Karen Wyatt MD is a family physician who has spent much of her 25 year medical career working with patients in challenging settings, such as hospice, nursing homes and indigent clinics. She is interested in a spiritual approach to medicine, illness, death and dying and is the author of two books. Check out her website at www.karenwyattmd.com
Learn why it’s important to be aware of the needs of people with disabilities (and their families) when providing end-of-life and bereavement care.
My guest Carrie Batt is an end-of-life doula and the founder of SEOL Care which offers disability-competent end-of-life care, support and planning for people with a disability and their families. She advocates for disability competent care and grief support after losing a loved one with a disability . She created a Facebook group To Walk a Mile in My Shoes that honors loss and disability. Learn more at her website:
Check out theĀ SeriesĀ Iāve recorded in the pastĀ here
Join the team atĀ Patreon.com/eoluĀ and receive free gifts like theĀ āMind if we talk about death?āĀ mini-poster orĀ Love Your LifeĀ sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthlyĀ EOL News Update, monthlyĀ What to WatchĀ recommendations,Ā Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access toĀ A Year ofĀ Reading Dangerously!
If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerĀ leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atĀ Patreon.com/eolu, especially my newest patronsĀ Dawn,Ā Rosie Ross, andĀ Beverly. And thank you to Xu Ying Steiner for buying me 5 coffees and to Nancy Reese JonesĀ who made a donation on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Join me for a few stories and a brief celebration of the 500th episode of EOLU Podcast!
This week I’m celebrating the milestone of 500 Episodes and I hope you’ll share my joy! I’ll be answering a few questions (submitted by ChatGPT!) and telling a story or two. It has been an incredible experience being part of this ecosystem and I’m grateful to all of my guests and listeners for making this possible. Next week I’ll be back to the regular schedule of interviews. Meanwhile check out my website and YouTube Channel:
Learn about the value of viewing death through a spiritual lens rather than just as an ending of the physical body.
My guest Felicity Warner is the founder of Soul Midwives⢠a global movement to teach holistic and spiritual end-of-life care. She has been working with death and dying for 35 years and her work is often used in hospitals, hospices, and care homes. She also teaches on the use of sacred oils at the end of life and will share that information today along with her insights about the five energetic stages of death. Felicity is also the author of The Soul Midwife’s Handbook, which will released later this year as an updated second edition and she is currently teaching a course on sacred oils for The Shift Network. Learn more at her website:
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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, especially my newest patrons Char Yutzy, Emma Schade-Stylli, and Wendy Getchell-Lacey who also made a donation on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn how a project making memory bears for people who are grieving is opening the door to conversation about the end of life.
My guest Michelle Sebern is an RN who trained as an end-of-life doula to channel her skills and passion into more community-focused work. When she found her rural community wasn’t quite ready to receive end-of-life doula services she decided to find a more creative way to give back. She will share how she founded The Memory Bear Maker and now creates customized bears to help people in their grief and begin end-of-life conversations. Learn more at her website:
Check out theĀ SeriesĀ Iāve recorded in the pastĀ here
Join the team atĀ Patreon.com/eoluĀ and receive free gifts like theĀ āMind if we talk about death?āĀ mini-poster orĀ Love Your LifeĀ sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthlyĀ EOL News Update, monthlyĀ What to WatchĀ recommendations,Ā Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access toĀ A Year ofĀ Reading Dangerously!
If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerĀ leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atĀ Patreon.com/eolu, especially my newest patronĀ Sue Simone, and to Caroline McClure for buying me 3 coffees! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn how doulas and chaplains collaborate to provide end-of-life care in a skilled nursing facility.
My guests for this episode are Jane Whitlock and Liza Neal who both work with the Full Circle Care Program in a skilled nursing facility to support residents and their loved ones during end-of-life journeys. Jane is an end-of-life doula who also helped found the Minnesota Death Collaborative and co-founded Full Circle Care. Liza is a chaplain who has worked to develop spiritual community within and outside faith and multi-faith contexts. She joined the skilled nursing facility in order to be part of the Full Circle Care Program, which we discuss in this interview.
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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, especially my newest patron Trina Wacasey, and to everyone who has bought me a coffee or donated on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn how the art of Visual Storytelling can enhance end-of-life education and serve as a tool for advance care planning.
My guest Jill Greenbaum is a contemplative chaplain and advocate of conscious living and dying. She completed chaplaincy training at the Upaya Zen Center and integrates her experience in psychology, education, visualization, and trauma-informed teaching into her work helping people explore their choices for end-of-life planning. She discusses how she utilizes visual storytelling in her work and why it is a powerful tool. Learn more at her website:
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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 everyone who has bought me a coffee or donated on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn how leadership skills and organizational tools can help decrease stress for family caregivers.
My guest Jennifer O’Brien has been a practice management consultant to physicians for 35 years and is the author of the book The Hospice Doctor’s Widow, which was the subject of our previous interview. After providing care for her husband, a hospice and palliative care physician, at the end of his life she has focused on helping people start conversations about caregiving and end of life. She shares insights and tips from her latest book Care Boss: Leadership Strategies and Resources for Family Caregivers, which was inspired by her realization that there are profound similarities between leadership and family caregivers. Learn more at her website:
Check out theĀ SeriesĀ Iāve recorded in the pastĀ here
Join the team atĀ Patreon.com/eoluĀ and receive free gifts like theĀ āMind if we talk about death?āĀ mini-poster orĀ Love Your LifeĀ sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthlyĀ EOL News Update, monthlyĀ What to WatchĀ recommendations,Ā Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access toĀ A Year ofĀ Reading Dangerously!
If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerĀ leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atĀ Patreon.com/eolu, and to everyone who has bought me a coffee or donated on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn how a hospice volunteer and doula utilizes his artistic talents to help patients and families.
My guest Rich Curtis is an artist, teacher, hospice volunteer and end-of-life doula. He currently volunteers for Archbold Hospice in Thomasville GA where he has utilized his artistic talents to help patients and their families at the end of life. Rich discusses his own path as an artist and eventually becoming a doula. He shares his drawings and tips for those considering being a hospice volunteer in this conversation. View Rich’s drawings at the link below or watch the video on YouTube to see them on screen:
Check out theĀ SeriesĀ Iāve recorded in the pastĀ here
Join the team atĀ Patreon.com/eoluĀ and receive free gifts like theĀ āMind if we talk about death?āĀ mini-poster orĀ Love Your LifeĀ sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthlyĀ EOL News Update, monthlyĀ What to WatchĀ recommendations,Ā Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access toĀ A Year ofĀ Reading Dangerously!
If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerĀ leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atĀ Patreon.com/eolu, especially my latest supportersĀ Tanya ArchambaultĀ and Malynda CressĀ and thanks toĀ Heather JardineĀ for buying me 3 cups of coffee! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn what it means to have a “good death” and how and why we all need to prepare for the end of life to benefit ourselves, our loved ones and our planet.
My guest Suzanne B. O’Brien RN is the founder and CEO of Doulagivers Institute and a “pioneer” in the global death doula movement. She has trained hundreds of thousands of people from all around the world to care those at the end of life. Most recently Suzanne is the author of The Good Death: A Guide for Supporting Your Loved One Through the End of Life. She discusses the book and why it’s so important that we facilitate a shift in how we experience death at this time in our world. Learn more at her websites:
Check out theĀ SeriesĀ Iāve recorded in the pastĀ here
Join the team atĀ Patreon.com/eoluĀ and receive free gifts like theĀ āMind if we talk about death?āĀ mini-poster orĀ Love Your LifeĀ sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthlyĀ EOL News Update, monthlyĀ What to WatchĀ recommendations,Ā Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access toĀ A Year ofĀ Reading Dangerously!
If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerĀ leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atĀ Patreon.com/eolu, especially my newest donor Connie WS and to John Wadsworth for renewing your pledge. Also thanks to Someone who became a monthly member of Buy Me a Coffee! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn about the benefits of creating intentional rituals for the big and small moments of life and death.
My guest Megan Sheldon is a cultural mythologist, humanist celebrant, and end-of-life doula in North Vancouver, BC. She is the co-founder of Be Ceremonial, the world’s first guided ritual and ceremony app. Megan will discuss her work creating ceremonies for people around the world, focusing on what she calls the ‘seemingly invisible moments of change’ in life and in death. She offers online workshops, virtual courses, and seasonal retreats and you can learn more at her website:
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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 everyone who has bought me a coffee or donated on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn about the benefits of team-based care and how the hospice team works together on behalf of patients and families.
This week I’m welcoming my recurring guest Barbara Karnes RN, who is an internationally recognized thought-leader and expert on end-of-life care and the dynamics of dying. We are continuing our series of conversations on various aspects of hospice care and you can find links to previous episodes in the notes below. Today we discuss the importance of a team approach to care on hospice and the roles played by each member of the team. Barbara is the author of numerous books on death, dying, grief and caregiving including “the little blue hospice book,” Gone from My Sight. Check out her books and videos at her website:
Check out theĀ SeriesĀ Iāve recorded in the pastĀ here
Join the team atĀ Patreon.com/eoluĀ and receive free gifts like theĀ āMind if we talk about death?āĀ mini-poster orĀ Love Your LifeĀ sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthlyĀ EOL News Update, monthlyĀ What to WatchĀ recommendations,Ā Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access toĀ A Year ofĀ Reading Dangerously!
If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerĀ leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atĀ Patreon.com/eolu, and to everyone who has bought me a coffee or donated on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn why and how to share your end-of-life wisdom and stories by writing a non-fiction book.
My guest Joanna Penn writes non-fiction for authors and is an award-winning, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of thrillers, dark fantasy, and memoir as J.F. Penn. She is also an award-winning podcaster, creative entrepreneur, and international professional speaker. Her most recent publication is the 2nd edition of How to Write Non-Fiction: Turn Your Knowledge Into Words. Today we discuss the challenges of writing non-fiction books about difficult and personal subjects like death and grief. Joanna offers her best tips and encouragement for anyone who wants to write a book but doesn’t know where to begin. Learn more about her work at her website:
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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, especially my newest supporters Morgan Everitt and Minda Sanchez. Also thank you to everyone who has bought me a coffee or donated on Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn from “Hospice Nurse Penny” how she started working in hospice and ended up being a viral influencer about end-of-life issues on social media.
My guest this week is Penny Smith RN, known on social media as “Hospice Nurse Penny.” She discusses her journey to becoming a hospice nurse and her rise to fame on TikTok during the COVID-19 lockdown. Her new book Influencing Death, Reframing Dying for Better Living is an honest and vulnerable look at her own life story and what she has learned from working with dying patients. Learn more and connect with Penny at her website:
Check out theĀ SeriesĀ Iāve recorded in the pastĀ here
Join the team atĀ Patreon.com/eoluĀ and receive free gifts like theĀ āMind if we talk about death?āĀ mini-poster orĀ Love Your LifeĀ sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthlyĀ EOL News Update, monthlyĀ What to WatchĀ recommendations,Ā Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access toĀ A Year ofĀ Reading Dangerously!
If you enjoy this content please share it with others and considerĀ leaving a review on iTunes. Thanks again to all supporters on my page atĀ Patreon.com/eolu, to Simply Celebrate for donating on PaypalĀ and thanks (again) toĀ Robin BissellĀ for buying me 3 cups of coffee! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn how talking about death and grief on a podcast can help us face tragedy and loss together.
My special guest David Ferrugio is the host of DEAD Talks Podcast, where he hosts guests like Tony Hawk, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Billy Carson, David Dastmalchian, Bryan Callen, Hospice Nurse Julie and many more over a growing audience of nearly 1 million followers, including social media platforms. He discusses his story of loss at the early age of 12 and his passion for helping others face grief by sharing conversations with his guests about loss. As current residents of Los Angeles we also talk about the recent fires that have devastated this city. Learn more about David’s work and podcast at this link:
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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. Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn about research being done in Canada to improve access to palliative care for marginalized populations.
My special guest Dr. Kelli Stajduhar is is a professor in the School of Nursing and Institute on Aging & Lifelong Health at the University of Victoria and the Canada Research Chair in Palliative Care, Aging and Community Health. She has worked in oncology, palliative care, and gerontology for 30+ years as a practicing nurse, educator, and researcher. She discusses her clinical work and research which have focused on health service needs for those at the end-of-life and their families, and on the needs of marginalized and vulnerable populations. Learn more at the website:
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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, especially my latest supporters Chris Rogers and Jan Wiebking and thanks to Robin Bissell for buying me 3 cups of coffee! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Learn about a Top Ten Playlist of songs selected by hospice patients for their own end of life journey.
We start out this new year with another episode our special series: Death & Grief in Pop Culture. This week my co-host Ben Kintisch and I will be reviewing the Top Ten Songs from an end-of-life playlist created by hospice patients in the UK. Ben is a cantor, hospice and eldercare chaplain, music teacher, and the creator ofĀ Life Review: The Hospice Musical.Ā Learn more about Benās work at his website:
Check out the Series Iāve recorded in the past here
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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 everyone who has bought me a coffee or made a donation through Paypal! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Find out what you may have missed in 2024 if you havenāt listened to every episode!
In this solo episode I recap some of the episodes of this podcast that had the greatest impact on me personally and professionally! All of the interviews from 2024 were fantastic but if you missed any of these be sure to take a listen! Thanks for your support this year! Looking forward to another amazing year ā be sure to subscribe and leave a rating and review if you enjoy this content.
HAPPY NEW YEAR AND MANY BLESSINGS TO YOU AND YOUR BELOVEDS!
Join the team atPatreon.com/eoluand receive free gifts like the āMind if we talk about death?ā mini-poster or Love Your Life sticker or coffee mug. PLUS get our regular bonuses: the monthly EOL News Update, monthly What to Watch recommendations, Behind the Scenes Bonus content, and automatic access to A Year of Reading Dangerously!
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, especially my latest supporters Nancy Walker and Linda Fennigbauer and thanks to Linda for also making a Paypal donation! Your contributions make all the difference and ensure this podcast stays ad-free.
Another December has arrived and once again we are busily preparing for the holiday rituals that will take place as the year winds to an end. This is a perfect time to stop for a moment and really think about the meaning of your own celebrations, so that you donāt end up spending a fortune in time and money with nothing real to show when it is over.
This is the year that you should dedicate yourself to staying in the present moment as much as possible, no matter how crazy and hectic your schedule becomes. If you race through each day of the season, mindlessly completing the items on your to-do list, you can become exhausted, depleted and resentful and totally miss the joys of this special time of year. But you can thrive throughout this busy season by following a few simple suggestions.
The solution is to give yourself some special gifts this year. Iām not talking about gifts that cost money or are indulgent, like a spa day, a fancy night on the town, or an exotic vacation ā though those things may be just what you need right now. But these are some splurges for the āSoulā ā activities that will help you find special meaning for yourself during the holidays:
The Gift of Solitude
No matter how busy you are, take some time out to be totally alone during part of one day or evening. Try to find a place to go where you will not be around other people and turn your phone off or leave it behind for at least one hour. I live in the mountains and itās easy for me to snowshoe on a trail above my house and walk in solitude for an entire day. But if you live in a city you may have to be creative: find a park where you can sit in an out-of-the-way grove, visit a little-used section of your local library, or find a time when you have your home to yourself, with no internet, television or radio to distract you.
The idea is to be totally alone with your thoughts for one hour. During that time, take some deep breaths, think about the holiday that is approaching, reminisce about good times in the past, and contemplate what is most important to you about this season. Think of at least one thing you love about the holidays and plan how you can emphasize that activity or feeling in your life this year.
2.The Gift of Spontaneity
Be watchful for opportunities to do something special that is not on your to-do list: wander through a local neighborhood to look at the lights, stop to listen to carolers on the street corner, take in the special window displays downtown, make a snow-angel or build a snowman if you live in a cold climate.
3.The Gift of Wisdom
Spend some time reading from one of the great Wisdom texts available to us: the Bible, The Bhagavad Gita, The Kabbalah, I Ching, The Gospel of Thomas, Tao te Ching, the poetry of Rumi, or countless other sources. Immerse yourself in the beautiful language and thoughtful sentiments in these ancient writings. As Rumi wrote: āLet yourself be silently drawn by the stronger pull of what you really love.ā
4.The Gift of Hunger
This may not sound like a gift at all, but I encourage youājust once during the holidaysāto skip a meal. In this season of baking, feasting, partying and frequent overindulgence, it is an interesting experiment to go without eating for part of a day. When you have felt hunger for a few hours you will actually appreciate the abundant food that surrounds you and remember those who are not so fortunate at this or any other time of the year. You might even want to donate the money you save from that meal to a local soup kitchen or charity.
5.The Gift of Stars
Though it may be difficult for some, depending on where you live, I recommend going to a place one evening where you can look up and see the stars. Lie back for a brief time and study the vastness of the universe, reminding yourself how small we really are here on our beautiful planet. All of the rushing, shopping, buying, wrapping, baking, and entertaining that fill up your schedule are not really important when you consider the entire expanse of creation. But the Love that you feel and share with others rises above everything as what really matters during this holiday season.
And finally, no matter which of the above gifts you choose to give yourself this year, spend some time writing about the experience in your journal. Remember to express your gratitude every day for this amazing life and all the blessings that have been showered upon you, during these holidays and all year long. May you have a December to remember as you bring this year to a close and share your gifts with the world!
And please accept a small gift this year: if you are interested in starting a journal or enhancing your journaling practice, you can download the āJournaling Starter Kitā at the link below (no obligation ā you donāt even have to sign up!) Enjoy this gift of reflection and may your days be blessed with what really matters!
Learn from this special recording of a workshop with Drs. Sammy Winemaker and Hsien Seow from their book Hope for the Best Plan for the Rest.
For this special episode I will share a few thoughts for everyone who has (like me) experienced a life-changing diagnosis during 2024. This holiday season will be different than all others for us as we face uncertainty in the future and also recognize the value of living fully in each and every moment. Check out my blog post Five Gifts to Give Yourself this Holiday Season for more thoughts and tips.
I also share a replay from a workshop with Drs. Sammy Winemaker and Hsein Seow from their amazing book Hope for the Best Plan for the Rest titled: Learning the Illness Roadmap. I hope you gain insights from this conversation that will help you on your journey.
As the anniversary of my motherās death approaches Iām reflecting back on that first year after her death and how I navigated grief through the year, including the holidays. I was with Mom for the week before she died and had the privilege of shepherding her through that transitionāa moment I had been preparing for since I first became a hospice physician. I knew many years ago that I would be with my Mom on the day she died and that it would be one of the most important days of my life.
Her death itself was actually joyful, though it was a process that took a great deal of inner work on her part, which has also been true for many of my hospice patients. Mom had been ready and waiting to āgo homeā for the previous 5 years and was relieved that her time had finally come. So as she took her last breaths I had to celebrate on her behalf, that her struggle was coming to an end, even while my heart was breaking as each thread of our physical connection slipped through my hands and I confronted the enormity of that loss.
For days after her death I was in a heightened state of consciousnessāsensing her presence everywhere around me, exquisitely aware of the beauty and fragility of absolutely everything in existence. Every portal of my being was wide open and love poured freely into and out from my heart as I delicately negotiated those tender days.
But within a few weeks I had retreated into the protective cocoon of grief, while I went through the motions of daily life, numb and slightly dazed. I could no longer recall what it felt like to be in that incredible state of lightness I had experienced immediately after her death and I concluded that it had simply been a symptom of sleep deprivation.
Over the next few months I kept myself incredibly busy as I joined a mastermind group, traveled to a publicity summit, became a radio show host, produced a digital workshop and created an online interview series, along with doing speaking engagements in various parts of the country. I stayed constantly on the go and rarely took a moment off, even when I was āon vacation.ā
I was proud of myself for being so resilient and productive. I didnāt realize that I had actually been hiding for all of those months from the grief that was mounting up inside me. But then everything fell apart: my radio show was cancelled, the interview series ended, my mastermind group moved on without me, my publicity contacts stopped communicating and I had run out of speaking engagements.
Winter weather had arrived, the holidays were looming, my calendar was empty and I had nothing to show for a year of exhausting over-commitment and frantic busy-ness. I suddenly recognized how short the days had become as I laid awake for hours in the darkness, lost in my own emptiness.
āThis is my first holiday season without Mom,ā I thought to myself, remembering how much she loved these times of celebration and always made each moment feel so full ⦠full of love and joy and laughter. And now, though I had the financial resources to buy anything I wanted or needed, I could not even begin to fill this emptiness that haunted me deep in the darkness.
How had she done it? What āmagicā had she created to make each moment of anticipation before a special holiday feel so extraordinary, so full of meaning?
Searching for answers, I unpacked a box of some of her prized holiday decorations I had āinheritedā after she died: a glittery ornament she and my grandmother had pieced together from old greeting cards; a tree-shaped wall hanging she and her sister made from broken green and brown glass (beer bottles my grandfather found in the trash behind a local dance hall) and adorned with old costume jewelry; various vases and candle holders she had crafted from discarded plastic bottles and glass jars, decorated with scraps of lace and fabric.
I had found these ātreasuresā of hers to be deeply embarrassing when I was a teenager and my friends from across town would visit our little house. They lived in huge homes, fancily decorated with porcelain figurines and hand-painted glass ornaments, which no one was allowed to touch. Yet my mother, oblivious of our humiliating low social status, proudly displayed her homemade trinkets as if they were priceless works of art.
Lost in these memories as I held the fragile greeting card ornament in my hands, I suddenly realized what my mother had been able to do all those years ago ā¦
She had created something from nothing ā¦
She had excelled at making each day seem special, even though her resources were limited. She managed to create little miracles everywhere she went, though her pocketbook was empty. She took things that were unwanted and discarded and gave them new purpose and meaning, finding the hidden beauty in everything.
She did this even with the destitute families she met who needed a place to liveāshe allowed them to move into the little rental house she owned, knowing they wouldnāt be able to pay their rent for several months. āYou will make it up later when things are going better,ā she would tell them. And her grateful tenants, relieved that someone finally saw something of value in them, almost always repaid her.
As I arranged my motherās treasures on a shelf in my living room, I suddenly knew what I needed to do. I would find my way through this grief that was smothering me by doing what Mom would do: make something from nothing for the holidays.
That night when the sun went down and the temperature dropped well below freezing, I placed two buckets of water out in the snow. They froze around the perimeter and remained hollow inside, forming beautiful sparkling ice lanterns that glowed with the light of the candles I placed in them.
I situated these ice lanterns at the top of my driveway, where they illuminated the path toward home in the deepest darkness of night though they were composed of ānothingā but water. Each evening as I trudged through the snow to light them I took comfort in the warmth emitted by those tiny flames and found hope that perhaps this light will also guide others who are wandering in the dark shrouds of grief toward the home they are seeking.
Though Mom will never again be with me physically and I will never again open a present from her on a special holiday, I have received the most important gift she could ever give me: the ability to cherish what really matters in life, to find the hidden beauty in everything, to make something from nothing.
And that has become my path through this process of grief: to continue to honor Momās memory by offering up whatever I have as a gift to the Universe, free from self-judgment and embarrassment, cherishing each moment as a priceless work of art, creating always:
Something from nothing ā¦
Light in the darkness ā¦
Fullness within the emptiness.
It is all I can do right now ⦠and indeed ⦠all that needs to be done.