Weeks 1–4
Letting go of blame.
- Wk 1Journal everything. Don’t filter.
- Wk 2Acknowledge your part — patterns, not blame.
- Wk 4Write the forgiveness letter. Read it. Burn it.
A 26-week guide to healing after divorce. One day at a time.
Naming what your body is doing is the first step to softening it.
Your brain spikes cortisol and searches for the threat. The loudest memory answers. This is a stress response, not a character flaw.
Grief lives in the body before it has words. The tightness loosens once the emotion is processed instead of pushed down.
They arrive in waves — and they pass. They pass sooner when you have something specific to do, instead of waiting them out.
“You are not broken. You did not fail.”
Weeks 1–4
Weeks 5–8
Weeks 9–12
Weeks 13–17
Weeks 18–26
A printable companion to walk the framework with. Each week has its theme, a few specific things to do, and a check-in question.
Tape it to the wall, keep it on your desk, or pull it up on your phone. It’s yours to mark up.
Three small things, three times a day — morning, midday, evening. Short rituals you can hold to when the day gets heavy.
Built to fit between meetings, walks, and late-night insomnia. Five minutes is enough.
I read it in one sitting on a Tuesday night. Then I cried in the shower for forty minutes. Then I started Week 1 the next morning. Five months in and I’m a different person.— Sarah M.
The 3 AM thing — I thought I was losing my mind. Reading ‘your brain is searching for the threat’ was the first time anyone made it make sense. I sleep through the night now.— James K.
Burning the forgiveness letter was the hardest week. Also the most necessary. I felt twenty pounds lighter after.— Priya N.
I bought this expecting another self-help PDF. It’s not. It’s a quiet companion. I keep it on my nightstand.— D.R.
The 30-minute grief container changed how I move through my days. I used to lose entire afternoons to it. Now it has a place.— Marcus T.
I’m on week 14. The ‘list ten things you loved about yourself before’ exercise broke me open in a good way. I’m building back.— Amelia W.
Wish it were a little more hand-holding in the early weeks. But the framework itself is solid and I’m walking it.— Tom S.
Honest, gentle, never preachy. You can tell whoever wrote this lived it.— Nadia B.
From skipdfluff · an independent press · personal experience, not a substitute for therapy