Some grief books are meant to be read quickly.This one is meant to be kept.100 Things I Wish Someone Had Told Me About Grieving is a quiet, honest paperback written from a male perspective-by a man who stayed, cared, and learned the hard truths of loss without a script.It isn't a guide.It isn't a recovery plan.And it doesn't ask you to move on.Instead, this book offers 100 short reflections-each one naming something many men discover alone after loss. The exhaustion. The silence. The anger, guilt, relief, and confusion. The pressure to be strong when you're breaking quietly. The fear that living again might mean letting someone go.Each entry stands on its own. You can open this book anywhere. Read one page. Close it again. Come back when you need to. It was written for moments when concentration is limited and grief feels heavy in the body.This paperback edition is for readers who want something tangible-something to underline, return to, or keep close during long nights and quiet mornings.This book is especially for: Men who have lost a partner, spouse, or loved oneCaregivers navigating life after staying until the endReaders who don't connect with therapy language or platitudesAnyone whose grief has been mistaken for strengthThis is grief as it is lived, not explained.All profits from this book are donated to WOLO, in honour of Georgie, and to support others living with loss long after the funeral is over.If you have loved deeply, lost profoundly, and are still here-this book was written for you.