Separating Pain from Suffering : A Workbook
by Zola Grief and Bereavement Coaching
You’re Not Failing at Grief. You’re Just Carrying More Than You Should Have To.
A gentle, practical workbook that helps you release the myths, judgement, and shame piled on top of your grief- so you can just feel what you actually feel.
Nobody told you there would be a right way to grieve. But somehow, you’re certain you’re doing it wrong. Maybe you cried too much - or not enough. Maybe it’s been over a year and people keep saying you should be “moving on.” Maybe you’re holding yourself together so well on the outside that you wonder if something is broken on the inside. Here’s the truth: the pain of loss is unavoidable. But the suffering that comes from judging yourself for how you grieve? That part we can work on - together.
What’s Inside - 7 Lessons + Bonus
Lesson 1: Pain vs. Suffering - Understand the critical difference between natural grief pain and the extra layer of suffering added by shame, judgement, and impossible expectations.
Lesson 2: The Stages Myth - Why the “five stages” model of grief recovery was never meant to be a roadmap - and why you haven’t missed a step.
Lesson 3: The Time Myth - Grief doesn’t run on a schedule. Release the pressure of timelines that were never real to begin with.
Lesson 4: Letting Go of the Replacement Myth - Healing doesn’t mean erasing your love for who or what you lost. It means growing around the loss, not past it.
Lesson 5: There’s No One Right Way to Grieve - Your grief is as unique as your relationship was. This lesson helps you stop measuring yourself against others.
Lesson 6: Rethinking What It Means to Be Strong - Spoiler: strength isn’t holding it all together. Real strength looks a lot different than what we’ve been told.
Lesson 7: When Grief Gets Big - Tools and strategies for when emotions flood - and permission to let them.
This Is For You If…..
"You were never given permission to grieve — because the loss happened long ago, or because others had it worse."
"You keep wondering if something is wrong with you because you're not grieving the way you think you're supposed to."
"You've started to believe that moving forward means leaving your person — or your loss — behind, and that feels unbearable."
You feel like everyone around you has an opinion about how - or how quickly - you should heal.
You’ve been told to “stay strong” so often that you’ve started to believe that falling apart means failing.
You’re months (or years) past your loss and still feel it every day, wondering if that’s normal.
"You're exhausted from performing 'okayness' for the people around you while falling apart on the inside."
Margaret, 58 - The Recent Widow
Margaret lost her husband of 32 years six months ago. Family keeps telling her she needs to “move on” and “be grateful for the time they had.” She’s functioning - working, cooking, and showing up - but feels a constant low hum of grief she can’t shake.
She wants to know: “Is it normal to still cry every day after 6 months”. The workbook’s direct challenge to the “time myth” and the “be strong” myth speaks directly to her experience. The warm, non-clinical voice feels like a friend, not a clinician. The low price point makes it an easy first step!
Devon , 34 - Adult child who lost a parent
His mom passed from cancer three years ago. He never really processed it - he threw himself into work. Now he’s experiencing what feels like delayed grief and doesn’t understand why it’s hitting him now. Feels embarrassed that it’s been so long.
The Time Myth lesson and the Pain vs. Suffering framework directly address his “what’s wrong with me” story. The PDF format fits his working style - he can download and read on his own schedule.
Aaliyah , 29 - Pregnancy Loss
Experienced a miscarriage at 10 weeks. People in her life don’t know how to support her - some even said “at least it was early.” She feels completely alone in her grief and questions whether she’s allowed to feel this devastated.
The “No One Right Way to Grieve” lesson and the overall message that grief doesn’t require justification speaks powerfully to her experience. She may not be ready for 1:1 coaching but for a low-cost workbook is a gently, private first step.