This study explores the transformational journeys of mothers after miscarriage, focusing on how they narrate their experiences of loss, coping, and growth. Using a qualitative narrative research design, the study involved five mothers from Lucena City, Quezon Province, who experienced miscarriage within the past three to ten years. Participants were recruited through snowball sampling and interviewed using semi-structured guides, allowing them to share their stories in depth. Data were analyzed thematically, guided by Swanson’s Middle Range Caring Theory and the Pagdadala Model of Sikolohiyang Pilipino, which provided frameworks for understanding care, resilience, and cultural burden-bearing. Results revealed themes of career-driven lifestyles during pregnancy, emotional struggles of grief and trauma, reliance on family and faith as coping mechanisms, and the redefinition of self and motherhood after loss. Despite pain and stigma, participants described gradual healing through support systems, meaning-making, and renewed perspectives on motherhood. The findings emphasize miscarriage as both a deeply painful and transformative experience, highlighting the need for compassionate care and culturally grounded support. Based on the results, the study proposed a psychosocial support workshop, to be facilitated with the assistance of professionals, to guide grieving mothers in their healing and growth.