There are some losses you see coming—an illness that stretches on, hard conversations that unfold over weeks, or a slow goodbye that allows you to prepare your heart.
And then there are sudden losses.
One day, life feels ordinary. Next, your mom is gone—and it doesn’t feel real. You reach for your phone out of habit, expecting her to be there—still reachable, still part of your day-to-day. You catch yourself thinking, I should tell her this, or I need to ask her something, and then the thought collapses into the truth.
When a mother dies suddenly, grief often arrives with a sense of shock. It isn’t only sadness; it’s the whiplash of losing someone before you’ve had time to process what’s happening.
Her mom was her best friend—the ultimate encourager who showed up for everything and provided a safe space where Brittany could cry without judgment. Even after Brittany moved 600 miles away, they talked nearly every day. Distance didn’t weaken the relationship; it deepened it.
Their “thing” was coffee: morning chats when Brittany visited, shared breakfasts, and long conversations that made life feel more stable.
Then, in early February, Brittany received a call she wasn’t prepared for: her mom had cancer. Like many of us, Brittany assumed “cancer” meant time—time to plan, time to talk, and time to say what mattered. But it was pancreatic cancer, and it had already spread. Her mom died in mid-March. From the first diagnosis to the final goodbye, it was only weeks.
If your mom’s death was sudden, you’re likely experiencing a kind of grief that feels particularly intense. Not because your love was greater than someone else’s, but because the loss came before your heart had a chance to catch up.
Here are three practical ways Brittany started navigating the grief of losing her mom so quickly—and how you can start navigating it too.
One of the most difficult aspects of sudden loss is how surreal it can seem. Brittany talks about feeling disbelief and numbness, as if her mind can’t keep up with reality.
She also noticed something many people who are grieving experience: grief doesn’t always show up as tears. Sometimes it appears as shutting down. It may show as irritability, anger, or a shorter temper. Sometimes you feel strangely “fine”—until you don’t.
If you find yourself wondering why you aren’t reacting the “right” way, remember that your body and mind are likely responding to trauma.
A few things that can help:
When death arrives suddenly, it often leaves behind unfinished business: words you didn’t say, questions you didn’t ask, moments you assumed would come later.
Brittany shared one regret with raw honesty: the Christmas she didn’t go home. Life moved forward, and she was busy with a new house. She assumed there would be another Christmas. She also mentioned a quieter kind of loss: as she got older and became a mom herself, she wished she had asked more about her mom’s life before motherhood—her stories, her history, and the person she was beyond her role as “Mom.”
If you didn’t get the time you hoped for, grief and regret can become intertwined. This doesn’t mean you loved your mom less; it means you were living normally in a world where we all assume we have more time than we actually do.
Here are a few gentle ways to make room for what feels unfinished:
After her mom died, Brittany felt responsible for holding the family together. She was the “doer” and the mediator. But that same year, more hardships arose: her grandmother’s health became worse, her sister and nephews were displaced, and her brother faced deep struggles. Brittany tried to keep everyone connected from afar.
Because there was so much to handle, Brittany didn’t have room to feel. But grief doesn't disappear because you stay busy; it finds other exits, like late-night sobbing or sudden waves of blinding emotion. Eventually, Brittany recognized those moments as a signal that she needed support.
If you feel pressured to be “the strong one,” consider these steps:
Strength doesn’t mean ignoring your pain; it means acknowledging it and making room for support.
Maybe your mom’s death happened fast—weeks, days, or suddenly out of nowhere—and you still feel like you’re catching your breath. You might keep replaying the end or feel guilty about what went unsaid.
You don’t have to navigate this grief alone.
If you’re looking for more guidance, discover the Living Without Mom book and companion video, which offer strategies for significant days, grief overload, and triggers—along with real stories and faith-filled encouragement to remind you that God is with you in your sorrow.