Tier 2 · 8 weeks + first-year map

The Death of a Parent

When a parent dies, the map of where you came from changes with them.

The recognition

The loss can alter memory, responsibility, family position, practical life, and the age you feel inside your own body—all before grief has found language.

The Death of a Parent supports the first reorientation after the person who held part of your origin is gone. It does not rush grief toward closure or ask sorrow to obey a motivational timeline.

The eight-week passage holds practical care, memory, unfinished relationship, family reorganization, identity, and the strange return of ordinary life. A first-year map helps you meet anniversaries and changing grief without treating every wave as a setback.

A look inside

The movement of the passage.

Each movement combines clear language, embodied noticing, practical decisions, and integration in the rooms where the crossing is already happening.

Movement 01

The world immediately after

Stabilize the practical field and name what has changed before meaning is required.

Movement 02

The relationship continues differently

Work with memory, conflict, love, ambivalence, and what remains unfinished.

Movement 03

The family rearranges

Notice new roles, obligations, boundaries, inheritances, and absences.

Movement 04

Carrying the origin forward

Choose what belongs in your life now without turning remembrance into permanent suspension.

What you receive

Complete on arrival.

  • Eight guided weekly chapters
  • A practical first-weeks care map
  • Memory and unfinished-conversation practices
  • A first-year anniversary and support guide

How it fits ordinary life

The experience is designed for self-directed use. Most people spend twenty to forty-five minutes with a weekly chapter, then let the practice travel through the conversations, choices, routines, and bodily responses of the days that follow.

Boundary

This is educational and reflective work. It does not diagnose or treat a medical or mental-health condition and is not crisis, grief-clinical, legal, financial, or emergency support. Where safety or clinical care is needed, qualified support belongs beside or before this work.