Time Doesn’t Heal
Why High Achieving Widowed People Feel Stuck and How to Rebuild a Meaningful Life
Impossible d'ajouter des articles
Échec de l’élimination de la liste d'envies.
Impossible de suivre le podcast
Impossible de ne plus suivre le podcast
30 jours d'essai gratuit à Audible Standard
Acheter pour 17,91 €
-
Lu par :
-
Teresa Amaral Beshwate
À propos de ce contenu audio
Time doesn't heal grief—in fact, it often makes things harder.
In Time Doesn't Heal, best-selling author, grief expert, and widow Teresa Amaral Beshwate challenges one of the most common and damaging myths grieving people are told: that time alone will make the pain fade. For widowed people—especially high achievers—this belief often leads to frustration, self-criticism, and the feeling of being stuck, despite doing everything "right."
Drawing on years of professional coaching experience and her own lived journey through loss, Teresa explains why driven, capable people tend to struggle the most after the death of a spouse—and why traditional grief advice so often fails them. Grief does not respond to deadlines, willpower, or productivity. It requires new skills, new tools, and a new relationship with yourself.
With compassion, clarity, and practical wisdom, this audiobook offers a proven path forward—one that replaces waiting and white-knuckling with intentional support, self-understanding, and meaningful rebuilding.
Inside, you'll learn:
- Why high-achieving widowed people feel stuck—and why it's not a personal failure
- How grief affects the brain, identity, and nervous system
- How self-criticism dramatically increases suffering
- What actually helps you move forward without "letting go" or "moving on"
- How to rebuild a meaningful life that honors both your person and who you are becoming
Whether you are newly widowed or years into this journey, Time Doesn't Heal provides reassurance, direction, and practical guidance for moving forward—not by erasing grief, but by learning how to carry it while creating a life that is still deeply worth living.
©2026 Teresa Amaral Beshwate (P)2026 Teresa Amaral Beshwate