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The Kind of Grief Society Doesn’t Recognise With Linda Rowley

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19th March 2026

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About this episode

There are some losses we never officially acknowledge.

Not the kind that comes with a funeral, flowers, or a clear ending. But the kind that quietly reshapes a life. A diagnosis. A caregiving role. A sudden accident. A future that no longer looks the way we thought it would.

In this episode, I speak with Linda Rowley, a wellbeing consultant, coach and facilitator based in regional Victoria. Linda has spent more than 20 years supporting people through change, loss, and uncertainty. Her work focuses on something many people have experienced but rarely have words for: ambiguous loss.

Linda’s professional expertise is deeply informed by her own life experiences, including being diagnosed with stage three cancer in her thirties while raising a young daughter. That journey, alongside supporting her mother through cancer at the same time, reshaped the way she understands resilience, identity, and what it means to rebuild life when everything changes.

Together, we explore how loss doesn’t always come with clear endings, why many of the most difficult life changes go unrecognised by society, and how we can support both ourselves and others through these complex transitions.

Remember; You may not be ready to die, but at least you can be prepared.

 

Take care,
Catherine

Show notes

Guest Bio
Podcast Guest - Image
Linda Rowley

Wellbeing Consultant and Coach

Linda Rowley is a wellbeing consultant, coach, and facilitator with over 20 years’ experience supporting people and organisations through change, loss, and life’s uncertain in-between spaces. Based in regional Victoria, Linda’s work is shaped not only by her professional background, but by her own life-altering health experiences — experiences that deepened her compassion and grounded her practice in what truly helps when life no longer looks the way we expected.

Linda has a particular passion for ambiguous loss,  the often unseen and unnamed grief that arises from uncertainty, unresolved endings, caregiving roles, and major life transitions. Drawing on positive psychology, wellbeing science, and neuroscience, she supports individuals and organisations to make sense of loss, rebuild trust in themselves, and find meaning alongside complexity, rather than rushing to “fix” what cannot be fixed.

Known for her warm, steady presence, Linda creates safe, practical spaces where difficult conversations can be held with honesty, dignity, and hope. Her work invites people to feel less alone, better equipped, and more able to support themselves and others through life’s hardest moments.

Summary

What you’ll hear in this episode:

  • What ambiguous loss is and why many people experience grief without realising it
  • How illness, caregiving, and life transitions can quietly reshape identity and relationships
  • Why society often fails to acknowledge losses that don’t come with rituals
  • The six resilience strategies that help people live alongside uncertainty and ongoing grief
  • Why advance care planning can protect families from difficult decisions and complicated grief later
Transcript

Linda: [00:00:00] if you think of a parent of a child with a disability, for instance, or someone who's living with a condition, whether it's a neurological condition or other illness or injury. That loss is ongoing. There's no clear ending to that, you know, and so it can be really hard to grieve for what's lost and also be grateful for what you still have, right?   Catherine: Welcome to Don't Be Caught Dead, a podcast encouraging open conversations about dying and the death of a loved one. I'm your host, Catherine Ashton, founder of Critical Info, and I'm helping to bring your stories of ... Read More

Resources

Connect with Linda Rowley

Website: https://lindarowley.com.au

LinkedIn: Linda Rowley

Linda’s capstone project involved reviewing and synthesising existing research on barriers to advance care planning and the role of positive psychology. A sample of the journal articles she reviewed includes: 

  • Factors influencing older adults to complete advance directives. Palliative and Supportive Care, 8, 267–275.  https//www.doi.10.1017/S1478951510000064
  • Facilitators and barriers to advance care planning implementation in Australian aged care settings: A systematic review and thematic analysis  https://doi.org/10.1111/ajag.12639
  • The impact of advance care planning on end-of-life care in elderly patients: randomised controlled trial https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.c1345

Additional Resources are:

 

  • Make Death Admin Easy with The Critical Info Platform

A simple system to sort your personal paperwork for when your information becomes critical.

Sign up here.

 

  • My Loved One Has Died, What Do I Do Now?

Our guide, ‘My Loved One Has Died, What Do I Do Now?’ provides practical steps for the hours and days after a loved one's death. Purchase it here.

 

  • Support Services
    If you're feeling overwhelmed by grief, find support through our resources and bereavement services here.

 

  • Support the 'Don’t Be Caught Dead' podcast with a one-off or regular donation to help Critical Info, a certified social enterprise, keep creating free, high-impact conversations about death, grief and planning—every contribution fuels our mission to reduce the burden on families and build a more death-literate, compassionate community. Donate now.

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