Grief and Loving Your Neighbor
When it comes to grief and loving your neighbor, we have to be honest with ourselves. Most of the time, when we lose someone we love, our grief feels deeply personal. We are sad because we lost them. We miss their presence, their voice, their laughter, their comfort.
Many of us believe that our loved one is no longer suffering. We believe they are at peace. Yet even that belief does not remove the ache of our own loss. It does not fill the empty chair at the table. Grief, in many ways, reflects how much that person meant to us.
But here is what I have learned. One of the most powerful ways to move through grief is to serve others in theirs.
If my grandmother were to pass, my instinct would be to stand beside my mother, my father, my aunts, my uncles, and my cousins. I would want to be steady for them. I would want to remind them that she is no longer suffering, that she is at peace, that her life mattered. I would want to offer comfort, strength, and perspective.
Strangely enough, when we show up for others in their pain, something begins to shift in us. The math does not always make sense on paper, but in practice it works. When we encourage others, we end up taking our own advice. When we remind them of hope, we hear it ourselves. When we help carry their burden, ours feels lighter.
This is not about pretending we are not hurting. It is not about denying our tears or suppressing our emotions. There is nothing healthy about acting strong while we silently break inside. Grief is real. Pain is real. We must feel it.
But there is a difference between feeling our emotions and being consumed by them.
Serving others during loss requires intentional strength. It requires emotional awareness. It requires us to process our feelings in a grounded and thoughtful way. And the reason we can serve so effectively is because we understand the pain. We are not detached. We are compassionate because we, too, are grieving.
Loss is unavoidable. There is one guarantee in life: people we love will eventually pass away. We will face grief again and again. We cannot escape it.
What we can choose is how we respond to it.
One of the greatest exercises in loving your neighbor is becoming a steady presence during their storm. To comfort. To listen. To encourage. To stand firm when others feel like collapsing.
In serving others through grief, we do not eliminate our own pain. But we transform it. We turn sorrow into strength. We turn loss into love in action.
And that is one of the highest forms of love we can give.

I’m not sure if I was running on empty because I was pouring into others or maybe I hadn’t truly learned how to mourn “correctly” if there’s such a thing. The weight of missing the moments with others sometimes is heavy enough to feel as though we’re running on empty for sure.
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This really hit me. I experienced grief way before I knew how to explain it! I was only 9, when my baby sister at 2 years of age (struck down by hit and run driver)! Then I lost my precious grandparents, 5 years apart from the other. And 3 years ago, my mother … at 3 pm … on Mother’s Day.
I think you’re right that grief feels so personal at first, it’s about our loss, our emptiness, but I’ve also seen how showing up for others can shift something inside us. It doesn’t erase the pain, but it gives it somewhere to go.
I like how you didn’t frame this as “just be strong” or ignore your feelings. That balance between actually grieving and still choosing to love people well is hard, but real.
I’m curious though—have you ever felt like you were pouring into others while quietly running on empty yourself? I think that’s the tension I still wrestle with at times.
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“In serving others through grief, we do not eliminate our own pain. But we transform it. We turn sorrow into strength. We turn loss into love in action.” Wise, insightful words, Jimmy. You’ve got me thinking: there’s satisfaction in providing what others need. That’s also part of the God-designed transformation that takes place within ourselves.
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Absolutely. Grief is such a hard and sensitive subject but being we all deal with it, we must investigate some best practices. Rarely can we go wrong in service of others
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This is beautifully written.
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Thank you ❤️
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Your writing holds a solid truth. Understanidng and expressing our emotions and being honest in this process is important. It does allow us to show up more honestly for others. This is a lovely writing.
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Thank you so much
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