The average bereavement policy in Europe gives employees somewhere between three and five days for the death of an immediate family member. In many organisations, less for extended family. The logic underneath these numbers is not stated explicitly — it rarely is — but it is not hard to read. Three days is enough time to handle the immediate logistics. It is a reasonable period to be visibly absent. It is, implicitly, about as long as the workplace is comfortable holding space for something this inconvenient.
What those three days have almost nothing to do with is how long grief takes. And the gap between the institutional timeline and the neurological one is not just a policy problem. It has become, for a lot of people, a source of shame — which is where the problem becomes genuinely cruel.
What the science actually says about timeline
Grief researchers have known for years that the dominant cultural model of grief — the idea that it moves through stages toward resolution, that it has a natural arc with a recognisable endpoint — is not well supported by the evidence. The stages model, popularised by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross in 1969, was never intended as a predictive timeline. It was descriptive, drawn from observations of terminally ill patients, and Kübler-Ross herself later said it had been widely misapplied. The grieving person does not move tidily from denial through anger to acceptance and emerge on the other side.
What neuroscience has added to this picture is a more granular account of what is actually happening in the brain during extended loss. The work of Cambridge neuroscientist Hannah Critchlow describes relationships as distributed cognitive systems rather than purely emotional bonds, and reframes bereavement in structural terms. When someone dies, the people who were close to them lose what Critchlow calls a transactive memory: a shared cognitive network through which information, memory, and practical functioning had been distributed across two people. The brain does not just process the emotional loss. It has to rebuild an entire operating system. That is not something that happens in three days, or three weeks, or often three months.
Research published in NeuroImage found that grief activates the same neural pathways as physical pain. The anterior cingulate cortex — the region the brain uses to register bodily harm — responds to social loss in essentially the same way it responds to a physical wound. There is no switch that flips at the end of the bereavement allowance. There is no neurological mechanism by which three days of absence, however genuine, produces the cognitive reset the return-to-work expectation implies.
The performance that follows
What happens when the three days are up is that many people return to work and begin performing. Not performing in a dramatic sense — not pretending the loss didn’t happen. Performing functional. Performing present. Performing at a level of capacity that allows the environment around them to remain comfortable, because the alternative — admitting that they are still significantly impaired, that their concentration is fractured, that they are doing the bare minimum while running on a seriously depleted system — feels professionally dangerous.
This performance has real costs. Research on grief and workplace performance consistently shows that the productivity loss associated with bereavement extends well beyond any formal leave period, typically running from six months to two years depending on the severity of the loss. People show up. They are physically present. But attention is impaired, decision-making is compromised, and the cognitive resources available for higher-order work are substantially reduced. This is not a character failing. It is what a brain under sustained, unprocessed stress looks like from the outside.
The performance is also exhausting in its own right. Carrying grief while presenting as functional is an additional load on top of the grief itself — and because the load is invisible, there is no mechanism for it to be accounted for or acknowledged. The person doing it is left to manage both the loss and the concealment of the loss, usually alone, usually in an environment that would prefer not to know.
Grief doesn’t go on leave when you do.
The shame layer
What makes this particularly hard to address is the shame that accumulates around it. And the shame is not incidental — it is, in a sense, structurally produced by the gap between institutional expectation and human reality.
When an organisation gives someone three days and expects them back, it communicates — without saying it — that three days is the right amount. That feeling significant impairment at week six is therefore outside the expected range. That needing more than the policy allows is a personal failure rather than a straightforward feature of how loss works. The person who cannot concentrate at three months has no language from the institution for this, no framework, no permission to say what is actually happening. So they say they’re fine. They say they’re managing. They do not say that they are still, every single day, carrying something large and heavy and largely invisible to everyone around them.
Bereaved workers consistently report that they could not be honest with their employers about the ongoing impact of their loss — not because their employers were explicitly unsympathetic, but because the environment made honesty feel professionally risky.
What better actually looks like
The organisations that handle this well are not necessarily the ones with the most generous bereavement policies, though longer leave helps. They are the ones where a manager can say, three months after someone returns, “how are you actually doing?” — and mean it, and be capable of hearing an honest answer without immediately routing it toward HR. That capacity — for genuine, unhurried acknowledgment — is not expensive. It does not require a policy change. It requires only that the people with authority in an organisation understand that the timeline they have been operating from does not correspond to the timeline grief actually follows.
Critchlow’s framing is useful here precisely because it depersonalises what people in grief tend to experience as a personal failing. The brain is not over it because the brain is not built to be over it quickly. That is not a description of weakness. It is a description of how the brain processes the loss of a cognitive and relational system it had organised around for years. The institution that understands this is not being soft. It is being accurate about what the science says, and adjusting its expectations accordingly.
The cost of getting this wrong
There is a business case for this, too, though I find it slightly dispiriting to have to make it. The productivity research is consistent: organisations that provide adequate support for bereaved employees — adequate meaning calibrated to the actual timeline of grief, not to the three-day institutional fiction — retain those employees at higher rates, see faster returns to full function, and report higher overall team morale. The cost of getting grief support wrong is not just borne by the individual. It is borne by the team around them, by the quality of work being produced by someone running on a depleted system, and eventually by the turnover that results when people quietly leave organisations that did not make enough room for them when they needed it.
The three days is not a policy built from evidence. It is a policy built from discomfort — from the institutional preference to not have to account for things as large and slow and unruly as loss. That discomfort is understandable. It is also, for the people navigating it alone on the other side of those three days, its own quiet cruelty.
`The science of loss does not offer a timeline that fits inside a calendar. What it offers is an honest account of what is happening and for how long — and the grace to treat people accordingly. That is something any organisation can choose to do, regardless of what the policy says.
If you are personally navigating loss and would like to speak with someone, the GriefShare directory can help you find local support groups and counsellors.






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