About Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT) for Grief

"The more you open up to feelings of loss, the more you can connect to feelings of love. Your ability to feel one side of this coin shrinks and grows in relation to your ability to feel the other side. Personal loss is inevitable, but you have a choice how to respond to feelings of loss."

Steve Hayes, PhD, Originator of ACT

Why ACT for Grief?

Grief is not a problem to fix — it is the natural, human response to love and loss. Yet grief can feel overwhelming, isolating, and disorienting. Women often tell me they feel “stuck” in painful thoughts, self-criticism, or waves of emotion that make everyday life feel impossible.

This is where Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT) becomes a powerful companion.

ACT is an evidence-based model of therapy rooted in contextual behavioral science. Instead of fighting your grief, ACT helps you create space for it, hold it with compassion, and move gently toward what matters most in your life.

ACT Principles in Grief Care

ACT weaves together six core processes. In grief therapy, these translate into gentle, practical skills that support you in living with both love and loss:

  1. Acceptance – Allowing room for painful feelings instead of pushing them down or judging them.
    → In grief: giving yourself permission and space to feel sadness, anger, yearning, or numbness.

  2. Defusion – Learning to see thoughts as thoughts, not as absolute truths.
    → In grief: noticing when your mind says “It’s my fault” or “I’ll never be okay” and noticing with self-compassion that those are thoughts, not truths. Building authentic, gentle inner skills to hold those thoughts lightly.

  3. Present Moment Awareness – Grounding in the here and now, even as grief pulls you into the past or future.
    → In grief: simple practices to anchor in breath, body, or sensory awareness when emotions overwhelm.

  4. Self-as-Context – Recognizing you are more than your grief, more than your thoughts, more than your pain.
    → In grief: remembering that you can carry love and sorrow without being defined only by loss.

  5. Values – Clarifying what matters most to you, even in the wake of loss.
    → In grief: reconnecting to love, relationships, creativity, or meaning as anchors for your next steps.

  6. Committed Action – Taking small, compassionate steps aligned with your values.
    → In grief: choosing tender actions (like reaching out for support, caring for your body, or honoring your loved one) that make life more livable.

"You don’t eliminate loss. That’s not how it works. You open up to it because it’s how we know that love matters."

Steve Hayes, PhD, Originator of ACT

ACT for Women’s Grief at Voyager Counseling

I specialize in radically compassionate grief care for women navigating life-altering loss. Many of the women I see are:

  • Caring and thoughtful, but struggle with self-criticism and self-blame

  • Tenacious and accomplished, but feel flattened by or afraid of grief’s weight

  • Authentic and open-minded, but feeling unsafe or disconnected in loss and not sure what to do

  • Professionals, therapists, and mothers who are holding their own grief quietly while caring for others

ACT meets you where you are: messy, imperfect, human. It does not require you to minimize your grief or “move on.” Instead, it helps you move with your grief — in a way that includes love, loss, and your ongoing life.

ACT and Depathologized Grief Care

At Voyager Counseling, I hold grief as a human experience, not a disorder. ACT fits this philosophy beautifully. It is not about erasing pain, but about building psychological flexibility — the ability to carry grief and still live meaningfully.

That’s why I:

  • Offer free women’s peer support groups where no diagnosis is required

  • Provide group therapy without insurance involvement, so grievers are not pathologized by mandated diagnosis

  • Accept insurance for individual therapy, because accessibility matters (I sincerely believe and practice, don’t let perfect be the enemy of the good)

ACT’s Existential and Humanistic Heart

ACT is more than a behavioral model — it is a deeply existential and humanistic way of being. Grief brings us face to face with mortality, love, and the questions that make us human:

  • Who am I, now that this person is gone?

  • How do I live in a finite, uncertain world?

  • What still matters to me when everything has changed?

In therapy, I companion you through these questions — not with quick answers, but with presence, compassion, and practices that let you explore them safely.

What ACT Looks Like in Session

An ACT-based grief therapy session with me might include:

  • Grounding with mindfulness, orienting, or self-compassion practices that you learn & carry forward

  • Exploring painful thoughts and feelings with gentleness (not judgment) at your pace

  • Clarifying your values — love, family, creativity, justice, kindness, connection—and connecting them to action

  • Learning practical skills to work with difficult emotions and self-criticism in session & after session

  • Choosing small, doable steps toward living aligned with what matters most then practicing between sessions

Over time, these practices help women feel less consumed by their pain and more connected to themselves, their love, and their lives

"Acceptance is not about liking or wanting what has happened, but about making space for the pain that comes with loss, so that life can move forward. In the willingness to experience grief, there is room to honor the love and meaning that loss represents."

Robin Walser, PhD & Darrah Westrup, PhD

In Short

ACT is both rigorous and tender. It is science-backed and deeply human. It allows us to sit with the truth that grief hurts because love matters — and it helps us keep moving toward love and meaning in the middle of the pain.

For me, ACT is not just a therapy model; it is as much a personal practice as a professional approach. It is one of the most powerful ways I know to honor grief as sacred and human while making practical, relevant, love-forward choices.

Take Your Next Step

If ACT-based grief therapy resonates with you, I invite you to:

You are not broken. You are grieving. And you do not have to grieve alone.

Women’s Grief Groups Open for Registration

Grief groups for caring, goal-oriented women struggling to include themselves in their own compassion and seeking connection

See each group page for more information and to request a 20 minute intake call.

Growing Self Compassion & Purposeful Self-Care

Radically compassionate Acceptance & Commitment Therapy for caring women who struggle to put on their own oxygen masks and yearn for nonjudgmental understanding and connection.

Expressive Arts in Grief & Loss

Radically supportive group therapy including creative arts & processing for deeply feeling women with kaleidoscope feelings in grief who yearn for supportive expression & deep acceptance.

"You don’t eliminate loss. That’s not how it works. You open up to it because it’s how we know that love matters."

Steve Hayes, PhD