The Happya Life with Clare Deacon
What if thriving isn’t about having it all together but finally feeling at home in your own skin?
Welcome to The Happya Life with Clare Deacon, the podcast for women ready to move from survival mode to self-worth, nervous system healing, and emotional freedom.
If you feel stuck in people-pleasing, overwhelmed by self-doubt, or burned out from always doing more, you’re not alone. And you’re in the right place.
💬 We talk boundaries, burnout, emotional regulation, trauma recovery, nervous system work, and creating a life that actually feels good (not just looks good).
I’m Clare Deacon, trauma-informed therapist, positive psychology coach, and Amazon #1 bestselling author of Blooming Happya. I combine science, soul, and strategy to help women stop performing and start becoming.
In each episode, you’ll get:
- Practical tools and nervous system insights
- Real talk on trauma, boundaries, and rebuilding your self-worth
- Coaching grounded in neuroscience, embodiment, and positive psychology
This is where self-help meets self-connection.
🎧 Ready to heal the patterns holding you back and start living from your truth?
Press play. This is where your transformation begins.
The Happya Life with Clare Deacon
Who Are You After Losing Someone Central to Your Life
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🪷If something in this spoke to you, I’d love to hear, message me.
Grief is talked about in terms of sadness and loss and stages. What almost never gets discussed is what it does to your sense of who you are.
When you lose someone central to your life, you do not just lose them. You lose the version of yourself that existed in relationship to them. Who you were as a daughter, a partner, a friend. How your days were organised. What gave your identity its shape.
And when that is gone, the question underneath the grief, who am I now, does not always get asked. Which is why so many women come through bereavement and still feel like they do not quite fit their own lives, even when the sharpest grief has softened.
In this episode, Clare explores the identity dimension of bereavement that nobody talks about. Gently, without rushing. Because this is not easy territory, and it deserves real attention.
This is for you if you have been feeling unfamiliar to yourself in grief, and you are not sure whether that is normal, or how long it is supposed to last.
A Cuppa and Chat is a free conversation to find out whether working with Clare is the right fit. happyacoach.com/chat. You do not have to decide today. But if this has named something you have been carrying, do not ignore that.
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Let’s Stay Connected: Your Journey Deserves Support
Email Clare Directly: clare@happya.co.uk
Music by LemonMusicStudio
I want to start this episode with something that grief rarely gets credit for.
Grief is one of the most significant identity experiences a person can go through. Not just an emotional experience, not just a painful season, but something that changes who you understand yourself to be at your core.
And because grief almost never gets discussed that way, because what it does to your sense of self is far less talked about than the sadness and the loss, a lot of women go through bereavement and come out the other side wondering why they feel so unfamiliar to themselves. Wondering why, even after the sharpest grief has softened, something still does not feel settled.
It is because grief does not just take a person from your life. It changes the landscape of who you are.
I want to talk about that today. Gently. Without rushing it.
My name is Clare Deacon. I am a positive psychology and nervous system specialist. This is the Happya Life podcast.
I want to name something specific before we go anywhere else.
In the early stages of grief, people around you have expectations of what you will feel and how long it will last. There is a rough shape in most people's minds for what grief looks like, and a timeline, often unspoken, for how long it is acceptable to be in it.
What nobody prepares you for is the identity dimension. The strange, disorienting experience of not quite recognising yourself. Of reaching for how you used to feel in your own skin and not quite finding it. Of realising, in quiet moments, that the version of yourself who existed before this loss is not quite the same version who exists now.
That is not pathology. That is grief doing what grief actually does.
Notice what it feels like when you think about who you were before this loss, and who you are now. If there is a gap between those two things, you are not imagining it. That gap is real, and it matters.
When someone central to our lives dies, we do not just lose them. We lose the version of ourselves that existed in relationship to them.
Who were you as a daughter? As a partner? As a friend to this particular person? As a parent? That role, that relationship, that daily orientation toward someone, it shaped how you moved through the world. It shaped how you made decisions, how you spent your days, what mattered and why.
When they are gone, that orientation goes too. And the question of who you are without it is one that grief does not automatically answer.
Some women find themselves not knowing what to do with time that used to be organised around someone else. Not knowing what they want from their days without a particular person in them. Not knowing who they are when they are not someone's daughter, or someone's partner, or someone's closest friend.
That disorientation is not a sign that you are not coping. It is a sign that the loss was significant enough to reorganise your identity. Which is also a measure of how much the relationship mattered.
And the nervous system is deeply involved in this. Your system learned to be in relationship with that person, to orient toward them, to feel safe in their presence. Their absence registers in the body as threat, as loss of regulation, as a fundamental wrongness that thought cannot resolve.
This is why grief is physical. Why it sits in the chest and the throat and the stomach. Why it exhausts you in a way that is completely out of proportion to anything you have done that day.
I want to sit with a question that does not often get asked in the middle of grief.
Not "how do I feel?" but "who am I becoming?"
Because grief is not just the end of something. It is also, when you move through it properly, the beginning of something. A reconfiguring. A period in which you find out which parts of yourself were genuinely yours, and which parts were shaped entirely by the relationship that is now gone.
Some women find, on the other side of this work, that there are parts of themselves they had set aside for years, suppressed or subordinated to the needs of the relationship, that now have room to surface. That there are things they want that they had not given themselves permission to want before. That there is a version of themselves waiting on the other side of grief who is not just the bereaved version, but something more whole.
That is not a betrayal of the person you lost. It is the most human possible response to a loss that required you to grow.
I want to name something gently but honestly.
Grief that does not include the identity dimension gets stuck. Not because the person grieving is doing it wrong. But because the question underneath the loss, who am I now, does not get addressed. And unanswered identity questions do not resolve quietly. They surface in anxiety, in a low-level lostness, in a persistent feeling of not quite fitting your own life.
The women who work through this properly, who allow the identity question to be part of what they explore, describe something specific on the other side. They describe feeling at home in themselves again. Making decisions from what they want rather than from what the relationship required of them. Knowing, sometimes for the first time in a long time, what they actually value. Waking up in the morning without their first thought being about the absence of the person they lost.
That does not mean the person is forgotten. It means they are integrated. Part of who you are, rather than a hole in who you are.
I want to hold this episode gently, because I know this is not easy territory.
If you are in grief right now, you do not have to rush this. But if a part of you has been quietly wondering why you feel so unfamiliar to yourself, I want you to know that is not weakness. That is the identity dimension of grief that nobody told you about.
You do not have to figure this out alone.
A Cuppa and Chat is a free conversation with me. A low-risk way to find out whether working together is the right fit for where you are. Book at happyacoach.com/chat. You do not have to decide today. But if something in this episode has named something you have been carrying, do not ignore that.
New episodes every Wednesday. I will see you next week.