Grief Moved Into The Attic and Stole the WiFi Password....
after my daughter died.
No se pudo agregar al carrito
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Compra ahora por $9.99
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Nelson Grey
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Grief Moved Into the Attic and Stole the WiFi Password by Nelson Grey is a brutally honest, darkly funny, and painfully raw exploration of grief. Imagine grief as an uninvited houseguest who shows up, refuses to leave, and keeps moving your furniture around while you’re just trying to survive. That’s the kind of messy, unpredictable, and absurd reality Grey lays bare.
This isn’t your typical grief book wrapped in platitudes and neat five-step models. No, Grey skewers the Hallmark version of mourning and replaces it with the unfiltered truth: grief is weird, it’s sneaky, and it will ambush you over something as ridiculous as an empty cereal box or a broken Netflix algorithm. With biting humor and gut-punching sincerity, he dismantles society’s discomfort with grief, calls out the ridiculous things people say, and gives voice to the silent, suffocating loneliness that comes with losing a child.
Between laugh-out-loud moments and heartbreaking reflections, Grey challenges everything we think we know about grief—especially for men, who are conditioned to hold it all in. Whether he’s crying in a gas station over nothing or realizing that grief is just love with nowhere to go, his journey is both painfully relatable and surprisingly comforting.
If you’ve ever lost someone and felt like the world expected you to “get over it” on a timeline that doesn’t exist—this book is for you. It’s a permission slip to grieve however the hell you need to, a sharp-witted survival guide, and, above all, a testament to the fact that love never really dies—it just changes shape.