When Grief Makes Your World Small: The Healing That Happens When You See Someone Else’s Story
Grief makes your world small, tight, and closed in. But something sacred happens when you step into someone else’s story. This raw, honest reflection invites widows into healing through empathy, witness, and the gentle ways God moves through our brokenness.
There’s something I don’t think most people understand about grief — especially the kind that comes after losing your person.
It makes your world small.
Tight.
Closed in.
You don’t do it on purpose.
You’re not trying to shut people out.
It just… happens.
Your body is trying to survive.
Your mind is trying to make sense of a life that seemed to break down overnight.
And your spirit is trying to remember how to breathe in a world that suddenly feels unsafe.
So you fold inward.
You get quiet.
You stay in your head.
You live inside this awful ache because that’s the only place that feels real anymore.
But here’s the thing — and this is the part I wish I could sit across from every single widow and share:
There is something deeply healing that happens when you step outside your own story long enough to see someone else’s.
Not with effort.
Not with “I should.”
Not with pretending your grief isn’t heavy.
But with honesty… and a little courage… and the tiniest willingness to look up.
When I was drowning in my own grief — truly drowning — the only thing that helped me keep moving forward was entering into someone else’s story. Sitting with their pain. Seeing their grief truths. Letting God's love move through me even when I felt like I had nothing left.
And it’s wild, honestly… because it shouldn’t make sense.
How can pouring out love when you feel empty bring healing?
How can holding space for someone else while you’re shattered do anything but drain you?
But it doesn’t drain you.
Not when it’s real.
Not when you’re not forcing anything.
Not when it’s done in response to Jesus.
It actually ignites something.
I’ve felt it happen in real time — that quiet spark in my chest, that soft reminder that my story is not done, that God is somehow using my brokenness to breathe life into someone else.
That’s the Holy Spirit.
That’s love in action.
That’s what happens when grief meets compassion.
And there’s real science behind this, which honestly still amazes me.
When we enter someone else’s story with empathy — especially in shared suffering — the brain releases oxytocin. This is the “bonding” hormone. The “you’re safe with me” hormone. The “you’re not alone” signal our bodies desperately need.
It lowers cortisol — that stress hormone that grief sends skyrocketing.
It softens the nervous system.
It opens the heart and you begin to breathe again.
It reminds you that you still have feelings.
Still have love.
Still have the ability to give something meaningful even when you feel emptied out.
And this part is important:
This isn’t bypassing your own grief.
This isn’t minimizing your pain.
This isn’t trying to pretend you’re okay.
It’s the opposite.
It’s God meeting you in the raw center of your sorrow and saying, “Watch what we can do…”
Because when you step into someone else’s story — even for a moment — you’re not abandoning your own.
You’re letting Jesus shine a bit of His love through the cracks that have felt useless or unworthy.
And scripture backs this.
John tells us that perfect love casts out fear — not your strength, not your resilience, not your best attempts to be okay… love.
God’s love through you.
God’s love toward you.
God’s love weaving stories so no one has to sit in the dark alone.
I used to think I needed to “heal first” before I had anything to offer.
But that was a BIG FAT lie — a straight-up lie from the enemy.
The truth is this:
Love doesn’t stop, get bruised, or pause for you to be healed in order to flow through you.
God doesn’t wait for your story to be tidy and neat before He uses it.
And grief doesn’t disqualify you from being someone who brings light into the world.
In fact… your grief might make you more tender, more aware, more present than you ever were before.
You don’t have to feel whole to offer love.
You just have to be willing.
And even that willingness?
He gives that too.
The Sacred Work of Bearing Witness
One of the most powerful things I’ve learned in grief is this:
You don’t have to fix someone to love them.
You just have to witness them.
Bearing witness is holy ground.
It’s looking at someone else’s pain without trying to tidy it.
It’s listening without offering answers.
It’s saying, with your presence, “I see you. You’re not alone in this moment.”
And something surprising happens when you do this — even while you’re grieving yourself:
You remember that your heart still works.
You remember that God is still moving.
You remember that tenderness still lives inside you, even on the days you feel numb.
Bearing witness isn’t about giving out what you don’t have.
It’s about letting your story sit beside someone else’s story and trusting that God will do the weaving.
Because grief convinces us that we’re useless.
That we’re too broken to show up for anyone else.
That our pain disqualifies us from offering comfort.
But the truth?
Grief has trained your heart to recognize suffering.
You see it differently now.
More clearly.
More honestly.
More compassionately.
Your presence carries weight — not because you’ve healed, but because you understand.
And when two hurting hearts sit side by side, Jesus sits with them.
Not to erase the grief, but to breathe life into the space between.
That’s bearing witness.
And it is both a gift to others and a healing balm for you.
5 Practical Ways to Enter Someone Else’s Story Without Overwhelming Yourself
These are gentle, grief-friendly ways to show up without abandoning your own emotional limits.
These are the steps I lived.
The ones that kept me soft when life seemed determined to harden everything.
Offer Presence, Not Solutions
You don’t need answers.
You don’t need wisdom.
You don’t need to say the right thing.
Just offer a moment of presence.
“I’m here. You don’t have to walk this alone.”
Presence heals what explanations never will.Let Your Listening Be Slow and Unrushed
When someone shares their pain, don’t sprint to the ending.
Sit with them in the middle.
Slow listening says, “Your story matters. You don’t need to be faster for me.”Share Only From Your Scars, Not Your Open Wounds
You don’t have to match their pain with your own.
But a gentle “I understand some of this” offers solidarity instead of comparison.Keep It Small, Simple, and Honest
Showing up doesn’t have to be big.
A voice memo.
A five-minute conversation.
A text that asks for nothing in return.
Small acts carry big presence.Let Jesus Fill the Space You Don’t Have Words For
Whisper, “Jesus, be here.”
He fills what you cannot.
He holds what neither of you can carry alone.
Here’s the beauty widows rarely hear:
Showing up for someone else in small, honest, grief-soft ways doesn’t empty you…
It grounds you.
It connects you.
It reminds you that your life still holds purpose.
That your love is still needed.
That God is still moving through your tired, hurting heart.
You are not useless.
You are not too broken.
You still carry something sacred to give — even now.
Especially now.
If You Want to Step Into Another Story With Me
One of the things that surprised me most in grief was how healing it was to enter into stories far beyond my own — especially the stories of widows in Kenya and Tanzania who carry both unimaginable weight and remarkable strength.
Their lives, their resilience, their faith… it changed something in me.
It opened my world back up when grief had made everything so small and tight.
If you’ve ever felt the nudge to step into someone else’s story — gently, slowly, in a way that brings life to both of you — I want you to know there’s room for you inside the work we do with Pamoja Love.
Through our Widow Project, we come alongside widows who are navigating heartbreak, cultural pressure, spiritual resilience, and the daily struggle to keep their families fed and safe.
And every time we stand with them, something holy happens:
Their story touches ours.
Our story touches theirs.
And God moves in the middle.
It’s not charity.
It’s not “helping the needy.”
It’s story joining — grief with grief, strength with strength, hope with hope.
If your heart is longing for a way to feel connected again…
If you want to witness courage that awakens something inside you…
If you want to know that your story still has something sacred to give…
You’re invited to join us.
Whether it’s praying for a widow by name, helping provide food for her children, supporting leadership training, or simply learning more about her world — you are stepping into a place where love, empathy, and healing move both directions.
And maybe… just maybe…
God will use their story to breathe a little life into yours, the same way He did for me.
If you want to learn more, you can visit: Pamoja Love Nonprofit
www.pamoja.love
and explore the Widow Project.
There is room for you here too.
Your grief.
Your tenderness.
Your story.
All welcome.
Ideas for when grief makes your world feel small.
This post explores grief, widowhood, empathy, nervous system healing, Christian faith, and the emotional and physiological impact of bearing witness to someone else’s story. It includes grief science, widow support, oxytocin and cortisol explanation, faith-based grief encouragement, and practical tools for healing. For widows searching for understanding, Christian grief resources, grief community, nervous system support in grief, or how to navigate sorrow with Jesus, this article provides compassionate guidance, trauma-informed wisdom, and spiritual grounding.
Grief Serum Recipe: a simple + kind nightly routine towards healing.
Grief is sneaky.
Grief is heavy.
Grief is exhausting.
Grief can deplete us to a place where we barely recognize ourselves.
And here is the thing…
Sometimes it wears us down to a level that not only impacts our state of mind but our bodies and potentially our belief systems as well. We may end up believing we don’t have anything in us to pull out of the pit we are currently in. That is a flat-out LIE though… even in the depths of grief, we can still continue to take steps towards healing.
That is what this post is all about. Having a super simple tool on hand that feels darn good, is relaxing, and helps you take steps towards healing.
I have found at the end of the day, during the time that pillow talk would typically happen, I needed a way to care for myself and remind myself I was going to be okay. Somehow, my evening process with this simple technique was not only caring for me but it also helped me to remember I was wanting to show up better and stronger for my future.
Note: You aren’t limited to using it at night, these tools and techniques can be used any time of day, whenever grief overwhelm strikes. Many of the oils do assist
Let me tell you a little bit about why I chose these specific essential oils included in my Grief Serum Recipe. Each one provides essential oils that help provide emotional stability, promote movement throughout the mind + body, and are especially good for the skin. I am telling you these are grief-busting oils. They target the areas that grief has tried to make me out, and I am guessing you as well.
Look, I am not saying this is a “do this and BAM, IT’S INSTANTLY BETTER.” But what I am saying is it truly is a soothing technique that does a lot more than just feel good. Whether you feel them or not your body and mind are responding, and with consistent use there will be substantial change. And yes, how it does work for me instantly is in the reminder that I care about myself, I care about my future, I care about how I process my grief and move forward.
I have a graphic posted with the recipe, the number on each essential oil bottle is how many drops to put in the 10ml roller bottle, and then top with baobab oil. You can use another low-comedogenic oil but this one is an absolute favorite of mine.
Make sure you check out the graphics I have posted here to see more on the oil-specific benefits. And feel free to do your own check on each one, you will be BLOWN AWAY. So good!
If you don’t have these specific oils I have a link to grab them here: GRIEF SKINCARE OILS
This investment towards natural health is completely worth it and trust me, there are SO many additional uses for these beauties. (If you decide to grab these make sure and send me a note so I can get you my additional uses booklet.)
Items you will need:
Frankincense, Helichrysum, Blue Tansy + Roman Chamomile
10ml White / Gold Rollerbottles
There are a whole host of resources you can use to learn new techniques for self-administered face, foot, and body massage. The book I have listed above is really simple to follow along with and in the thick of heavy grief simple matters. I also have a lymphatic book that is spectacular: The Book of Lymph , if you want to get a little more specific in areas you are addressing. I use it for my sinus congestion. One more item I find really helpful is my Gua Sha stone, it is cool + smooth, I love the way it glides across my skin with the grief serum. These aren’t necessary, just for those who like to dive deep quickly. The essential oils + the baobab oil in a roller bottle, and your hands, are all you need to do the basic techniques in the beginner’s book.
I’d love to hear your feedback after trying this nightly for a few weeks. Let me know if you experience slightly deeper sleep, calmer nerves, or maybe a spark of nurture has lit for your weary soul.
Grief is hard work but it is SO worth it! I am praying this technique becomes a simple and effective tool for you to have in your grief toolbox.