Specialised psychological support

Non-Motherhood Grief

The pain of not having been able to be a mother is a grief that exists, even if society does not always recognise it. This pain also deserves space.

Specialised therapeutic space

A taboo grief that does not need to be lived in solitude

There are women who wanted to be mothers and couldn't. Because of infertility, life circumstances, complex decisions or biological limits. And what they feel is a grief — real, deep and mostly invisible — because there is no ritual, no date, no recognised loss.

I offer you a specialised psychological space where we make room for the pain and integrate the experience together. Where we work through the rupture of the motherhood project, explore the impact on identity, and address the guilt and self-demand that so often accompany this process.

In society there is no awareness of this loss. Here, this pain is authorised, named and accompanied.

I can support you with

  • Grief after infertility treatments
  • The decision not to continue trying
  • Involuntary childlessness due to life circumstances
  • The impact on identity and sense of self
  • Guilt, self-blame and social pressure
  • Envy and its emotional weight in everyday life
  • Ambivalence between acceptance and desire
  • Building a meaningful life beyond motherhood
What fits in this space

The emotions that inhabit this grief

These are emotions that are rarely spoken aloud. Some feel uncomfortable, others carry shame. Here, each one has permission to exist without judgement.

Jar of Ambivalence — Non-Motherhood Grief
Ambivalence
Jar of Envy — Non-Motherhood Grief
Envy
Jar of Guilt — Non-Motherhood Grief
Guilt
Jar of Sadness — Non-Motherhood Grief
Sadness
Jar of Honesty — Non-Motherhood Grief
Honesty
Hover over each jar to discover the emotion

Key concept

The Rupture of the Project

For many women, motherhood was not just a desire — it was a life project, a part of their imagined identity. When that project breaks, what breaks is not only a plan: it is a way of understanding oneself, one's future and one's place in the world.

Part of the therapeutic work is allowing yourself to grieve what will not be, while beginning to explore who you are and who you can become beyond that project. Not as a consolation, but as an honest reconstruction.

How we work together

What the sessions are like

A contained space, without timelines, adapted to the rhythm of your process.

First session

Recognition and listening

The first session is above all a space of reception. Together we explore:

  • Your story and how you have arrived at this point
  • The type of grief you are experiencing (infertility, circumstance, decision)
  • How it has affected your identity, your relationships, your daily life
  • The social and family context around you
  • What you are looking for in this space
You don't need to justify your pain. You just need to come.

During the process

Sessions can focus on
  • Naming and validating grief without minimising it
  • Working through guilt, envy and self-blame
  • The impact on identity and sense of self
  • Managing social pressure, family comments and intrusive questions
  • Grief as a couple and differences in how it is experienced
  • Anniversaries, triggers and difficult moments
  • Ambivalence between acceptance and continued desire

Reconstruction

Over time, the work moves towards
  • Integrating the experience into your life story
  • Rediscovering identity beyond the motherhood project
  • Building a meaningful life from what is real
  • Redefining relationships and social bonds
  • Exploring new sources of meaning and connection
  • Living with the loss in a conscious and non-paralyzing way
Reconstructing is not forgetting or settling. It is finding a new way of inhabiting your life with honesty.
Tools we use
Narrative and identity work Emotional validation techniques Working with guilt and self-demand Psychoeducation on disenfranchised grief Meaning reconstruction

If you feel you need this space, I'm here

You don't need to justify your pain or explain your grief. It's enough to know that you don't want to carry this alone.

Book a session

Initial assessment session · Online

Let's talk?
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