The therapists on this page offer grief counselling in Camden and nearby areas, with both in-person and online appointments available. All specialise in bereavement and loss.

Therapy in Camden

Camden is a distinctive inner north London neighbourhood known for Camden Market, its music venues, and its creative, diverse culture. Beyond the market, Camden offers quieter residential areas, the Regent's Canal, and easy access to Regent's Park. Camden is served by the Northern and Jubilee lines at Camden Town and Chalk Farm stations, with fast connections to central London and beyond.

What is bereavement therapy?

Grief is the natural response to loss. Most commonly this is the death of someone we love, but grief can also follow the end of a relationship, a miscarriage, the loss of a role or identity, or any significant change that takes away something we were counting on.

Grief does not follow a predictable path. It can be consuming and overwhelming, or it can arrive in waves — sometimes months or years after the loss. For some people, grief becomes stuck. They find they cannot move forward, or that loss has reopened earlier wounds. Bereavement therapy offers a dedicated space to grieve fully, without pressure, judgement, or a timeline.

Christina Johnson

Are you currently impacted by stress, anxiety, low self esteem, depression, OCD, trauma, phobias, addiction, loss, grief or anger? Have…

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Martina Klich

I trained at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust as a Psychodynamic Psychotherapist. I am a member of the Tavistock Society of…

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Cordy Griffiths

I have more than five years experience helping a wide range of people of all ages, ethnicities and backgrounds. I have a particular focus…

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Laura Farley

I offer a warm, confidential and non-judgemental space where clients can explore present challenges and understand themselves more clearly…

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Navdeep Kaur

I am an integrative therapist with a humanistic foundation, placing the therapeutic relationship at the centre of the work. I aim to offer…

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Farah Chowdhury

BACP-registered integrative counsellor and psychotherapist, and the founder of A Space for You Counselling. She works from locations in…

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Naomi Segal

Psychodynamic and psychosexual relationship therapist (MA, MBACP, RegCOSRT) who works with individuals and couples navigating sexual…

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Eoghan Naughton

I am a BPS chartered counselling psychologist with extensive experience and skills in working with psychological and emotional problems in…

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Ania Dyczkowska

I am a UKCP Registered Psychotherapist with over a decade of experience providing psychotherapy for individuals and couples in Central…

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Jonathan Cullen

MBACP-accredited integrative psychotherapist with over 25 years of experience, working from Marylebone in central London and Waltham Cross…

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Simon Rudd

UKCP registered and MBACP member integrative psychotherapist practising in Bloomsbury, Central London, and online. He trained at the…

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Evelina Rimgailaite

I can help you better understand the patterns in your thoughts, emotions, and relationships, particularly those shaped by past experiences…

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What to expect from bereavement therapy

Bereavement therapy is led entirely by your pace and your experience of loss. Your therapist is not there to move you through stages of grief or tell you what to feel — they are there to sit with you in it, help you make sense of your experience, and support you in finding a way to carry what has happened.

Some people need only a handful of sessions; others benefit from longer-term support, particularly when the loss is complex, unexpected, or traumatic, or when grief has reopened earlier wounds. Therapy can also be helpful for those supporting a grieving partner, parent, or child, and for people who feel they should be over it by now but aren't.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long after a bereavement should I wait before starting therapy?

There is no right answer. Some people find it helpful to start therapy soon after a loss, to have a supported space during the acute phase. Others come to therapy months or years later. The most important thing is that you access support when you feel ready.

Is grief therapy different from regular therapy?

Not fundamentally — good therapy always makes space for loss. However, a therapist experienced in bereavement will understand the specific dimensions of grief: the physical responses, the non-linear nature, the complicated feelings that often accompany loss, including relief, guilt, or anger.

Can grief therapy help with complicated grief?

Yes — prolonged grief disorder (sometimes called complicated grief) is a recognised condition in which grief does not ease over time and significantly impairs daily functioning. Specialist bereavement therapy can be very effective in these cases.