The real guide for grief

“You’re so good at making sure we never feel alone.”

A friend said that to me after years of funerals, casseroles, and 2am phone calls. This guide is everything behind that sentence, written for both people in the room. The one grieving. The one who loves them.

A person standing alone in a dark kitchen at 2am, looking at their phone after losing a parent

2:00 AM. Nobody warns you about this part.

The sentence everyone says

“Let me know if you need anything.”

It is the kindest sentence that helps no one. It hands the grieving person one more job. Figure out what you need. Then work up the nerve to ask for it.

Nobody likes to feel needy. So they never ask. And you never call. Both of you meant well. Both of you are still alone.

That is what I say instead. That one change is the whole book.

Hands typing and deleting a text message to a grieving friend, unsure what to say

You have typed this text. You deleted it three times.

One book. Two covers.

Grief puts two people in the room. This guide speaks to both.

Flip it one way, it is written for the person grieving. Flip it the other way, it is written for the friend who wants to show up and is terrified of saying the wrong thing.

Side A

For the one grieving

What is about to hit you that nobody warned you about.

  • The bowling ball moments. Grief that ambushes you mid sentence, mid show, mid Tuesday.
  • What to say to yourself at 2am. When the house is quiet and your head is not.
  • The anger nobody admits. At them for not fighting harder. At yourself for thinking that.
  • The time box. An hour. Ten minutes. Open the box on purpose. Then close it.
  • The logistics avalanche. What has to happen and when, while you can barely stand.
  • The peanuts. How grief changes shape, and the choice you get to make about it.
Side A · $17
Side B

For the one who loves them

The exact playbook for showing up without making it worse.

  • The first text to send. Word for word, the moment you find out.
  • The just handle it checklist. Tasks to take over without being asked.
  • What not to say. And what to say instead, for every hard moment.
  • The three week check-in. When everyone else disappears, you do not.
  • The one year message. They are counting the days. Be the one who remembered.
  • How to listen without fixing. Presence is the skill. This teaches it.
Side B · $17
My credentials

I did not study grief. I showed up to it.

A foil covered casserole dish on a kitchen counter with a handwritten note that reads warm in oven, love Dad

Warm in oven at 300. Love, Dad. xx

The bedroom

A friend lost her husband. Before she came home, I cleared the hospital bed out of their bedroom and put the furniture back the way it used to be. She never had to see the room like that again. She never had to ask.

The Bishop

Another friend needed clergy two states away and had nothing left to make calls with. So I made them. Texas to California, until I found the right person and the service was handled.

The houseful

I have fed a house full of funeral guests. Called ahead. Asked about allergies. Showed up with everything. Nobody had to think about food on the worst day of their life.

My father

And I have been on the other side of it. My dad died in 2013. I know what the casserole on the counter means when you are the one who cannot eat. Both sides of this guide are written from the inside.

None of that took talent. It took noticing. This guide teaches you to notice.

“I do not love peanuts. That is not the point.”

My dad bought peanuts at every Padres game. Jack Murphy, then Petco. Thick fingers working the shells open while the game went on without us.

He is gone now. I still buy the peanuts.

Side A ends there. Not with closure. With a choice you can make on purpose.

Instant download · PDF · reads on your phone

Get the side you need. Or get both. Your call.

This is what I wish someone had handed me when my dad died.

Side A

For the Griever

You lost someone. Start here.

$17

  • The full Side A guide
  • The 2am chapter
  • The time box tool
Get Side A
Side B

For the Friend

Someone you love is grieving. Start here.

$17

  • The full Side B playbook
  • Scripts for every moment
  • The just handle it checklist
Get Side B

Just need something for your wallet or your fridge? The Quick Cards are $9 on Etsy.

Questions

What people ask before they buy

What do you say to someone who just lost a parent?

Not “let me know if you need anything.” Side B gives you the exact first text to send, what to say at the funeral, and the check-in three weeks later when everyone else has gone quiet. Word for word, so you are never frozen at the keyboard again.

Is this a religious grief book?

No. There is faith in it because there is faith in me, and it shows up the way it does in real life. A prayer at 2am. Permission to be angry at God. Nothing is asked of you.

I am the one grieving. Is this really for me?

Side A is written directly to you. Not the five stages. The real stuff. The triggers nobody warns you about, what to say to yourself at 2am, and the paperwork avalanche that hits while you can barely stand. You will not find a single line in it telling you to stay positive.

What format is it? When do I get it?

PDF, delivered the moment you buy. It reads cleanly on a phone, which matters, because most people buy it late at night before a funeral.

Why is it called Just Handle It?

Because that is the move. You see the need, you handle it, you do not make them ask. A friend once told me, “You’re so good at making sure we never feel alone.” This guide is how.

Free download

The first ten days are logistics. Take the checklist.

Death certificates. The bank. The phone plan nobody can log into. The Logistics Checklist covers what has to happen and when, in two columns. One for the griever. One for the friend. Free, straight to your inbox.

No spam. No drip campaign tricks. The checklist and the occasional honest letter.