This One Small Gesture Will Mean So Much To Your Grieving Friend

It only takes a minute of your time, but the impact is huge.
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Illustration: Chris McGonigal/HuffPost; Photo: Getty Images
It's a small but powerful way you can support a grieving loved one for years to come.

Much of the advice out there about how to support someone who is grieving focuses on what to do in the immediate aftermath of a loss. As the weeks and months pass, the flowers, sympathy cards, offers to send dinner and check-in calls and texts stop rolling in. But grief doesn’t have an arbitrary endpoint — it’s a lifelong process that requires long-term support. 

If you want to be there for a grieving friend on their grief journey, there’s a small but meaningful thing you can do: Reach out to them on the anniversary of their loved one’s death. Mark the date in your calendar or set an annual reminder in your phone so that you don’t forget.

Kellyn Shoecraft lost her father on Feb. 6, 2004, and her sister on Aug. 9, 2017. When someone remembers to reach out to her on those significant dates, it’s “truly touching” and helps her “feel seen,” she told HuffPost. 

“There’s recognition that even though one year — or 5, 14 or 32 years — has passed, it is still hard and sad to live without our person or people,” said Shoecraft, founder of the grief care package company Here For You. “Remembering the date also lets me know that my sister and dad haven’t been forgotten. And in that way, they are carried forward.”

“Remembering the date also lets me know that my sister and dad haven’t been forgotten.”

- Kellyn Shoecraft, founder of Here For You

Litsa Williams is a therapist and co-founder of the website What’s Your Grief. Setting a reminder to check in on a death anniversary is something she recommends and does with her own friends and family, she told HuffPost.

“This is something I always do not just with the anniversary, but I try to always make a point to put [in] any significant dates — the person’s birthday, the wedding anniversary — any days that you know might be hard for them,” said Williams, who also co-authored the book “What’s Your Grief?: Lists to Help You Through Any Loss.”

Try not to get hung up on what to say 

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LaylaBird via Getty Images
Just letting your loved one know that you're thinking of them on a tough day means a lot.

Obsessing over the perfect words to text your grieving friend might prevent you from pressing “send” on the message — but don’t let that happen. According to Williams, “It’s always going to be better to say something than nothing.”

“It doesn’t have to be anything fancy.” she said. “Oftentimes just keeping it simple and letting them know that you’re thinking of them and that you’ve remembered that it’s a hard time is incredibly meaningful for people.”

There’s no one “right” method of reaching out either. It could be a text, an Instagram DM, an email, a phone call or a voice note — whatever feels appropriate based on this person’s preferences and how you two typically communicate.

Depending on how close you are, you can also offer to meet up with them or talk on the phone. 

Williams said she might say something like: “Just thinking of you this week, I’m sure it must be tough with the anniversary of your dad’s death. Let me know if you want to get together for coffee or if there’s anything else that I could do that might be helpful or supportive this week.”

Shoecraft also suggested offering to spend time with your friend doing whatever they are in the mood for, but not taking it personally if they decline. 

“Often, the thing that is the hardest for people grieving is that they don’t get to talk about their loved one as much anymore.”

- Litsa Williams, therapist and founder of "What's Your Grief"

You could also mark the day by making a charitable donation in their loved one’s memory, sending them a gift, doing a toast to the deceased or sharing a memory or photo of the person who passed away, she said. 

Another idea? “Make a small change to your day in honor of the deceased,” Shoecraft said. “For example, if they loved cookie dough ice cream, enjoy a cone after dinner.”

Consider taking a picture to send to your friend of whatever you do to commemorate the person they lost. It may feel performative to you, but your friend will likely appreciate it. 

“Photograph the toast, the sunset you’re enjoying, the coffee drink you’re sipping — whatever it is you’re doing in honor of or that reminds you of the deceased,” Shoecraft said.  

And know that it’s never too late to start making this annual gesture. Even if you haven’t acknowledged the date in years past, don’t let that stop you from doing so in the future.  

“I would welcome remembrance of my dad and sister — who died 19 and 5 years ago respectively — even if a lot of time has passed or if I never heard from the person before about their deaths,” Shoecraft said. 

That said, you don’t need to wait for a big date to show your support

Reaching out on the death anniversary (or other significant dates) is meaningful — but so is checking in with your friend periodically “just because.” 

If you happen to see or hear or do something that reminds you of the person who died, let your friend know.

Like, “The ice cream shop near my house has Fruity Pebbles as a topping. I remember your mom always putting those on her scoop of vanilla at our middle school sleepovers,” Shoecraft said. 

While you might assume that bereaved people don’t want to talk about the deceased, many times the opposite is true.

“So often, the thing that is the hardest for people grieving is that they don’t get to talk about their loved one as much anymore, or they worry that other people have forgotten about them,” Williams said. 

So don’t be afraid to bring up their loved one’s name in conversation, share fond memories when they come to mind and set those reminders in your phone to text your friend on the monumental days and the ordinary ones, too. 

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Before You Go

These Are The Books That Have Helped Me Process My Grief After A Big Loss
"Crying in H Mart" by Michelle Zauner(01 of06)
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Michelle Zauner's bestselling memoir received a ton of press after it was published in April 2021, and I quickly added it to my virtual shopping cart not knowing how similar my and Zauner's experiences were.

In the book, we meet Zauner as a busy 25-year-old who has unintentionally distanced herself from her Korean roots. Then, when her mother is diagnosed with terminal cancer, Zauner is prompted to rediscover her culture in a way that's both food- and relationship-driven, and recounted in a way that's incredibly sensorial and satisfying.

Probably my favorite element of "Crying in H Mart" is the way that the author speaks with such honesty about her relationship with her mother. It's a complex one, like most mother-daughter relationships, and she is now being forced to observe it all in its entirety through the lens of losing her. It was incredibly relatable and helped me to break down my own memories with my mother and our connection to each other, outside of her illness.
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"The Year of Magical Thinking" by Joan Didion(02 of06)
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Before I ever tucked into this book, I knew I was in good hands. Joan Didion has such a delicious way of telling stories and evoking privately lived experiences so that, in the end, you feel like they were your own.

In "The Year of Magical Thinking," Didion wields her quintessential way with words and uses them to tell her own personal story of loss, and about the natural ebbs of flows of life in general. It's just before Christmas and Didion's daughter falls ill, only for her husband to die a week later. Although this sounds completely doom and gloom, there's light at the end of the tunnel, I can assure you.

There's always something that has seemed a little wrong about witnessing the people you admire divulge on a personal topic such as grief. Reading this memoir helped drive home the fact that everyone experiences loss and that there's nothing shameful about sadness.
(credit:Amazon)
"My Year of Rest and Relaxation" by Ottessa Moshfegh(03 of06)
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Although I didn't set out reading this book with the intent that it would help me process grief, it did give me a front-row seat to all ways it can be destructive given the right sort of environment.

Our narrator is a pretty, entitled Columbia graduate who is living a reckless existence after both of her wealthy parents pass away. For an entire year, she decides to hide from the world by ingesting a cocktail of irresponsibly prescribed drugs, one after another. In between her moments of hibernation, we witness the narrator's loopy ramblings, memories of her parents and her bizarre relationship with her best friend, who also happens to be losing her mother to cancer.

At the end of the "year of rest and relaxation," the reader sees that positive things can happen, even from some of life's cruelest curveballs.
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"Animal" by Lisa Taddeo(04 of06)
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This was another read that unintentionally allowed me to understand losing a parent and the trauma surrounding that loss. In Lisa Taddeo's book, our unlikely protagonist, Joan, leaves her sordid existence in New York and flees to the sweltering Topanga canyons of Los Angeles in search of the only person who can help her understand the deep and complex trauma of her past – trauma that most likely began when she lost both of her parents as a young girl. Throughout the course of the story, we see the ways in which Joan copes, channels her rage and ultimately finds the strength to move forward.

Although "Animal" is a work of fiction, Taddeo has been open about the death of both of her parents early in life and this relationship with loss is reflected in the experiences had by Joan. And while I wouldn’t recommend this novel for the faint of heart, it's completely riveting from start to finish and put together with some of the most beautiful prose I've ever read.
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"What Remains" by Carole Radziwill(05 of06)
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Admittedly the first time I had ever heard of Carole Radziwill and her New York Times-bestseller novel "What Remains" was during her tenure as a cast member on “The Real Housewives of New York.” On the show, she was known as the cool and intelligent former journalist that had suffered great tragedy when her best friend's plane crashed into an ocean, and then her husband passed away from cancer three weeks later.

Reading Radziwill's memoir felt kind of like reading a fairy tale, even in those dark moments of despair. She manages to articulate unimaginable loss in a way that's beautiful and clear to understand and ultimately lands on the importance of friendship, love and the concept of destiny.
(credit:Amazon)
"A Grief Observed" by C.S. Lewis(06 of06)
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I was a little bit hesitant to read this book. Although C.S. Lewis is a childhood-favorite author of mine, I know he is a devout Christian and that faith would be heavily referenced in his memoir – something that would be difficult for me to identify with as an atheist. After reading it, however, I appreciated Lewis' dissection of grief, his observation of faith and the honest way he expressed the dwindling of that belief system after losing his wife to cancer.

Towards the end of the memoir, which is bursting with profound descriptions and analogies of grief that ring so true to those who have experienced it, Lewis finds his faith again and, with it, a kind of peace.
(credit:Amazon)

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