Navigate Select ESC Close

The Science & Process of Healing from Grief | Huberman Lab Essentials

2026-05-28 Science & Technology
12.4k
584
73
Andrew Huberman
Andrew Huberman
7.5m subscribers

Unlock all features

FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.

Description

In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, I explain the neuroscience of grief, including how the brain maps relationships across three dimensions — space, time, and closeness — and why losing someone requires a remapping of those neural circuits. I describe how grief differs from depression, the role of oxytocin in driving yearning after a loss, and why people move through grief at different rates. I also discuss science-based tools for grieving adaptively, including how to access feelings of attachment while decoupling them from episodic memory. Finally, I explain how foundational biology — particularly sleep and cortisol rhythms — shapes our capacity to navigate the grieving process. Show notes: https://go.hubermanlab.com/RtAnILi Watch more Huberman Lab Essentials: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPNW_gerXa4OGNy1yE-W9IX-tPu-tJa7S&si=a1_sA7rUT-fE0OM5 Follow Huberman Lab Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hubermanlab Threads: https://www.threads.net/@hubermanlab X: https://x.com/hubermanlab Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hubermanlab TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@hubermanlab LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-huberman Website: https://www.hubermanlab.com Newsletter: https://www.hubermanlab.com/newsletter Timestamps 00:00:00 Grief 00:01:47 Myths of Grief, Kubler-Ross & fMRI 00:03:56 Brain Mapping Experiment, Proximity 00:07:05 Inferior Parietal Lobule; Space, Time & Closeness 00:09:20 Episodic Memory & Remapping After Loss 00:13:41 Tool: Dedicated Time, Counterfactual Thinking & Guilt 00:15:30 Oxytocin & Individual Differences in Grief 00:16:30 Prairie Voles, Monogamy & Nucleus Accumbens 00:21:58 Vagal Tone, Emotional Disclosure & Bereavement Writing Study 00:26:51 Cortisol Rhythms, Complicated Grief & Sunlight 00:30:57 Rational Grieving, Neuroplasticity & NSDR #hubermanlab #science #health #grief Disclaimer & Disclosures: https://www.hubermanlab.com/disclaimer

Top Comments (10)

@hubermanlab 2026-05-28

Thank you for watching. Please click the subscribe tab and then the "bell" icon to subscribe to our channel here on YouTube and get notified when new content is posted... And thank you for your interest in science! -- Andrew

30 3 replies
@Neuroshiftdaily 2026-05-28

Grief is not something you “get over.” It is something your mind and body slowly learn how to carry differently. Healing does not mean forgetting. It means finding a way to keep loving without losing yourself.

40
@Eggdrupsoop 2026-05-28

This video helped me realize that I need to start a grief practice, a personal exercise, the same way I need to start a smaller muscle training routine. Not treating the practice like an afterthought, but as an essential part of moving through life like a rational human being. Thank you for your interest in communicating science to the general public.

16
@TheNutragrammatronLab 2026-05-28

The idea that grief requires a literal “remapping” of expectations and attachment circuits is fascinating. It explains why loss can feel less like a single emotion and more like the brain repeatedly searching for someone who no longer exists in your reality.

34 4 replies
@IncandescentVoltage 2026-05-28

This really resonated with me. It’s been many years since my husband passed, so I don’t expect him to walk through the door or call anymore, but the grief still rises up in the moments where he should have been here, our sons graduating, major milestones, those once-in-a-lifetime moments. And honestly, sometimes I still feel angry that he’s gone, especially when I try dating and realize how rare it is to be treated with the kind of love, steadiness, and care he gave so naturally.

8
@julieb8445 2026-05-29

I lost my son 7 years ago. I still get stuck in the "what ifs" I think as a parent your main job is to raise your children to provide, help them grow and live. I feel like I failed in my most important job. I have to focus on the good and not the "what ifs". There's nothing I can do about the past, but our thoughts can be strong. I appreciate your videos on grief. I wonder if you could do one just on child loss. I've experienced all losses, my mom, 2nd mom, brother, cousin, best friend, but child is as they say "the greatest loss".

25 4 replies
@prisingVolet 2026-05-28

I lost 2 of my sisters to suicide in the past few years, it's changed my world and has been the biggest learning curve of my life to say the least. Thank you for this Andrew, will give it a listen.

5
@Surface_Depth 2026-05-28

The prediction machinery angle is an interesting part: the brain doesn't just feel the loss; it keeps running the same expectations it always has. Expects them to walk in. Expects the phone to light up. Not because you're in denial, but because a system built on thousands of confirmed predictions doesn't just stop when the data stops coming in. What Huberman doesn't quite name is how disorienting that is at a mechanical level. Most people experience that loop as a failure - like they're not grieving correctly, or they're holding on too tight. But it's not sentiment. It's the prediction engine doing exactly what it was designed to do, with inputs that no longer exist. That reframe doesn't make it easier. But it does make it less like something is wrong with you - and more like something is working exactly as built, in a situation it wasn't built for.

9
@teresacorrigan3076 2026-05-28

Thank you for acknowledging the loss of animals as a source of grief.

28
@lindafuchs8498 2026-05-31

Thank you, I look forward to listening & learning. My sister passed away suddenly & unexpectedly 3 days ago. The timing of this information is perfect & appreciated. Thank you. GOD BLESS 🙏 💫❤️

3

Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge

  • Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
  • Chat with videos, export text & PDF
  • $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research

Free forever plan • All features unlocked

App screenshot