Breathing Through Grief - Why Healing Isn’t Just Emotional
When people think about grief, they often think of emotions like sadness, anger, confusion, or longing. But grief doesn’t live only in the heart or the mind. Grief lives in the body, too.
For many who are grieving, the body holds tension, fatigue, restlessness, and pain long after words feel unavailable. This is why healing after loss isn’t just emotional, it’s physical, nervous-system-based, and deeply embodied.
Understanding how grief affects the body can be an important step toward gentler, more complete healing.
How Grief Lives in the Body
Grief activates the body’s stress response. When a significant loss occurs, the nervous system often shifts into a state of heightened alert, commonly known as fight, flight, or freeze. While this response is protective in the short term, it can become exhausting when grief is prolonged.
You may notice physical symptoms such as:
- Tightness in the chest or throat
- Shallow breathing or frequent sighing
- Fatigue or heaviness in the body
- Restlessness, anxiety, or difficulty sleeping
- Headaches, muscle tension, or digestive changes
These symptoms are not signs that something is “wrong” with you. They are signs that your body is responding to loss in the way it knows how.
Why Talking Isn’t Always Enough
Talking about grief can be helpful, but many people find that words alone don’t fully address what they’re feeling. This is because grief is not just a cognitive experience; it’s a physiological one.
Sometimes the body needs support before the mind can feel relief. When grief is stored in the body, it may show up as:
- Feeling stuck or numb
- Feeling overwhelmed without knowing why
- Becoming easily triggered or emotionally flooded
- Difficulty relaxing, even in safe environments
This is where body-based practices, such as breathwork, can play a meaningful role.
What Is Breathwork?
Breathwork is a gentle, intentional practice that focuses on using the breath to support the nervous system. Unlike everyday breathing, breathwork invites awareness, slowing, and regulation, helping the body shift out of stress and into a state of safety and calm.
In the context of grief, breathwork can help:
- Release physical tension held in the body
- Calm the nervous system
- Create space for emotions to move without force
- Encourage grounding and presence
- Support rest and emotional regulation
Breathwork does not require you to relive your loss or “fix” your grief. Instead, it offers a quiet way to listen to the body and respond with care.
When the nervous system feels safe, the body is better able to process loss. Breathwork works by signaling safety, slowing the heart rate, softening muscle tension, and deepening the breath.
This can be especially helpful for those who:
- Feel emotionally overwhelmed
- Struggle with anxiety or panic related to grief
- Feel disconnected from their body
- Have difficulty resting or sleeping
For many, breathwork becomes a way to meet grief without pressure. Allowing emotions to surface naturally, at a pace the body can handle.
Breathing Through Grief
The winter months, especially after the holidays, can feel quiet and heavy. January often brings fewer distractions and more space, sometimes more space than feels comfortable when you’re grieving.
This quieter season can also be a meaningful time to focus on gentle care, reflection, and support. Practices like breathwork align naturally with winter’s slower rhythm, offering warmth, grounding, and connection during a time that can feel isolating.
In recognition of how deeply grief affects both the body and the mind, Roupp Funeral Home is offering a Breathwork for Grief session on January 20th, as part of our continued commitment to supporting families beyond the funeral service.
This session is designed to:
- Provide a safe, supportive space for grief
- Offer gentle breathwork practices accessible to all
- Support relaxation and nervous system regulation
- Allow participants to connect with their grief without pressure or expectation
No prior experience with breathwork is required. This session is not about forcing healing, it’s about creating space for it.
Open to all at no cost. To learn more, and to reserve your spot, please visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/breathing-through-grief-tickets-1977966789914
You Don’t Have to Carry Grief Alone
Grief asks a lot of the body. If you’ve been feeling exhausted, tense, or disconnected, it may be your body’s way of asking for care.
Healing doesn’t mean forgetting. It doesn’t mean moving on. It means learning how to carry loss in a way that honors both your loved one and yourself.
At Roupp Funeral Home, we believe that grief support should be compassionate, holistic, and ongoing. Whether through conversation, community, or body-based practices like breathwork, we are here to walk alongside you during the holidays, after them, and in the quiet months in between.
If you feel called to explore a gentler way of supporting your grief, we invite you to join us. You are not alone and your body deserves care, too.













