
Why Do You Feel So Much Grief After Narcissistic Abuse? Catholic Answer https://hello.catholicnarcissistrecovery.com/supportgroup
It’s not just anger or frustration—you’re mourning something real. You're mourning a loss of who you thought someone was, a loss of a false reality, of false love, a loss of yourself.
But God has a purpose for your tears.
🔹 Why grief happens (even if you’re more angry than sad).
🔹 What you’re really grieving: Lost love? Lost time? Yourself?🔹 How to process grief in a healthy, faith-filled way.
🔹 Jesus cried. You can too. Grieving isn’t weakness—it’s healing.
🙏 God will turn your tears into joy. You’re not alone in this.
📌 Join our Catholic Narcissist Recovery support group:
Key Points:
• The Unexpected Grief of Narcissistic Abuse
• What Are You Really Mourning? Lost Love, Time, or Self?
• How Suppressed Emotions Resurface in Healing
• The Physical Side of Grief: Where Do You Feel It?
• Why Anger Often Masks Deeper Sadness
• How to Process Grief With Faith & Prayer
• Jesus Wept: Why Crying is Not Weakness
• Encouragement: God Will Turn Your Tears Into Joy
Key Takeaways:
✔️ Grief is not just for death. You’re mourning what you thought was real.
✔️ Anger often hides deeper sadness. Allow yourself to feel it fully.
✔️ Your body holds grief. Pay attention to where you feel it.
✔️ Healing takes time, but it’s temporary. God has a plan for your tears.
✔️ Even Jesus cried.
Grieving is not weakness—it’s part of healing.
Bible Verse for Reflection:
📖 Psalm 30:11 – “You have turned my mourning into dancing; you removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy.”
Healing from narcissistic abuse takes time, but you are not alone in your grief. Let yourself feel, cry, and heal—because God is with you. 💙