You’re devastated, but you can’t explain why. It was “just” a pet. It was “just” an ex you broke up with years ago. It was a pregnancy no one knew about. It was a relationship the world didn’t accept. You grieve in silence because no one seems to understand that your loss is real, your pain legitimate, your need for support just as valid as anyone else’s.
Disenfranchised grief describes mourning that society doesn’t recognize, support, or validate. It’s the grief you’re expected to hide because others don’t see your loss as worthy of grieving. This lack of acknowledgment doesn’t make the grief less real—it makes it harder to process and heal.
What Is Disenfranchised Grief?
Disenfranchised grief is a term coined by grief scholar Dr. Kenneth Doka. It refers to grief that:
- Is not openly acknowledged
- Is not socially sanctioned
- Is not publicly mourned
- Receives little or no social support
Why It Happens
Society has unspoken rules about:
- Who is allowed to grieve
- What losses are worth grieving
- How grief should be expressed
- How long grief should last
When your grief falls outside these rules, it becomes disenfranchised—denied the social recognition and support that aid healing.
The Impact
When grief isn’t acknowledged:
- You can’t express it openly
- Support systems don’t mobilize
- No rituals mark the loss
- You may question your own feelings
- Isolation increases
- Grief becomes complicated
- Healing is impeded
Types of Disenfranchised Grief
Unrecognized Relationships
Examples:
– Ex-spouses or partners
– Affairs or secret relationships
– LGBTQ+ relationships (especially historically or in certain communities)
– Online relationships
– Former friends
– Estranged family members
– Coworkers or acquaintances
– Pen pals or long-distance connections
– Therapists, teachers, mentors
The Problem:
Society defines who has the “right” to grieve. If the relationship doesn’t fit recognized categories, your grief may be dismissed.
Unrecognized Losses
Examples:
– Pet loss
– Pregnancy loss (especially early)
– Infertility
– Giving a child up for adoption
– Loss of job, career, or identity
– Loss of home or homeland
– Loss of health or ability
– Divorce
– Moving away from community
– Loss of dreams or hopes
– Celebrity or public figure deaths
– Dementia (grieving while person is alive)
– Incarceration of a loved one
The Problem:
Some losses aren’t considered significant enough for grief, even when they’re profoundly painful.
Unrecognized Grievers
Examples:
– Children (assumed not to understand)
– Elderly people (expected to be “used to” loss)
– People with intellectual disabilities
– People with mental illness
– The bereaved who “caused” the death (drunk driving, etc.)
– Those who weren’t present at death
– Distant relatives or friends
– Former relationships
The Problem:
Some people aren’t seen as capable of or entitled to grieving.
Unrecognized Deaths
Examples:
– Suicide (stigma remains)
– Drug overdose
– AIDS-related deaths (especially historically)
– Deaths of stigmatized individuals
– Deaths in violent or illegal circumstances
– Deaths where the body isn’t recovered
– Deaths considered shameful
The Problem:
How someone died can affect whether grief is supported.
Unrecognized Ways of Grieving
Examples:
– Not crying
– Continuing to function
– Using humor
– Not wanting to talk
– Grieving “too long”
– Not grieving “long enough”
– Grieving differently from family
The Problem:
Your grief style may not match what others expect.
Common Examples of Disenfranchised Grief
Pet Loss
Why It’s Often Disenfranchised:
– “It’s just an animal”
– Expected to “get another one”
– No bereavement leave
– Often dismissed by those who haven’t experienced it
The Reality:
Pets are family members. The bond can be as strong as any human relationship. The grief is real and valid.
Pregnancy Loss
Why It’s Often Disenfranchised:
– Early loss may be dismissed as “not really a baby yet”
– People minimize with “you can try again”
– Parents may not have told anyone about pregnancy
– No rituals or recognition for many losses
The Reality:
Parents grieve the child they imagined and the future they anticipated. The loss is significant regardless of gestational age.
Divorce
Why It’s Often Disenfranchised:
– Expected to be relieved if you wanted it
– Told to be angry, not sad
– Previous relationship stigmatized
– Friends may take sides
The Reality:
Divorce involves grieving a relationship, identity, dreams, and often a person you still love.
Dementia
Why It’s Often Disenfranchised:
– Person is still alive
– Death expected to be “relief”
– Ambiguous loss—they’re here but not here
– Caregiving overshadows grieving
The Reality:
You grieve the person you knew while caring for who they’ve become. It’s profound and sustained loss.
LGBTQ+ Losses
Why It’s Often Disenfranchised:
– Relationship may not have been recognized
– Family may not acknowledge partner
– May be excluded from rituals
– Support may be limited
The Reality:
Love is love. The grief is identical regardless of gender or orientation.
How Disenfranchised Grief Affects You
Emotional Impact
- Questioning if you have the “right” to grieve
- Shame about your feelings
- Suppression of grief
- Isolation
- Anger at lack of support
- Complicated grief development
Behavioral Impact
- Grieving in secret
- Not seeking support
- Returning to “normal” too quickly
- Avoiding reminders
- Self-destructive coping
Relational Impact
- Feeling misunderstood
- Distance from people who don’t get it
- Difficulty finding community
- Isolation from usual support systems
Coping with Disenfranchised Grief
Validate Your Own Grief
Affirm:
– Your loss is real
– Your pain is legitimate
– You have every right to grieve
– Others’ opinions don’t define your grief
– Your grief doesn’t need permission
Challenge:
– Internalized messages that minimize your loss
– Comparisons to “worse” losses
– Guilt about grieving
Find Those Who Understand
Options:
– Support groups for specific losses (pet loss, pregnancy loss, etc.)
– Online communities
– Friends who “get it”
– Therapist familiar with disenfranchised grief
– Others who’ve experienced similar loss
Create Your Own Rituals
If traditional rituals aren’t available:
– Hold private memorial
– Create memorial space or shrine
– Write letters to the lost person/pet/dream
– Mark anniversaries
– Create tangible memorial (planting, art, donation)
Express Your Grief
Even privately:
– Journal about your loss
– Create art
– Write poetry or story
– Talk to the deceased (pet, person, dream)
– Allow tears and emotions
Educate Others (If You Choose)
Options:
– Explain your loss and its significance
– Share resources about grief
– Help others understand
– Note: You don’t owe anyone education
Protect Yourself
When necessary:
– Limit time with dismissive people
– Have responses ready for unhelpful comments
– Set boundaries about discussing your grief
– Prioritize supportive relationships
Seek Professional Help
Therapy can help:
– Validate your experience
– Process grief without judgment
– Develop coping strategies
– Address complicated grief if it develops
What Doesn’t Help
Comments That Dismiss
- “At least it wasn’t a real…”
- “You can always get another…”
- “It was for the best”
- “You weren’t that close anyway”
- “Time to move on”
- “Others have it worse”
Expecting Quick Recovery
Grief doesn’t follow a timeline. Disenfranchised grief may take even longer without support.
Comparing Grief
All grief is valid. Comparing losses doesn’t help.
Telling People How to Feel
Everyone grieves differently. There’s no right way.
Supporting Someone with Disenfranchised Grief
Do
- Acknowledge the loss
- Validate their feelings
- Ask about the person/pet/loss
- Listen without judgment
- Be present
- Recognize anniversaries
- Follow their lead on what helps
Don’t
- Minimize the loss
- Compare to “worse” losses
- Tell them how to feel
- Rush their grief
- Avoid mentioning the loss
- Judge their grieving style
Changing the Culture
Advocating for Recognition
- Talk openly about disenfranchised losses
- Support workplace bereavement policies for all losses
- Create inclusive rituals
- Challenge minimizing language
- Educate others about grief
Breaking Silence
When safe to do so:
- Share your experience
- Speak the name of who/what was lost
- Model healthy grieving
- Support others with similar losses
Moving Forward
Disenfranchised grief is doubly painful: you bear the loss plus the burden of others’ dismissal. But your grief is valid whether or not it’s recognized. The love behind the grief was real, and that can never be taken away.
Find those who understand. Create your own rituals. Validate your own experience. And know that you’re not alone—countless others grieve in the shadows alongside you, mourning losses the world doesn’t see.
Your grief doesn’t need society’s permission. You don’t need anyone’s approval to honor what you’ve lost. The relationship, the dream, the life—it mattered. And that’s enough.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re struggling, please reach out to a qualified mental health provider. Arise Counseling Services offers compassionate, professional support for individuals and families throughout Pennsylvania.
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