In the wake of an unimaginable loss, a young soul grapples with a shattered heart and a world turned upside down. Waking to the devastating reality of their fiancée’s sudden death, they find themselves caught in a storm of grief, desperately seeking solace in the warmth of their late partner’s compassionate family, whose kindness offers a fragile beacon of hope amid the darkness.
Yet, even as they cling to this fragile lifeline, they face a harsher, colder reality at home. Their own parents, bound by ignorance and prejudice, rush to push them forward, demanding a swift return to normalcy while uttering cruel, homophobic slurs against the memory of the one they loved most. This clash of love and rejection leaves them lost, isolated, and unsure how to navigate the unbearable pain that no one seems willing to acknowledge.

My (22 F) parents (42 F, 44 M) are unbearable after the death of my fiancée (23 F) and I don’t know how to cope.










































According to grief expert Dr. William Worden, effective mourning involves accepting the reality of the loss, processing the pain of that loss, adjusting to a world without the deceased, and finding an enduring connection with the lost relationship while beginning new life paths. The experience described by the author directly contradicts these necessary steps, as the parents are actively preventing the acceptance of reality and creating new, acute sources of pain.
The parents are exhibiting severe maladaptive coping mechanisms characterized by projection, denial, and internalized homophobia. By attacking the deceased fiancée, insulting her character, and demanding the survivor ‘get over it’ quickly, the parents are avoiding their own discomfort with the loss and the reality of their child’s same-sex relationship. The mother’s comments about killing the fiancée if she were alive, along with the father’s timeline for mourning, represent emotional abuse and coercion, which severely hinders the survivor’s ability to regulate emotions. Furthermore, the parents are undermining the survivor’s sense of reality by insisting the fiancée was toxic and by mocking the plan to change the surname, which is an important part of honoring the commitment made.
The author’s coping mechanisms, informed by prior therapy, are failing because they are being actively sabotaged by the primary support system. The comparison between the fiancée’s family (who offer comfort and validation) and the biological parents (who offer aggression) highlights a critical need for immediate boundary setting. The appropriate course of action is not to find a way to ‘make’ the parents empathetic—as their current behavior stems from deep-seated prejudice and inability to cope—but rather to focus solely on self-preservation. The constructive recommendation is for the survivor to immediately prioritize physical and emotional separation from the parents, relying heavily on the support received from the fiancée’s family and their best friend, while consulting with a therapist experienced in trauma and grief to navigate this hostile environment.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.























The individual is experiencing profound grief following the sudden death of their fiancée, compounded by severe emotional distress caused by their parents’ hostile and unsupportive reactions. The central conflict lies between the survivor’s deep need for comfort, validation of their relationship, and time to mourn, versus the parents’ aggressive demands for immediate recovery, homophobic rejection of the deceased partner, and attempts to control the survivor’s identity and grieving process.
Given the extreme emotional abuse and invalidation experienced, is it possible for the survivor to achieve healthy grieving while remaining physically dependent on parents whose core values and reactions are actively damaging their mental health, or must the priority shift immediately to establishing physical distance and seeking external support structures?







