The "5 Stages of Grief" Are a Lie—Here's What Grief Actually Looks Like
Published by: Small Universe
Date: November 22, 2025
Reading time: 8 min (1,555 words)
You lost someone. Everyone told you: “First you’ll be in denial, then angry, then you’ll bargain, get depressed, and finally accept it.” But it’s been months and you’re still cycling through all of them. Some days you’re fine. Some days you’re destroyed. You skip stages. You repeat stages. You feel like you’re doing it wrong.
📖 What You'll Learn (8-minute read)
- Why the "5 stages" model is fundamentally misunderstood
- What each "stage" actually represents (and why they're not stages)
- What modern research says about how grief actually works
- Why believing in linear stages can make grief harder
- How to navigate your grief without a roadmap
You’ve heard of the 5 stages of grief: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance. They’re everywhere—in movies, books, therapy offices, well-meaning advice from friends.
Here’s what most people don’t know: Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, who created this model in 1969, never said grief follows these stages in order. She never said everyone experiences all of them. And she never said they’re stages at all.
She was describing common experiences she observed in dying patients—not a roadmap for grief. But somewhere along the way, her observations got turned into a checklist. And now millions of grieving people think they’re failing because their grief doesn’t follow the “rules.”
What Research Actually Says
Modern grief research is clear: Grief doesn’t follow a predictable sequence. PMC
Here’s what we know:
-
Not linear: You don’t go through stages in order
-
Not universal: You might experience all, some, or none of these experiences
-
Not time-limited: There’s no timeline for how long each “stage” lasts
-
Not one-way: You can cycle back through experiences multiple times
-
Not required: Your grief is valid even if it looks nothing like the stages
Grief isn’t a ladder you climb. It’s a wave you learn to ride.
What the “Stages” Actually Are
The experiences Kübler-Ross described are real—they’re just not stages. Think of them as common grief experiences that might show up at any time, in any order, for any duration.
1. Denial: "This Can't Be Real"
Denial isn't about refusing to believe the truth. It's your brain's way of protecting you from being overwhelmed all at once. It's shock. It's numbness. It's your mind saying "I can only process this much right now."What it looks like:
-
Feeling numb or disconnected
-
Going through the motions on autopilot
-
Moments where you forget they’re gone
-
Feeling like you’re watching your life from outside
This is normal. Denial isn’t weakness—it’s protection.
2. Anger: "This Isn't Fair"
Anger in grief isn't always loud. Sometimes it's irritability. Sometimes it's rage. Sometimes it's anger at the person who died for leaving you. Sometimes it's anger at yourself, at God, at the unfairness of it all.What it looks like:
-
Snapping at people who don’t deserve it
-
Rage at how unfair this is
-
Anger at the person who died
-
Resentment toward people who haven’t lost anyone
This is normal. Anger is grief with nowhere to go.
3. Bargaining: "What If I Had..."
Bargaining is your mind's attempt to regain control. It's the "what ifs" and "if onlys." It's guilt. It's regret. It's trying to rewrite the past.What it looks like:
-
“If only I had called that day…”
-
“What if I had noticed the signs…”
-
Replaying the past looking for what you could have changed
-
Making deals with God or fate
This is normal. Bargaining is grief trying to make sense of the senseless.
4. Depression: "I Can't Do This"
This isn't clinical depression (though grief can trigger that). This is the deep, heavy sadness of loss. It's when the shock wears off and the reality sets in. It's withdrawal. It's exhaustion. It's the weight of it all.What it looks like:
-
Overwhelming sadness
-
Not wanting to see anyone
-
Losing interest in everything
-
Feeling like you can’t go on
This is normal. Depression in grief is your soul processing the impossible.
5. Acceptance: "I'm Learning to Live With This"
Acceptance doesn't mean you're okay with the loss. It doesn't mean you've "moved on" or "gotten over it." It means you're learning to live with a reality you didn't choose.What it looks like:
-
Having good days without feeling guilty
-
Integrating the loss into your life story
-
Finding ways to honor them while moving forward
-
Accepting that this is your new normal
This is normal. Acceptance is grief making space for life again.
What Grief Actually Looks Like
Here’s the truth about grief that the stages don’t capture:
Grief Is Not Linear
You don't go: Denial → Anger → Bargaining → Depression → Acceptance → Done.You go: Denial → Anger → Acceptance → Depression → Anger again → Denial → Acceptance → Bargaining → Depression → Anger → Acceptance → repeat forever in random order.
Grief Comes in Waves
You'll be fine for days, then destroyed by a song. You'll feel acceptance, then wake up angry. You'll think you're doing better, then get hit by a wave that knocks you down. This isn't regression—this is grief.Grief Has No Timeline
There's no "should be over it by now." Some people feel acceptance quickly. Some people cycle through intense grief for years. Both are normal. Your timeline is your timeline.Grief Changes You
You don't "get back to normal." You become a new normal. The loss becomes part of your story. You learn to carry it. You don't get over it—you get through it.Why the Stages Myth Is Harmful
Believing grief follows stages can actually make grief harder:
-
You think you’re doing it wrong when your grief doesn’t match the stages
-
You rush yourself to “get to acceptance”
-
You judge yourself for “still being angry” or “going backwards”
-
You suppress emotions that don’t fit the “stage” you think you should be in
-
You feel broken when grief doesn’t follow the rules
The truth: There are no rules. There is no right way. There is only your way.
How to Navigate Grief Without a Roadmap
1. Let Go of the Stages
Stop trying to figure out what "stage" you're in. Stop waiting to "move to the next stage." Your grief doesn't need to follow a pattern to be valid.2. Feel What You Feel
Angry today? Feel it. Numb tomorrow? That's okay. Acceptance one day, denial the next? Normal. All of it is normal.3. Stop Judging Your Grief
There's no "should" in grief. You shouldn't be "over it" by now. You shouldn't be "further along." You shouldn't feel any particular way. You feel what you feel.4. Expect Waves
Grief comes in waves. Sometimes you're fine. Sometimes you're not. Sometimes a wave hits out of nowhere. This isn't failure—this is grief.5. Be Patient
Grief takes as long as it takes. There's no finish line. There's no "done." There's only learning to live with it.6. Seek Support
You don't have to do this alone. Talk to friends. Join a grief group. See a therapist. Let people help.7. Know When You Need Help
If grief is preventing you from functioning for months, if you're having thoughts of suicide, if you're using substances to cope—get professional help. That's not "normal grief"—that's grief that needs support.🌅 The Bottom Line
Grief doesn’t have stages. It has experiences. It has waves. It has moments.
Some days you’ll feel acceptance. Some days you’ll feel rage. Some days you’ll feel nothing. Some days you’ll feel everything.
All of it is normal. All of it is grief. And none of it means you’re doing it wrong.
What to Do Next
You're not alone. Join thousands of people learning that there's no "right" way to grieve.
Every mind is a universe worth exploring with care.