J Daniels
Description
After losing a child, people show up the only way they know how—with words.
In my experience, some of them helped. Some of them didn’t. And some of th
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em stayed with me long after the moment had passed, not because anyone meant harm, but because no one ever teaches you what to say to someone who is grieving, or how to support someone whose world has just ended.
It Gets Better is not a grief recovery guide, and it’s not a step-by-step roadmap for healing after loss. If you’re looking for timelines, stages, or a neat version of moving forward, this isn’t that book. Grief doesn’t follow rules, and it doesn’t respond well to being managed. What this book does instead is take an honest look at grief support, grief communication, and the phrases people reach for when they don’t know what else to say—and what those words actually feel like on the receiving end. Because people do say things.
“Be strong.”
“At least…”
“Everything happens for a reason.”
“It’s been enough time.”
“You have other kids to think about.”
They say them with love. With discomfort. With the need to make sense of something that doesn’t make sense. But intention and impact are not the same thing, and the space between them is where a lot of quiet damage happens. I hope this book moves through that space. Each chapter follows the real experience of loss as it unfolds over time, from the early days of raw grief to the shifting expectations of “moving on,” breaking down common grief phrases through what was meant, how it was heard, and what might have actually helped. It’s honest, sometimes uncomfortable, and at times edged with dark humor, because if you’ve lived through trauma, you know that sometimes that’s the only way to tell the truth without softening it.
My story is at the center of this book, but it is not the only one. Woven throughout are the voices of other mothers who have experienced child loss and understand firsthand how isolating grief can feel, not just because of the loss itself, but because of the way people respond to it. Their perspectives reinforce something important: while grief is deeply personal, the way people talk about it often isn’t. I want to be clear about something... this book reflects my experience and the experiences shared with me. I am not speaking for every mother who has lost a child, because there is no single way to live through something like this. What I can offer is honesty about what this has felt like for me, and for the women who chose to share their stories alongside mine. There is also strong language in parts of this book, and moments where humor shows up in ways that might feel unexpected. That isn’t carelessness—it’s how I have learned to survive something that doesn’t make sense. If you’ve ever used humor to carry something heavy, you’ll understand exactly what I mean.
This is not a book about getting over grief. It’s a book about living with it, about grief awareness, about learning how to show up for someone who is grieving without making them carry your discomfort too. It’s for people who want to know how to help a grieving friend, what not to say, and what actually matters when words fail.
For those who are grieving, I hope this book offers recognition, validation, and the quiet relief of knowing you’re not the only one who noticed how some things land.
For those who want to support someone through loss, I hope it offers something just as important: a better understanding of how language shapes the experience of grief, and how sometimes the most supportive thing you can do is stop trying to fix it, stop trying to explain it, and just be there.
Because the truth is, there are no perfect words.
But there might be better ones.
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J. Daniels