Grief Doesn't Follow a Timeline. And It Doesn't Have To.
You don’t need to be told about the five stages. You’re living it, and it doesn’t feel like a neat progression. Some days are better. Some come out of nowhere and knock you flat. Some days you feel fine and then guilty for feeling fine.
The loss is there in the morning. It’s there when something small reminds you. It’s there in the space where something used to be. There’s no right way to grieve. And there’s no timeline you’re supposed to be keeping up with.
At MK Counseling Services in Pittsburgh, we offer grief counseling for people carrying loss of any kind, whenever you feel ready to reach out.
Grief Is Not What People Expect
What Grief Actually Looks Like
Most people picture grief as sadness. But grief wears a lot of different faces, and most of them don’t match what we’ve been taught to expect.
Grief can look like:
- Numbness. Not sadness, just a flatness. Going through the motions. Feeling disconnected from your own life.
- Anger. At the person you lost, at yourself, at the situation, at people who seem to have moved on.
- Guilt. The things you said, the things you didn't say, the ways you wish it had been different.
- Relief. Which can feel deeply confusing and bring its own grief behind it.
- Physical exhaustion. Grief lives in the body. Fatigue, loss of appetite, disrupted sleep, a heaviness that doesn't lift.
- Difficulty concentrating. An inability to focus that makes work, decisions, and daily tasks feel harder than they should.
And grief isn’t only about death. Loss takes many forms:
- The end of a relationship or marriage
- A pregnancy loss or infertility
- A friendship that fell apart
- The loss of who you were before something changed
- A career, a home, a version of your life that didn't happen the way you planned
Whatever you’ve lost, it counts. You don’t need to justify the weight of it.
When Grief Gets Stuck
When Loss Doesn't Lift
For most people, grief shifts over time. It doesn’t disappear, but it changes shape. It becomes something you carry differently rather than something that carries you. But sometimes grief gets stuck.
You might be dealing with complicated grief if:
- It’s been months, or longer, and the intensity hasn’t eased
- You find yourself avoiding anything that reminds you of the loss
- It’s affecting your ability to function: work, relationships, basic self-care
- You’ve withdrawn from people and don’t have the energy to re-engage
- You feel like a part of you is missing and you can’t imagine feeling whole again
Complicated grief isn’t a sign that you loved too much or that something is wrong with you. It’s a sign that the loss was significant and that you need more support than time alone can provide.
Reaching out for help doesn’t mean you’re over it. It means you’re willing to carry it differently.
How We Work With Grief
Our Approach to Grief Counseling
Grief therapy at MK Counseling isn’t about moving on. It’s not about closure, a word that rarely reflects the reality of loss. It’s about helping you find a way to carry what happened without being consumed by it. To hold the loss alongside life, rather than instead of it.
Chris Koska works with grief from a grounded, steady, and deeply human place. He draws from CBT to address the thought patterns grief leaves behind: the guilt, the self-blame, the “what ifs.”
He uses DBT skills to help regulate the emotional intensity that grief brings. And he uses Socratic questioning, not to challenge your pain, but to help you examine the beliefs about yourself and the loss that are keeping you stuck. Sessions aren’t rushed. There’s no agenda beyond what you’re ready to bring.Â
Working with Chris Koska for grief support.
Chris Koska, LPC brings a steady, grounded, and deeply engaged presence to some of the heaviest moments clients face.
He works with teens, adults, and seniors, and he’s experienced in grief that’s recent, grief that’s old, and grief that’s complicated by other things: depression, relationship strain, or a loss that others didn’t fully understand.
He’s not a passive therapist. He shows up fully and he’ll sit with you in the hard parts without trying to rush you out of them.
Chris sees clients in-person at our North Hills Pittsburgh office and via telehealth across Pennsylvania.
What Grief Counseling Looks Like at MK Counseling Services.
Your first session is just a conversation. There’s no expectation to have it together. Chris will ask about what happened, how long you’ve been carrying it, and what you’re hoping for, and you share only what you’re ready to share.
From there, sessions are built around you. Some weeks you’ll want to talk about the loss directly. Others you’ll need to talk about everything else it’s affected. Both are part of the work.
There’s no fixed timeline for grief therapy. Some clients come for a few months. Others stay longer. The pace is always yours. Sessions are available in-person at our North Hills Pittsburgh office and via telehealth across Pennsylvania.Â
Grief Counseling May Be Right for You If!
- You're not sure you're ready, but something brought you here
- You're carrying a loss, recent or long-standing, that's still affecting your daily life
- Grief has become complicated. It's not shifting and it's getting harder to manage alone.
- You want a space to talk about it without worrying about how it affects the people around you
You don’t have to be ready. You just have to be willing. Whenever that is, we’ll be here.
Whenever You're Ready
Loss changes something. Therapy helps you carry it differently.
There’s no rush. No pressure. If you’d like to reach out, fill out the appointment request form and tell us a little about what you’re carrying. We’ll take it from there, at whatever pace feels right.
