Skip to content
Michael Joel Hall
  • Journal
  • About
  • Press
  • Contact
  • Books
Michael Joel Hall

What Science Knows About Grief

longreads.comWhat Science Knows About GriefMusic critic Amanda Petrusich writes about losing her husband suddenly in 2022 and her experience with EMDR therapy. The most impactful element wasn't the therapeutic protocol itself but her therapist's repeated instruction to actually grieve—to stop resisting pain and instead value it as an essenti✦ Read ad free and get the full MichaelFilter · $5.50
Part of the MichaelFilter

Members read the whole piece — the writeup, the pull-lines, and the full transcript. Unlock access for $5.50.

Unlock the full reading · $5.50 →
Music critic Amanda Petrusich writes about losing her husband suddenly in 2022 and her experience with EMDR therapy. The most impactful element wasn't the therapeutic protocol itself but her therapist's repeated instruction to actually grieve—to stop resisting pain and instead value it as an essential internal system, like releasing tension in a finger trap rather than pulling harder.

Teaching:
• Resistance creates tension: students gripping in poses are like pulling against the finger trap—cue softening into difficulty rather than muscling through it
• Permission to feel discomfort in a pose as information rather than problem to solve immediately—grief as practice, sensation as teacher
• The instruction 'let's make sure you're really breathing' mirrors 'make sure you're really grieving'—students often perform practice rather than inhabit it
• Asana as system that requires nurturing rather than conquering—the pose tightens when you thrash against it

Writing seeds:
• Essay on resistance patterns in practice: how students avoid sensation the same way we avoid grief, and why that compounds suffering
• Post comparing finger trap mechanics to vinyasa—the paradox of effort and release, when trying harder makes everything worse
• Piece on permission structures in the shala: how teacher language can authorize students to feel what they're actually feeling rather than perform progress
• Exploration of practice as grief technology—how the mat becomes a container for processing what we can't solve our way out of

Idea map:
• Grief as system literacy: understanding internal processes as systems that need nurturing rather than fixing—maps directly to practice as systems literacy
• The finger trap as embodied metaphor for attention: you can't think your way out, only feel your way through—practice as method for learning this
• Thrashing against difficulty as opposite of practice—embodiment requires allowing rather than solving
• The therapist's reminder mirrors teaching function: creating permission to actually experience rather than bypass what's present

Source: https://longreads.com/2026/07/07/grief-science-new-yorker/
Thursday, July 9, 2026 · 1:40 pm
💬 Comment

Notes from the field

No notes yet · members & customers welcome

  1. No notes yet. Be the first to leave one.

Leave a note

Want more? (optional — commenting alone never subscribes you)
Comments are for members & customers. We’ll email a one-tap link to confirm it’s you.

Join MichaelFilter

Michael Joel Hall’s daily reading — the field journal, critical-thinking cards, and synthesis — as a membership.

$5.50/month · cancel anytime

Join — $5.50/mo →

Secure checkout on theyoga.club. A yearly option ($55) is available there too.

© 2026 Michael Joel Hall

  • Journal
  • About
  • Press
  • Contact
  • Books
Comment

Journal entry

Comments here are for members & customers. We’ll email a one-tap link to confirm it’s you if needed. Not a member yet?