Client Success Stories

Learning to

Breathe Again

Sandra's Story

Case Study 02

Sandra's Story

From Invisible to Unstoppable

The Challenge

Sandra lost her husband of twenty-six years to a sudden cardiac event. There was no warning, no preparation, no chance to say the things that might have been said if either of them had known. One ordinary Tuesday he left for work, and by the afternoon her entire life had changed in a way she had no framework for.
She came to coaching four months after his death, referred by a friend who had worked with Gina. She described herself as functioning but not living. She was going to work, feeding her adult children when they visited, answering messages. But she felt nothing she could name as genuine. The world had gone flat, and she did not know how to bring it back.

The Emotional Struggle

Sandra had been raised

In a family where grief was private, brief, and managed. Crying was permitted at funerals. Extended mourning was considered self-indulgent. She carried those messages directly into the aftermath of her husband’s death, and they were working against her in ways she could not fully see.

She had not spoken honestly about what his death had done to her sense of self. She and her husband had built their entire adult lives together. She did not know, at sixty-one, who she was as an individual. The identity disruption was as significant as the grief, and she had no language for it and no one with whom to address it safely.

The Process

The Coaching Process

Gina began by creating the space Sandra had never had to grieve without a timeline or an audience. The early sessions were not structured around goals or outcomes. They were structured around honesty. What had the loss actually taken. What had the marriage been. What had the twenty-six years produced and cost and given. Sandra spoke more honestly in those sessions than she had in the months since his death combined.
As the acute grief began to soften slightly, the work shifted toward the identity question. Who was she outside of the marriage. What parts of herself had existed before the partnership and might be available to her now. What she actually wanted her life to look like, not the life she thought she was supposed to want as a widow, but the one she might choose if she allowed herself to choose.

The Outcome

A year after beginning coaching, Sandra joined a pottery class. It was something she had wanted to do for thirty years and had always deferred. She described the first session as the first time since her husband’s death that she had been fully present in an experience rather than observing herself from a distance.

She carries the loss. She expects to always carry it. But she describes it now as something she holds rather than something that holds her. She is building a life that is genuinely hers, and she is doing it in a way that she believes would make her husband proud.

Ready to do the honest work?

If Maria’s story resonates with you, it might be time to stop administering your life and start living it. Let’s talk.