Love, Loss, and the Ongoing Bond

Feb 7, 2026

Keely Rhiannon, LLMSW, CGP, CGCS-CA, Lead Grief Counselor

February often places love at the center of public attention. For those who are grieving, this focus can feel tender or isolating. Celebrations of romance and connection may highlight what has changed or what feels absent. Grief may feel more visible during this month, even when it remains largely unspoken.

Grief exists because love exists.

The pain many experience in February reflects the depth of connection that continues beyond loss. Love does not end with death. It often remains present through memory, longing, and the ongoing bond we carry with those who have died. This connection can bring comfort at times and ache at others.

Valentine’s Day and similar traditions can create pressure to participate in ways that may not feel authentic. Some people may feel sadness, others guilt for moments of joy, and some may feel disconnected altogether. There is no correct response. Grief does not follow social expectations or timelines.

For some, February becomes a time to redefine what love looks like now.

Love may show up as remembering quietly, setting boundaries, or caring for oneself. It may look like honoring loss privately rather than publicly. All of these expressions are valid.

If this month feels heavy, it does not mean you are doing grief incorrectly. Grief may be asking for gentleness, patience, and acknowledgment rather than resolution.

Love continues, even as it changes shape.

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