Today I want to share something simple, but heavy. Not something from books or big knowledge… just a thought that stayed in my mind for a long time. Maybe you have also felt this, maybe you haven’t. But if you read it slowly, you might understand what I’m trying to say.
In our lives, people keep leaving us. Almost every day, someone we know, someone we love, goes away. Some departures are normal, expected… but some leave a mark that never really goes away. We have words for many of these losses. If a husband dies, the woman is called a widow. If parents pass away, the child is called an orphan. These words are small, but they carry meaning. When we hear them, we understand there is pain behind them.
But there is one kind of loss… that has no proper name.
When parents lose their child.
I used to think about this a lot. Why is there no word for it? Is it something we forgot to name… or is it something too deep to be captured in a single word?
Just think for a moment. A parent raises a child with so much care. They protect them from everything — cold, pain, even small discomfort. Many parents don’t even let their child walk barefoot on a cold floor, worried they might get sick. They lose sleep, they sacrifice their own comfort, just to see their child safe and happy.
Now imagine… that same child is suddenly gone.
An accident. Illness. Something unexpected.
How does a parent live after that?
The same hands that used to protect the child… now have nothing to hold. The same eyes that watched every small movement… now search for someone who is no longer there. It’s not just loss. It’s a silence that stays forever.
Maybe that’s why there is no word for it.
Because some pain is too big for language.
We can say “widow,” we can say “orphan,” and somehow we understand. But this… this kind of grief cannot be explained so easily. You can listen to it, you can imagine it, but you cannot fully feel it unless you go through it.
And the truth is a bit hard:
People don’t really “move on” from this kind of loss.
They just learn how to live with it.
Time doesn’t erase it. It only teaches a person how to carry it quietly. From the outside, everything may look normal again. Smiles return, routines continue… but deep inside, something always remains missing.
So maybe instead of searching for a word, we should focus on something else — understanding, patience, and presence. Sometimes just sitting silently with someone, without trying to fix their pain, is enough.
Because not every grief needs a name.
Some are simply too deep… to be spoken.