When Grief Shows Up Uninvited

It’s been over 20 years since my dad passed away.

Twenty years… which somehow feels impossible to say out loud.
Because part of me thinks, how has it been that long?
And another part quietly whispers, how has it only been that long?

That’s the thing about grief—it doesn’t follow a timeline.
And it definitely doesn’t RSVP.

You can be in the middle of a completely normal day…
laughing, driving, folding laundry, sipping your tea…
and then something small shifts.

A song.
A smell.
A memory.

And just like that, there it is.
That familiar ache. That lump in your throat you didn’t plan for.

I used to try to push it away.
Talk myself out of it. Stay busy enough to outrun it.

But grief has a way of gently insisting… “hey, I’m still here.”

And as much as I don’t always welcome it,
I’m starting to see that it’s not just something to survive—
it’s something God can use.

He’s used it to remind me that love doesn’t just disappear.
He’s used it to draw near in ways I might’ve missed otherwise.
He’s used it to soften me… to help me sit with other people in their pain a little longer, a little better.

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted…” — Psalm 34:18

If you’re feeling that ache today—out of nowhere, uninvited—
you’re not doing it wrong.

And you’re definitely not alone.

Because even when grief pulls up a chair at your table…
God is already sitting there.

And maybe—just maybe—
that’s the quiet gift tucked inside the ache:

You don’t have to carry it by yourself.


Reflection: 

When grief shows up unexpectedly, how do I usually respond—do I push it away or allow myself to feel it?

Is there a part of my grief I’ve been trying to outrun instead of gently acknowledging?

What would it look like to invite God into those unexpected waves instead of facing them alone?


Comments

10 comments on “When Grief Shows Up Uninvited”

  1. Jo Moore Avatar
    Jo Moore

    Love these thoughts Kim

  2. Kelly Corday Avatar
    Kelly Corday

    ❤️

  3. Gay McCormick Avatar
    Gay McCormick

    God can gently hold us in our grief, sit with us and even cry with us. It’s been 53 years since my mom died, 49 years since my dad died, and the hardest of all, Dennis, which has been 6 years. But I can still praise Him, because I know He has a special plan and He will walk with me through all of it. Thank you Jesus.

  4. Jennifer Major Avatar
    Jennifer Major

    So lucky to have you as a friend ❤️. Thanks for sharing!!

  5. Jennifer Shaw Avatar
    Jennifer Shaw

    I feel this as well Love you 🥰

  6. Stephanie LaBrier Avatar
    Stephanie LaBrier

    Oh Kim… I love this so much and I have found grief shows up at the most strange times…in the grocery store seeing their favorite food you once bought, making coffee when they loved it too, passing by a favorite restaurant….
    My husband Paul passed away from illness in 2019, then two years later, my son Taylor was killed by a drunk driver. That one shook my faith but praise His Name didn’t destroy it. I have to choose daily to trust Him, choose joy and worship through it. Not always easy but definitely worth it.💕

    1. Kimberly Underwood Avatar
      Kimberly Underwood

      Stephanie, I once heard someone say about loss…”you never get over it. You just get used to it.” What a terrible thing to get used to. I’m so grateful that this is not the end.

    2. Peggy Daegele Avatar
      Peggy Daegele

      Thank you Kim. Your words are so true. My mom passed 40 years ago. She was 49 and there is not a day that goes by without thinking of her.
      You have a way with comforting words. God is with us always.
      Blessings to you.

  7. Wow! What deep and meaningful thoughts! I’m going to use this with my patients!

    1. Kimberly Underwood Avatar
      Kimberly Underwood

      Wow, thank you so much! That means more to me than you know!

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