Grief After a Death
Practical and emotional guidance for the days and weeks after losing someone you love.
This guide is for anyone who has recently lost someone. Take it at your own pace. You do not have to read it all at once, and you do not have to do anything perfectly. There is no right way to grieve.
The first days after a death
The days immediately after a death can feel surreal. You may feel strangely calm, or completely undone, or both at different moments. This is not a sign that something is wrong with you — it is your mind and body responding to something enormous.
In the first days, very little is required of you emotionally. There will be practical things to organise — a funeral, notifications, paperwork — but most of these can wait. Try to focus only on what is immediately in front of you.
You are allowed to do only the next necessary thing. Everything else can wait.
If you need help with the practical steps after a death — registering the death, funeral planning, notifying WINZ and IRD — read our full guide: What to Do After Someone Dies.
What grief actually feels like
Grief is not a single emotion. It is a whole landscape — and it looks different for every person, and for every loss.
You might feel some of these things, or all of them, or none that you expected:
None of these feelings means you are grieving wrong. There is no correct emotional response to loss. You are carrying something very heavy — be as patient with yourself as you would be with someone you love.
The ‘stages of grief’ — a note
You may have heard of the five stages of grief — denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance. These were originally described as a model for understanding terminal illness, not as a prescription for how bereavement should unfold. Grief does not move in neat stages. It loops back, skips forward, and arrives without warning. You do not need to tick any boxes.
Looking after yourself
When you are grieving, basic self-care can feel both impossible and irrelevant. But your body needs support right now, even if your mind is elsewhere.
Your GP is a good first contact if grief is affecting your sleep, physical health or daily function. They can provide a medical certificate for time off work, refer you to funded counselling, and check in on your wellbeing.
The weeks and months ahead
After the funeral, many people find that support drops away. The flowers stop arriving, friends return to their own lives, and the world appears to expect you to resume normal functioning. But grief is often heaviest in the weeks and months after a death — not in the immediate aftermath.
The quiet after the funeral is not the end of grief. It is often where it begins to deepen.
Hard dates
The first birthday, anniversary, Christmas, or Father’s Day without someone can hit hard. It can help to plan ahead — decide whether you want company or solitude, create a small ritual to mark the day, or simply give yourself permission to feel whatever comes. There is no right way to get through these dates.
Grief does not follow a timeline
There is no point at which you are expected to be “over it.” Grief changes shape over time, but it does not disappear. Many people find that grief becomes less constant but more intense in waves — arriving sharply at unexpected moments for months or years after a death. This is normal, not a sign that something has gone wrong.
Secondary losses
Alongside the primary loss of the person, grief often brings a cluster of secondary losses — the loss of the future you expected, of your role as a carer or partner, of shared routines, of financial security, of your sense of identity. These are real losses too, and they deserve to be acknowledged.
When to seek extra support
Grief is not a mental illness, and most people move through it without needing professional intervention. But there are times when extra support is important:
Your GP is the best first point of contact. They can refer you to funded grief counselling, or you can contact The Grief Centre or Skylight directly.
Support and resources in New Zealand
Get support:
The Grief Centre — 0800 331 333 → Skylight — 0800 299 100 → Victim Support (sudden & traumatic death) — 0800 842 846 → Healthify NZ — grief & loss information → Practical guide: What to Do After Someone Dies → Full Grief Support NZ resources page →If you are in immediate danger, call 111.
Free 24/7 counselling: call or text 1737.
Lifeline: 0800 543 354 — Samaritans: 0800 726 666
