Les 1
When One Door Closes
People say, âWhen one door closes, another opens.â But honestly? It didnât feel that way to me. When a door closes, whether itâs a relationship, a dream, or a diagnosis, you donât walk right into something new. You end up in a hallway, standing between two doors. And the hallway is messy. Itâs full of doubt, hope, and fear. Itâs lonely. Itâs where youâre no longer who you were, but not yet who youâre becoming.
Les 2
The A.C.C.E.P.T. Model
For so long, people had told me, âYou have to accept it.â But no one ever told me how. This model became my âhow.â In the lessons that follow, I will guide you through each step. This isn't a checklist; it's an invitation. It's a way to meet yourself in the mess of grief and slowly, gently, find a way forward.
Les 3
Before We Begin
This course wonât tell you to âmove onâ or âjust be strong.â Instead, it will give you language for what feels impossible, help you see what you're going through is normal, offer you a structure to lean on, let you move at your own pace, show you small ways forward, and remind you that youâre not alone. This course wonât fix your grief, give you a neat timeline, replace therapy or support groups, promise itâll be easy, or pretend to have all the answers. Grief isnât something to be fixed, and there isnât a single way through it.
Les 4
Step 1: Acknowledge Your Reality
We often confuse acknowledgment with agreement. We think if we admit whatâs happening, it means weâve given up. That weâve surrendered. That weâve failed. âBut acknowledgment isnât the same as giving up. Itâs about being honest with yourself. Even when the truth is hard, itâs actually where healing begins.
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When we resist acknowledgment, itâs often because we want to hold on to how things used to be. We hope life might return to normal, that the test results were wrong, the call was just a dream, or the goodbye was only temporary. This is deeply human. Itâs how the mind tries to protect the heart.
Les 5
Step 2: Control The Controllable
The truth is that much of what breaks our hearts in life is beyond our control. The diagnosis. The breakup. The delay. The death. The policy. A job that didnât come through. And holding on to all the things we canât control is what makes us miserable.
Les 6
Step 3: Create A Calming Routine
When most people hear the word âroutine,â they immediately think discipline. They think of James Clearâs Atomic Habits, stacking habits, building systems, and becoming 1% better every day. And heâs right: routines can be powerful drivers of consistency and achievement. In that context, theyâre about self-mastery.
But when youâre grieving, the game changes. Youâre not in a season of optimization, youâre in survival. Your nervous system isnât asking for productivity hacks, itâs begging for stability. In grief, routines arenât about self-mastery. Theyâre about self-regulation.
Les 7
Step 4: Expectations With Compassion
Thereâs no timeline for healing. Letâs sit with that for a second. Thereâs no timeline. No finish line. No point in the future where someone hands you a certificate that says, âYouâve officially grieved enough. Youâre now healed.â We know this deep down, yet we often hold ourselves to invisible deadlines. We measure progress by the calendar, expect to feel better, and get frustrated when weâre still tired, triggered, or hurting. Itâs as if the world has put an invisible stopwatch on us.
Les 8
Step 5: Positive Feelings Over Thoughts
When youâve experienced grief or trauma or deep disappointment, thinking can only take you so far. Eventually, it stops being helpful and starts becoming a loop. A loop that sounds like: âMaybe if I had done it differentlyâŠâ, âI shouldâve seen this coming.â, âWhat if this is my fault?â, âHow do I fix this?â Your brain tries to protect you by replaying, reviewing, and revisiting. But healing doesnât happen in the brain alone. Healing happens when we allow ourselves to feel.
Les 9
Step 6: Tribe Your Way up
Social connection is one of the most important parts of resilience. When people feel truly supported and understood, they are more likely to heal in healthy, lasting ways. Sadly, not every relationship can offer that kind of support. One painful lesson I learned in grief is that not everyone can carry your story. Even those you love most, who you thought would stay, sometimes canât sit with your pain. Itâs not because youâre too much, but because your grief may be too heavy for them. It took me a long time to see that this didnât mean I was unlovable or too complicated, or that I didnât matter in our friendship. The truth is, some people just canât walk with you through the hard times.
Les 10
And Then.. What?
Youâve walked with me through the six steps of acceptance:
1. Acknowledging your reality and naming what hurts, rather than denying it.
2. Finding control in the places you can, however small.
3. Creating routines that calm and ground you.
4. Releasing judgment and softening the expectations you place on yourself.
5. Letting positive feelings back in, even when they feel impossible at first.
6. Finding your people, those rare souls who can hold your story without trying to fix it.
Thatâs no small thing. If youâve even practiced one or two of these steps, youâve already shifted something inside you. Youâve given yourself permission to live alongside grief, rather than trying to erase it. So⊠what happens after acceptance? Letâs be honest, life doesnât become perfect just because weâve accepted what we canât change. Acceptance is only the beginning. The real question is: what now?