When someone is dying slowly—from illness, age, or circumstance—you begin grieving while they're still here, condensing emotions that normally unfold over months into weeks or days. This early mourning isn't morbid; it's a practical way your mind and body prepare for a loss you can see coming.
Anticipatory grief is the mourning that begins before an expected loss, such as a terminal diagnosis, advancing dementia in a loved one, or the end of a relationship, and it carries many of the same emotional and cognitive burdens as grief after death. It is often invisible and unsupported because the loss has not yet officially occurred, leaving people without access to typical grief communities or rituals.
AI can provide a private, always-available space for people navigating anticipatory grief to process fear, document memories while the person is still present, and prepare emotionally for what is coming without burdening the person who is ill or the people around them.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.