Grief does not move in neat stages-and if you feel broken because healing hasn't followed a timeline, you are not failing.The Million Stages of Grief is written for those living with loss, trauma, and the quiet exhaustion of surviving what changed everything. It offers understanding and reassurance to readers who feel unseen by traditional models of grief-and who are searching for language that finally fits their experience.Michael Reed wrote this book after losing his wife and both of his daughters in the wildfire that destroyed large portions of Gatlinburg, Tennessee in 2016. In the aftermath of profound loss, he discovered that the widely accepted stages of grief did not reflect the reality he-and so many others-were living.What he found instead was a truth rarely spoken: grief unfolds in countless moments, memories, setbacks, and small survivals-not in orderly stages. This book was written to give language to that experience and to remind readers they are not broken for grieving the way they do.This is not another five-stage grief book. There are no timelines to meet, no emotional benchmarks to pass, and no pressure to "move on."Instead, The Million Stages of Grief offers compassionate insight into: Why grief resurfaces unexpectedlyHow trauma affects the grieving processWhy anger, numbness, and heartache are normal responsesHow to release the belief that you are grieving "wrong"What it means to live alongside grief, rather than trying to erase itMichael Reed is a trauma-informed author and certified grief coach whose work has helped thousands of people navigate grief with honesty and compassion.Written with emotional safety and deep respect for the grieving process, this book meets readers where they are-whether the loss is recent or years behind them, whether the pain is loud or quietly carried. Readers describe this book as validating, grounding, and deeply comforting during the seasons of loss.This book is for you if: You have experienced profound loss or traumaTraditional grief models have left you feeling unseenYou want understanding, not platitudesYou need reassurance that your grief makes sense