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Description
You weren't mourning who they were. You were mourning who you had so deeply, so honestly, believed them to be. There is a particular kind of grief that has no funeral, no sympathy cards, no socially accepted space to fall apart. It is the grief of mourning something that looked like love - but upon honest reflection, may never have truly been what you believed it was.Grieving the Relationship That Never Existed explores the painful inner experience of losing not just a person, but a version of reality you had built your hope around. It examines how the mind constructs a portrait of someone from fragments - early tenderness, moments of connection, the person you believed they could become - and how devastating it is when that portrait no longer holds.This book offers insight into the layers beneath this kind of loss: the grief that feels illegitimate because others don't understand what exactly you are mourning, the shame of having loved an illusion, and the quiet disorientation of rebuilding a sense of reality after it has been gently - or violently - dismantled. It does not rush you toward acceptance or reframe your pain as a lesson learned. Instead, it sits with the complexity of mourning something real to you, even when others question whether there was ever anything there to lose.For anyone who has ever been told you barely knew them or it wasn't even that serious - and felt the unbearable loneliness of a grief no one else could quite see.



