EOLPodcast

Ep. 515 Collective Grief Rituals: Honoring Ancestors and Carrying Light

Learn about the importance of community-based rituals for grief to help us heal the divisions in our society.

In this solo episode I’m sharing some my observation that our society is currently in a massive collective grief spiral, largely due to unaddressed grief from the COVID pandemic as I wrote about in a recent Substack essay. Collective community rituals are needed to help us express and alchemize this grief together. I believe we in the death-positive movement carry a responsibility to help our families, neighbors, and community-members come together in simple ways to acknowledge grief and I invite you to participate in this endeavor.

Read the Substack post here

DOWNLOAD How to Create A Collective Grief Ritual

Listen here:

This episode includes:

  • We are in a massive spiral of cultural grief
  • What happens when grief is not tended
  • Why community grief rituals are important
  • What other cultures teach us about collective mourning and remembrance
  • How to incorporate grief rituals into other types of deathwork
  • Who should take up this challenge to help our society address its unexpressed grief
  • Ideas for simple grief rituals and how and when to use them

โ€œMay we find ways, each in our own communities, to tend the tears of things, to honor our ancestors, and to carry light together through this dark season of grief.โ€

Karen Wyatt MD

Links mentioned in this episode:

EOLPodcast

Ep. 514 Life Advice for Entrepreneurs from the Terminally Ill with Travis Luther MA

Learn how business leaders and entrepreneurs are being taught to find meaning in life from the stories of the terminally ill.

My guest Travis Luther MA is a sociologist and entrepreneur and a recognized expert in childhood trauma. He teaches business leaders through workshops, one-on-one coaching, and keynote speaking about finding deeper meaning in work and life. He is the author of the forthcoming book What We Learn When We Learn We Are Dying: Life Advice from the Terminally Ill. He discusses his current work and his advice for entrepreneurs based on what he has learned from numerous interviews with people dealing with terminal illness. Learn more at his website:

travisluther.com

Watch on YouTube

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This episode includes:

  • What inspired Travis to interview people facing terminal illness
  • Why he teaches entrepreneurs the lessons he has learned
  • How this teaching is received
  • His teaching about the “lived” and the “unlived” life of entrepreneurs
  • Why Travis focused on younger people and entrepreneurs for the interviews he did
  • The most common advice was to stop deferring life to the future and live now
  • Unprocessed trauma and grief are common for people in the entrepreneurial community
  • The Time Traveler MethodTM developed by Travis
  • Why almost everything that happens can be viewed as a lesson to learn from

Links mentioned in this episode:

If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerย leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atย Patreon.com/eolu, especially to my latest supporterย Susan and to Connie WS for upping your pledge. Thank you also toย Taya Levine who made a donation on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.

EOLU Blog

What Death Doulas Offer at the End of Life

And why you need to know about their work

In my position as a retired hospice physician I often hear stories of end-of-life experiences that did not go well for patients or their families, both in the hospital and at home. When people describe the challenges theyโ€™ve faced, even when working with a local hospice, I tell them that a death doula might have made all the difference. But most have never heard of a death doula and have no idea what they do.

Unfortunately many people are unaware of this rather new field of deathcare that is poised to change how people and their loved ones navigate death, dying, and what comes after. But Iโ€™m here to tell you about it so you can have more options and make better decisions for yourself and your loved ones when you are in a time of need.


What Is a Death Doula?

A death doula is a non-medical guide who offers emotional, spiritual, and practical support before, during, and after death. We often say that death is much more than a medical experienceโ€”it is a personal, emotional, spiritual, familial, societal experience that we have largely chosen to ignore for the past century. Most people at the end of life need far more than medical care alone can offer.

Hospices have been created to help with the medical aspects of care and also offer social work and chaplaincy support. But in this modern world of Western medicine, hospice staff members are often carrying heavy caseloads and may have constraints on the time they can spend with patients and families. Many gaps in care can arise for those being served at their time of greatest need, which leads to the stories of suffering Iโ€™m often told.

Unlike hospice nurses, who manage the medical aspects of end-of-life care, death doulas arenโ€™t bound by institutional rules or time limits. They show up and fill in the gaps during those times of great need. In the best of worlds they work alongside the hospice staff, each offering their expertise and collaborating for the best care possible. But when the hospice staff experiences pressure to shorten visits, the death doula is more able to focus on presence for as long as needed.


What Do Death Doulas Actually Do?

The services offered by death doulas vary widely and some may choose to specialize in one area or another. Some doulas sit at the bedside, some hold space in advance when illness is newly diagnosed, some serve the dying directly through the last breath, others assist families and caregivers with after-death plans.

What unites them is a passion for changing how we care for people at the end of life. The people called to this work are devoted and excel at being present during times of suffering with love and compassion. Here is a list of some core services provided by death doulas:

  • Death educationย โ€“ helping people understand the dying process, physically and spiritually, including early in the process of illness
  • Advance directives & planningย โ€“ guiding people through end-of-life paperwork with compassion
  • Ritual designย โ€“ creating meaningful vigils, farewells, or legacy ceremonies
  • Family supportย โ€“ helping loved ones navigate grief, guilt, and decision-making
  • Hospice augmentationย โ€“ providing what hospice often canโ€™t: time, touch, storytelling, bedside presence
  • After-death guidanceย โ€“ assisting with body care, home funerals, or grief rituals
  • Meaning-makingย โ€“ helping the dying reflect on life, purpose, forgiveness, and legacy

Why This Work Is Still So Unknown

While the modern death doula movement got started in the early 2000โ€™s, the work of providing support to the dying is ancient and used to be available in every neighborhood and village. But modern healthcare and burial practices that emerged at the turn of the 20th century caused a dramatic shift in illness and death care away from the family home and into institutions. So over the span of a half century we lost all the intrinsic knowledge of how to care for our own dying loved onesโ€”and we made death taboo, the very aspect of life we used to hold near us so tenderly.

The death doula movement is trying to revitalize the โ€œold waysโ€ of being with dying in a new formโ€”not necessarily a next-door neighbor, but trained helper who can show up at your door in a time of need with just the right tools to offer. Most people are unaware of death doulas and many communities lack access to this kind of care because the movement is still young. But things are changing and we can help them change fasterโ€”by talking about death doulas and sharing whatโ€™s possible. And also by getting training ourselves so that we can be the ones holding presence when the people we love are at the end of life.


Why Everyone Needs What Death Doulas Offer

Itโ€™s hard for most of us to imagine what the end of our own lives might be like. If we have not experienced the death of someone close to us we have no idea what it involves and what it takes to make the last breath as peaceful and loving as possible. Thatโ€™s one reason why so many people are caught off guard when they suddenly find themselves caring for someone 24/7 with absolutely no training or understanding of whatโ€™s happening.

Take it from those of us who have been through these scenarios many timesโ€”you will need support when someone you love is dying and at the time of your own death. Youโ€™ll be better off if you spend some time now learning about the work of death doulas and if there are any in your community.

Some aspects of death care that you may not think of nowโ€”but you will need laterโ€”include:

  • Permission to grieveโ€”not just at the time of death but throughout the process of illness
  • Time to reflect on life and relationships and what is needed for healing old emotional wounds
  • A sense of meaning and tying up loose ends; making sense of the events of life and how they have mysteriously unfolded for you
  • Guidance when systems fall short, which they inevitable will; you will have impossible decisions to make and will need support through that process
  • A calm, compassionate presence that can change everything for the people going through loss; a tragic experience can become sacred in the presence of love
  • A role model for how to show up for one anotherโ€”not just in dying, but in living with more depth

โ€œIf you donโ€™t need a death doula today, you will someday. Or someone you love will. And when that time comes, I hope you know they exist.โ€

Death Doulas and Modern Technology

At this time of rapidly expanding technology and artificial intelligence there is even more need for the human touch and heart-based presence of a human death doula. While AI may be able to augment the work of doulas by recording advance directives, researching funeral poetry and customs, or offering tips to caregiversโ€”in the quiet moments and the liminal spaces where the breath falters and the veil is thinโ€”the touch of a human hand, the tear that falls on a cheek, the softly whispered blessing, are not replaceable.

Death doulas may choose to use AI themselves to augment their training, to learn about unfamiliar cultural or religious death traditions, to find recipes for a clientโ€™s special dietary needs, or the perfect prayer for a vigil. But they should not fear the technologyโ€”the need for human presence will never disappear.


How to Choose a Death Doula

Remember that there are many different types of services offered by death doulas, so be clear about what type of help you need. Consider factors like training, area of specialization, availability, experience, and certification when making a choice. Many doulas will offer a free consultation to get acquainted before you decide who to hire.

Check with local hospices, palliative care facilities or community websites to find out if there are doulas in your area. In addition the following organizations have national doula registries where you can search within your state and community:

Be sure to talk to your loved ones if youโ€™re interested in the possibility of hiring a death doula. Let them know that everyone benefits when the right care and assistance are available. And now that you know about death doulas pass this information on to others who may need it as well.

You matter because you are you, and you matter to the end of your life. We will do all we can not only to help you die peacefully,
but also to live until you die.ย 

-Cicely Saunders

Check out my next post on Substack where Iโ€™ll explore how AI might help us deepen our own death awareness.ย 

EOLPodcast

Ep. 513 Why (Death-Aware) Spirituality Matters Now More than Ever

Check out this recent episode from my podcast What Really Matters that includes why we need death-aware spirituality.

This week I’m taking a little summer break from interviews and sharing with you a recent episode from my newly-relaunched podcast What Really Matters. I discuss the importance of spirituality right now at this particular time in our society and specifically what I think of as “death-aware” spirituality. I hope you find it interesting. You can check out the archives of the What Really Matters Podcast at the following link:

https://www.podpage.com/what-really-matters-everyday-spirituality

Listen here:

This episode includes:

  • Why we all need to look inward at this time
  • Collectively we are facing crises of grief, meaning, and moral guidance
  • We need spirituality that is: Death-Aware, Ego-Wise, and Rooted in Love
  • 3 simple practices for each of those goals
  • Why I returned to this podcast
  • How it differs from EOLU Podcast
  • What to expect in future episodes

Links mentioned in this episode:

If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerย leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atย Patreon.com/eolu, especially to my latest supporter Suzanne, and thank you toย everyone who bought me a coffee or made a donation on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.

EOLPodcast

Ep. 512 Navigating a Life-Changing Diagnosis: Action Steps with Hsien Seow PhD

Learn about a helpful workbook and a free workshop toolkit to support people who are navigating a life-changing diagnosis.

My return guest Dr. Hsien Seow is a palliative care researcher and a professor in the Department of Oncology at McMaster University. He is a co-host with Sammy Winemaker MD of The Waiting Room Revolution Podcast and they are both the authors of the book Hope for the Best Plan for the Rest. Today we discuss the new workbook that accompanies the book and a workshop toolkit they are offering at no charge. Learn more at the website:

waitingroomrevolution.com

Listen here:

This episode includes:

  • Why Hsien and Sammy created a workbook for their book
  • What the workbook consists of – reflections, exercises, FAQ’s
  • The power of learning from one another about navigating illness
  • The Ambassador Program and the free downloadable workshop that people can access and teach to others
  • Toolkit included with the “workshop in a box”
  • The goal is to create empowered patients and families
  • Why the workshop toolkit would work well for doulas and hospice providers
  • This information is for caregivers and loved ones as well as patients
  • The public health palliative care approach to illness
  • International audience reaction to the book
  • The value of “relational care” in the medical setting

Links mentioned in this episode:

If you enjoy this content please share it with others and consider leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page at Patreon.com/eolu, and to Molly Byock for buying me a lot of coffee and Aralyn Hughes who made a donation on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.