Symptoms
Your experience of grief is likely to be different from another person's. Similarly, you will probably grieve somewhat differently each time you experience a significant loss. Your reaction to loss is influenced by the relationship you had with the lost person and by your general coping style, personality, and life experiences. How you express grief is influenced in part by the cultural, religious, and social rules of your community.
Grief is expressed physically, emotionally, socially, and spiritually.
- Physical expressions of grief may include crying or sighing, headaches, loss of appetite, difficulty sleeping, weakness, fatigue, feelings of heaviness, aches, pains, or other stress-related ailments.
- Emotional expressions of grief may include feelings of sadness or yearning. But feelings of worry, anxiety, frustration, anger, or guilt are also normal.
- Social expressions of grief may include feeling detached from others, isolating yourself from social contact, and behaving in ways that are not normal for you.
- Spiritual expressions of grief may include questioning the reason for your loss, the purpose of pain and suffering, the purpose of life, and the meaning of death. After a death, your grieving process is influenced by how you view death.
Intense grief can bring on unusual experiences. After a death, you may have vivid dreams about your loved one, develop their behaviors or mannerisms, or see or hear your loved one.
Symptoms of grief in children and teens
Age and emotional development influence the way a person grieves a death.
Children younger than age 7
Children younger than 7 usually perceive death as separation. They may feel abandoned and scared. And they may fear being alone or leaving people they love. Grieving young children may not want to sleep alone at night, or they may refuse to go to day care or school.
- Children under age 7 usually are not able to verbally express their feelings. Instead, they tend to act out their feelings through behaviors, such as having trouble following directions, having temper tantrums, or role-playing their lives in pretend play.
- Children younger than age 2 may refuse to talk. And they may be generally irritable.
- Children between the ages of 2 and 5 may develop eating, sleeping, or toileting and bed-wetting problems.
Children ages 7 to 12
Children between the ages of 7 and 12 often perceive death as a threat to their personal safety. They tend to fear that they will die also and may try to protect themselves from death. While some grieving children want to stay close to someone they think can protect them, others withdraw.
- Some children try to be very brave or behave extremely well. Others act out their emotions in negative ways.
- A grieving child may have problems concentrating on schoolwork, following directions, and doing daily tasks.
- Children in this age group need to be reassured that they are not responsible for the death they are grieving.
Teens
Teens perceive death much like adults do. But they may express their feelings in dramatic or unexpected ways. For example:
- They may join a religious group that defines death in a way that calms their feelings.
- They may do things that are dangerous, such as reckless driving, smoking cigarettes, drinking alcohol, taking illegal drugs, or having unprotected sex.
Like adults, preteens and teens can have suicidal thoughts when grieving. Warning signs of suicide in children and teens may include preoccupation with death or suicide or giving away belongings.
Where to get help 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
If your child talks about suicide, self-harm, a mental health crisis, a substance use crisis, or any other kind of emotional distress, get help right away. You can:
- Call the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988.
- Call 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255).
- Text HOME to 741741 to access the Crisis Text Line.
Consider saving these numbers in your phone.
Go to 988lifeline.org for more information or to chat online.
Learn more
- Prolonged Grief
- Suicidal Thoughts or Threats
- Warning Signs of Suicide in Children and Teens