“…"Successful grievers"-in whatever form-were assumed to hold firmly onto an intact ego, whereas unsuccessful grievers were prone to melancholia (Freud, 1917); had insecure attachment models (Bowlby, 1969(Bowlby, /1997; were not able to climb the ladders of task, phase, or stage models (Kübler-Ross, 1970;Worden, 2009); were not able to formulate coherent narrative life stories (Davis & Nolen-Hoeksema, 2001;Gillies & Neimeyer, 2006) or maneuver the oscillation between loss and future-oriented strains of the dual-process model (Stroebe & Schut, 2010); and had lost themselves along the way. If grief is viewed as a normative phenomenon (Brinkmann, 2016;Kofod & Brinkmann, 2017;Meier, 2022), sustaining a coherent sense of self has been one of its most long-standing demands. Given that one of the hallmarks of late modernity is an increased individualism and the belief in an autonomous and self-sufficient subject, it would be fair to expect that this long-standing resistance to accepting that the loss of others will alter one's being has not seen its final end.…”