In theory, Tuesday’s episode of This Is Us, focusing on the funeral of Jack Pearson, should have been its most heart-wrenching yet. It’s a scene played out in many television series, watching characters we’ve come to love don black outfits to say their final goodbyes. But what makes This Is Us so powerful each week is its repeated reminder that when we love someone, there is no such thing as a “final” goodbye.

We have known that Jack passed away since early in Season 1. It was not a surprise. But what is surprising is how This Is Us used the story of the Pearson family to show the nuances of grief—how, in this case, losing a father or a husband is not something that you eventually “get over” but instead, a loss that becomes an integrated part of life going forward.

We saw it with Kate’s ritual of watching the Super Bowl with her father’s ashes, Randall remembering how his father would calm him when he became overwhelmed, Kevin’s residual guilt for his final words to his father and Rebecca’s inability to take off the necklace she received from her husband. Those moments are presented alongside frequent flashbacks, which helped audiences better understand the present lives of the Pearson family. With its format—giving audiences a glimpse into the past, present and now *spoiler alert* the future—This Is Us shows audiences how loss can shape how we live. And that is a narrative often missing from the way we approach grief in the real world, let alone how it’s portrayed on television.

This Is Us writer Dan Fogelman tweeted after the now-infamous fire episode on Sunday, revealing that the show’s deep understanding and portrait of grief comes from a personal place. “My mom died 10 years ago, unexpectedly. It’s the hinge upon which my life swings. Jack’s death is the Pearson hinge,” he wrote. “We look back. We move forward. That’s our collective journey. Sad? Yes. But when you look through a wide enough lens—it’s also outrageously beautiful.”

In the post-Super Bowl episode, Randall (Sterling K. Brown) compared grief to a toothache that turns from bursts of intense pain to a dull ache. I lost my mum nearly three years ago, and so far, that ache has yet to go away. I think we often believe that grief is temporary, and only allow expressions of it in that first few months or maybe a year. However, what the Pearsons show, and what I have grown to understand, is that there will always be moments of wishing that loved one was still around, whether that’s during the Super Bowl, Mother’s Day or simply when you see something that reminds you of the person you’ve lost.

When Rebecca (Mandy Moore) swallowed her tears to be strong for her kids, I remembered pushing my grief aside to be strong for my grandmother, who had just lost her child, and my dad, who had just lost the love of his life. When Randall recalled his father’s support of his big dreams, I remembered my mother’s support that was so potent I could *feel it* whenever I called to tell her about something I had achieved. To this day, I can still hear her say, “I’m so proud of you, babe” and I miss that, every time something new and exciting comes along in my career. And when Kate (Chrissy Metz) and Kevin (Justin Hartley) felt pangs of guilt over her their father’s death, my stomach dropped, remembering all the times that I was cruel to my mother, not realizing that our time was limited. Personally, This Is Us has become a unique form of grief counselling for me, validating feels that I’ve had and giving me an outlet to cry it out each week—and I am not alone.

Everyone eventually experiences loss and it’s important to understand that grief is not a moment in time (or a singular episode). That’s what this show has given us.

Filed under: flare, This Is Us