What Is a Grief Attack and What Can You Do if You Have One?

Staff
By Staff
5 Min Read

7 Steps to Handle a Grief Attack

There are many techniques you can try to lessen the severity of a grief attack. It may be helpful to try out a variety of approaches to see which ones help you the most, Seeley says.

1. Do Jumping Jacks (or Another Brief, Intense Exercise)

Intense exercise is a tactic in dialectical behavior therapy — a specialized form of talk therapy that helps people manage intense emotions and change unhelpful behaviors — due to its calming effects.

For the same reason, it may help during a grief attack, Seeley says. “It can help you find a way to deal with that overwhelming urge to do something, to fix the situation.”

2. Eat Sour Candies

“Do something that gives you a very intense sensory experience,” Seeley recommends. Sensory stimulation — like eating something sour or holding ice in your hands — can ground you when you’re experiencing scary physiological symptoms, like shortness of breath or trembling, and help you calm down. Sour candies are a popular choice, but you can also use other strong flavors like wasabi or horseradish.

3. Dunk Your Face in a Bowl of Cold Water

In a study published in Frontiers in Psychiatry in 2021, researchers had 16 people with panic disorder submerge their faces in cold water for 30 seconds. They found the practice significantly reduced participants’ heart rate and lessened symptoms of anxiety and panic. Exposing your body to cold temperatures may also help if you’re experiencing a grief attack, Seeley says.

4. Try to Pace Your Breathing

Research supports using emotional regulation techniques like breath work to cope with grief attacks, per Lee’s paper. Breathing exercises can help by slowing your heart rate and easing feelings of panic, Seeley says.
One deep breathing technique you can try is the 4-7-8 technique, in which you breathe in through your nose for 4 seconds, hold your breath for 7 seconds, then exhale through your mouth for 8 seconds.

5. Practice Relaxing Different Muscle Groups

If your muscles tense up during a grief attack, progressive muscle relaxation — a two-step practice of building up tension in a certain muscle group, holding it, and then releasing it — may help, Seeley says. A small study of 94 grieving widows and widowers backs this up, showing that progressive muscle relaxation significantly reduced symptoms of stress, depression, and negative affect (a persistent, high level of unpleasant emotions).

To try progressive muscle relaxation, practice clenching your fists, wrinkling your forehead, or tensing your biceps; hold each muscle in position for a few seconds, then relax it.

6. Be Mindful of Your Grief

Like progressive muscle relaxation, mindfulness has been shown to reduce symptoms of stress, depression, and negative affect in grieving widows and widowers. That’s because mindfulness helps you feel your grief instead of misinterpreting its symptoms as dangerous, Seeley explains.

One common mindfulness practice is the body scan. To do this, focus on different body parts, one at a time, pausing to relax your muscles and notice any sensations you’re experiencing in each. Start with your feet and slowly work your way up from your toes to the very top of your head.

7. Practice Acceptance

A small study of grieving people, published in 2024, showed that accepting (rather than avoiding) “grief-related experiences” — such as distressing thoughts, emotions, and memories — helped participants endure “distressing internal experiences” related to their grief.

Acceptance — which involves allowing yourself to think and feel uncomfortable thoughts and emotions rather than trying to suppress them — is crucial to your grief journey, and may help you during a grief attack, Seeley says. “Allow yourself to feel the grief instead of pushing it away.”

Read the full article here

Share This Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *