When Grief Has No Clear Ending: Living With Ambiguous Grief
Some grief doesnโt come with an obituary or a final goodbye. It just lingers โ heavy and invisible โ leaving us wondering how to mourn something thatโs not fully gone. Maybe itโs a loved one whoโs still here physically but emotionally unreachable. Maybe itโs someone who vanished without warning โ through addiction, dementia, distance, or silence.
This kind of loss has a name: ambiguous loss. Dr. Pauline Boss first introduced the term back in the 1970s, describing it as โthe most stressful kind of lossโ because thereโs no clear resolution, no way to fully close the door and begin healing.
Itโs the kind of grief that keeps you suspended โ somewhere between hope and heartbreak โ unsure how to move forward when thereโs still a part of you holding on.
Read more about ambiguous loss here.
What Ambiguous Loss Looks Like
Ambiguous loss shows up in two main ways:
- Someone is gone, but still feels present.
Maybe a soldier who never came home, a parent you were separated from, or a relationship that ended suddenly without explanation. Even though theyโre physically gone, they still occupy space in your heart and your thoughts. Theyโre โgone, but not for sure.โ - Someone is here, but no longer feels like themselves.
A spouse with dementia. A loved one battling addiction or mental illness. A parent whoโs emotionally distant or lost in depression. Their body is here โ you can see them, hear them โ but the person you knew seems to have disappeared. Theyโre โhere, but not really here.โ
In both situations, youโre caught in a painful in-between โ loving someone who is both absent and present, and not knowing how to grieve what you canโt define.
Why This Kind of Grief Feels So Hard
Traditional grief has rituals that help us mark an ending โ funerals, memorials, gatherings. People bring food, share stories, cry together. Thereโs closure, or at least recognition.
But with ambiguous loss, thereโs often none of that.
No obituary. No support meal train. No clear line between โbeforeโ and โafter.โ
You might hear things like โYou need to move onโ or โAt least theyโre still alive,โ and you want to scream โ because people donโt see whatโs really happening. Thereโs no rulebook for how to grieve someone whoโs both gone and not gone.
Itโs confusing, exhausting, and deeply lonely. Your emotions might swing wildly โ sadness one day, anger the next, even relief or guilt. And because thereโs no ending, it can feel like grief never stops circling back around.
The Myth of Closure
We live in a world that loves the word โclosure.โ But closure is a myth. You canโt simply tie up grief with a bow when the story hasnโt truly ended.
Instead of โgetting over it,โ ambiguous loss invites us to learn to live with it.
That means making room for uncertainty and finding peace inside of it โ not waiting for the day when everything feels resolved.
You can love someone and still accept that theyโre gone in some ways.
You can keep hoping and still build a life that moves forward.
You can hold two truths at once โ and thatโs where healing begins.
The Emotional Roller Coaster

People experiencing ambiguous loss often describe feeling:
- Constant confusion and second-guessing
- Guilt for having mixed emotions
- Shame or embarrassment that others donโt understand
- Isolation โ like your grief doesnโt โcountโ
- Hope and despair colliding in the same breath
And yet, all of this is completely normal.
Youโre not doing it wrong. Youโre doing the best you can in an impossible situation.
Six Ways to Live With Ambiguity
(Adapted from Dr. Pauline Bossโs research)
- Find meaning in the loss.
Ask yourself: What has this loss taught me? What am I learning about love, resilience, or patience? You canโt change what happened, but you can find meaning in how it shapes you. - Let go of what you canโt control.
You canโt fix the unknown or force answers. But you can choose how you respond โ focusing on your own well-being instead of trying to manage whatโs out of reach. - Rebuild your identity.
When someone disappears (physically or emotionally), it can shake who you are. Maybe youโre no longer a caregiver, a partner, or the same version of yourself. Allow yourself to rediscover who you are now. - Accept mixed emotions.
Itโs okay to feel angry and loving at the same time. Sad and relieved. Hopeful and hopeless. Opposite emotions can live together โ and that doesnโt make you broken; it makes you human. - Redefine the relationship.
Even if the person isnโt the same โ or isnโt present โ your connection can still exist in a new way. You might honor memories, continue certain traditions, or simply hold space in your heart. - Find new hope.
This isnโt about hoping the situation will change โ itโs about finding internal hope. Hope that youโll keep growing, that life will still offer joy, and that you can carry your grief without it carrying you.
Creating Your Own Healing Rituals

When thereโs no funeral or closure, you can create your own way of marking the loss.
It might look like:
- Writing a letter to say what you never got to say
- Planting a flower or tree in their honor
- Lighting a candle when you think of them
- Sharing stories with a trusted friend
- Holding a small โletting goโ ceremony
These rituals give shape to grief and help your heart catch up to what your head already knows.
You Are Not Alone
Ambiguous loss can make you feel like youโre living in two worlds โ one where you still hope, and one where youโre learning to let go. But youโre not the only one walking that line.
There are support groups and counselors who understand this type of grief. Talking with others who โget itโ can help ease that loneliness and bring a sense of belonging back into your healing process.
Learning to Carry What You Canโt Fix
There may never be an answer, a return, or a clear ending.
But there can still be peace โ the kind that comes from acceptance rather than resolution.
You donโt need to โmove on.โ
You just need to keep moving โ one day, one breath, one small act of hope at a time.
And that, my friend, is what it means to live with love that refuses to disappear.
