Grief and loss
There's a point where grief becomes too much — not because you're too sensitive, but because you've been carrying too much for too long. That's grief overload, and it's a real thing.
Humans have a finite capacity for processing loss at any given time. When losses come faster than that capacity can absorb, or when grief has been suppressed for a long time, the system can become overloaded. What this looks like varies: numbness, an inability to feel much of anything, or the opposite — intense emotional reactivity to things that seem small, because the underlying grief is so large.
Grief overload can also happen to people who've spent years supporting others through loss while their own grief went unattended. Caregivers, people in helping professions, people who became "the strong one" in their family — they often arrive at a point where the accumulation finally surfaces, often triggered by something that seems disproportionate.
One of the crueler aspects of grief overload is the shame it generates. You feel like you should be functioning better. Other people have been through hard things and seem fine. You worry that your emotional state is a character flaw rather than a natural response to accumulated, unprocessed loss. This shame tends to keep people isolated rather than reaching for help.
What's actually happening is that you've been carrying more than one person can carry alone, for longer than was sustainable. That's not weakness. It's arithmetic.
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