instead of just depression, this stage includes the following:)

  • Depression. This may be a period of isolation and loneliness during which you process and reflect on the loss.
  • The upward turn. At this point, the stages of grief like anger and pain have died down, and you’re left in a more calm and relaxed state.
  • Reconstruction and working through. You can begin to put pieces of your life back together and carry forward.

4. Acceptance

Acceptance and hope. This is a very gradual acceptance of the new way of life and a feeling of possibility in the future.

5. Wisdom

Grief becomes wisdom and empathy develops for others in that through the transformational experience of grief we come to a place where we can recognize these states in others.

Moving Forward

Grief changes us, but it can also deepen our capacity for empathy, gratitude, and meaning. There is no timetable or “correct” way to grieve — only your way. The stages are also not linear so you could experience acceptance one day and the next day be back in anger.  Support from compassionate others, therapy, and time can help integrate loss into a renewed sense of wholeness.

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References

  • Kübler-Ross, E. (1969). On Death and Dying. Macmillan.
  • Kübler-Ross, E., & Kessler, D. (2005). On Grief and Grieving: Finding the Meaning of Grief Through the Five Stages of Loss. Scribner.
  • Stroebe, M., & Schut, H. (1999). The Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement: Rationale and Description. Death Studies, 23(3), 197-224.
  • Stroebe, M., & Schut, H. (2010). The Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement: A Decade On. Omega, 61(4), 273-289.
  • Worden, J. W. (2009). Grief Counseling and Grief Therapy: A Handbook for the Mental Health Practitioner (4th ed.). Springer.
  • Neimeyer, R. A. (2019). Meaning Reconstruction in the Wake of Loss. Death Studies, 43(1), 1-11.

10 Minute Evening Breath Practice

(Ideal for beginners or those building their practice.)

How to Practice:

  1. Settle In (1 min)

Sit back in your chair or lie down on a mat.

Let your eyes close or soften your gaze.

  1. Body Scan with Breath Awareness (2 min)

Inhale gently through the nose, noticing the rise of the chest or belly.

Exhale slowly, feeling your body relax.

Mentally scan from head to toe, softening any tension you notice.

  1. Box Breathing (4-4-4-4) (4 min)

Inhale through the nose for a count of 4.

Hold for 4.

Exhale through the nose for 4.

Hold for 4.

Repeat for 6–8 rounds.

  • Cooling Breath (Shitali or Sitali) (2 min)

Curl your tongue into a tube (or keep lips in an “O” shape if that’s easier).

Inhale through the mouth, feeling a cool sensation.

Exhale through the nose.

Repeat for 8–10 breaths.

  1. Closing Gratitude (1 min)

Rest hands in your lap, palms facing upward.

Think of one thing you’re grateful for today.

End with a long, slow exhale.

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10 Minute Morning Breathing Practice

(Good for beginners or those who are building a practice.)

Purpose: Stimulates energy, clears morning fog, and prepares you for the day.

How to Practice

  1. Find Your Seat (1 min)

Sit comfortably with your spine tall, either on the edge of your bed, on a cushion or in a chair.

Rest your hands on your thighs, palms facing down.

  1. Gentle Centering (2 min)

Close your eyes.

Take 6 deep breaths in through the nose and sigh out through the mouth.

  1. 3-Part Breath (Dirga Pranayama) (3 min)

Inhale first into the belly, then the ribs, then the chest (like filling a glass of water from bottom to top).

Exhale in reverse: chest, ribs, belly.

Keep the breath smooth and steady.

Practice 4 breath-cycles/rounds

  1. Alternate Nostril Breath (Nadi Shodhana) (2 min)

Using your right hand, close your right nostril with your thumb. Inhale through the left.

Close the left nostril with your ring finger, exhale through the right.

Inhale right, close, exhale left. That’s one round.

Continue slowly, 6–8 rounds.

  1. Closing (2 min)

Place both hands over the heart.

Take 6 deep breaths and set a gentle intention for your day.

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How Meditation Affects the Brain

zen rocks pic

I’m facilitating a new class, Monday Yoga /Wellness Class, that starts Monday June 20 at 7pm (space is limited so contact me if you are interested.)

This class is aimed at developing an individual wellness/meditation practice.  We will do yoga postures to let go of any tension and to open the body up for relaxation for the first part of the class.  The rest of the class is focused on progressive relaxation, breathing, and a variety of meditative techniques.   (Props, chairs, and mats are available).

I have many people who come to see me that want a meditation or a yoga practice at home.  I created this class to help with that.  We will be exploring not only how and why to prepare before meditation but also will practice different meditative techniques for students to “try out”.

We will also discuss how meditation affects the brain.

The research is suggesting that a regular meditation practice (15-30 minutes a day) can increase gray matter in the brain, build new connections, clean out plaque that causes dementia, reduce the size of the amygdala which causes the fight or flight response, and increase our resiliency to cortisol (stress hormone).

There are many reasons to work on a meditation practice, especially if you are trying to be healthy and/or reduce stress and its effects.  Of course this should be easy enough, right? Why is sitting 15-30 minutes every day so difficult to maintain (and for some even start)?  One is that sitting in general can be painful and uncomfortable. Two, establishing any new habit or change is difficult. Consistency, consistency, consistency.  The mantra for true success ……Oh if developing consistency itself was easy.

Even if you practice now and then, it is better than none at all.  I would encourage everyone to try for 5 minutes and go from there.  You may surprise yourself that you can actually develop your own practice if you keep coming back to it when you think of it, no matter how long the in-between.

One also does not have to just “sit”.  I’m also hoping this new class will educate students on what is meditation by research standards vs other definitions.

Here are some links that discuss the effects on the brain from meditation and the research behind it:

Psychology today

Mindful.org

Washington Post