A little while back, a dear friend of mine lost her mom. It was sudden, and everyone was, you know, just heartbroken. My first instinct, like a lot of folks, was “I gotta bring food!” And don’t get me wrong, a warm meal can be a comfort. But then I got to her house, and the kitchen counter was already a mountain range of casseroles, cakes, and pasta bakes. Seriously, enough to feed an army for a week. My friend looked overwhelmed by it all, on top of everything else.

It got me thinking, really thinking. Food is kind of the default, right? But when someone is deep in grief, sometimes the last thing they can deal with is more stuff, even well-intentioned stuff. Or they have specific dietary needs, or just no appetite. So, I started to ponder what else, what truly helpful things, one could offer. I remembered years ago when my own grandpa passed. My aunt, bless her heart, wasn’t eating, but what she really struggled with was just the day-to-day. The mail piling up, the dog needing a walk. That stuck with me.
Shifting My Approach
So, for my friend this time, and drawing on what I’d sort of figured out over the years, I decided to skip adding to Mount Casserole. Here’s kinda what I’ve learned to do, through a bit of trial and error, really.
First off, practical help is huge. I mean, just offering to do a load of laundry, or run to the grocery store for milk and bread – things they just can’t face. I once just quietly did the dishes for a grieving neighbor while they were on the phone making arrangements, and she later told me it was the kindest thing anyone did that week. It’s not glamorous, but it’s real.
Then there are the paper goods and household essentials. Sounds boring, I know. But think about it: if they have family and friends coming in and out, they’re burning through stuff at an incredible rate. Showing up with these items can be a quiet lifesaver. For my friend, I put together a big bag with things like:
- Paper towels
- Toilet paper (you can never have enough at times like these!)
- Tissues – lots and lots of tissues
- Paper plates and plastic cutlery (so no one has to think about dishes)
- Disposable cups
- Some easy-to-grab, no-prep snacks like granola bars, fruit, and bottled water
It’s one less errand for them to even think about, let alone go out and buy when their mind is completely elsewhere.

More Than Just Tangibles
If there are kids or pets, oh man, that’s another area where you can really step in. Offering to take the kids to the park for an hour or two, or just to your place to play. Or walking the dog. It gives the grieving person a little breathing room, a moment of quiet in the chaos. I’ve seen the sheer relief on a parent’s face when someone offers to entertain the little ones for a bit, giving them space to make a phone call or just sit down for five minutes.
Sometimes, it’s about comfort in a different way. I once put together a small basket for someone – nothing fancy. Some nice, unscented hand lotion because hospital soap and constant hand washing dries your skin out, a soft pair of socks, maybe some herbal tea bags for when they can stomach something gentle. Just little things that say ‘I’m thinking of your comfort during this awful time’. It’s not about fixing anything, because you can’t, but it’s about offering a moment of solace.
And look, gift cards can be good too, but maybe not just for any old restaurant. A gift card to their local grocery store, or for a food delivery service they can use when they are ready, on their own time, for what they actually want or need. That gives them a bit of control, which is something people often feel they’ve lost a lot of during grief.
The Most Important Thing I’ve Learned
The biggest one, though, and it costs absolutely nothing? Just being there. Seriously. Sometimes, all someone needs is a quiet presence. Not even talking, just sitting with them, offering a hand to hold. Or, if they do want to talk, being ready to listen without jumping in with advice or your own stories unless they specifically ask. When my friend was going through it with her mom, I just went over one afternoon, made us both a cup of tea, and we sat in comfortable silence for a good hour while she occasionally just sighed or said a few words. Later, she said it meant the world because there was no pressure.
So yeah, food is thoughtful, it really is, and it comes from a good place. But sometimes, digging a little deeper and thinking about what truly lessens the burden or offers a different kind of comfort can make a huge difference. It’s not always about grand gestures. It’s often about the small, practical, quiet acts of care that show you’re there for them when their world is upside down. That’s what I’ve learned, anyway, just by going through these things with people I care about and seeing what actually seemed to help.
