While social work can be personally and professionally fulfilling, it is also a complex profession that can negatively impact workers. These impacts not only detrimentally effect individual social workers, but can also extend out to collegial relationships, workplace culture, and quality of direct client work. One potential impact currently not researched extensively within the social work context is disenfranchised grief. Engaging a narrative approach, this research project explores the stories of disenfranchised grief of two social workers: Chloe and Grace (participant chosen pseudonyms). Through the narrative analysis of their stories, it emerged that Chloe and Grace’s grief, as well as other body-mind responses, had been disenfranchised. The narrative analysis also revealed four plotlines – the limited integration of the body into social work; the prioritising of client work; the dominant discourse of being a professional; and the place of organisational values and policy – that contributed to this disenfranchisement. The findings from this research project are presented through plotlines, ‘re-storied’ passages, quotes, as well as ‘turning points’; providing a vivid sense of Chloe and Grace’s lived experiences of disenfranchised grief. Framing social worker well-being as a social justice issue, and calling on organisations to enact policy that enables social workers to access meaningful and relevant supervision as a strategy to support their overall well-being, is an implication for practice drawn from this research project.