[POEM] So Much
/In honor of suicide awareness and prevention month, we lovingly offer this story from one of our graduates, Melissa Seligman. We hold space in our hearts for those we’ve lost to suicide and also honor those grieving.
Read MoreTrain In One Of The Top 10 Fastest Growing Jobs Of The Future
How Do I Practice for Death by Tarron Estes
The Evolution Of The End Of Life Doula Movement by Jeff Markel
The Grace of Dementia by Sara Bensman
Holding Space with Death by Marie David
Becoming a Sacred Passage Doula by Shirley Grant
Initiation Of A Death Doula By Kristie Zahn
In honor of suicide awareness and prevention month, we lovingly offer this story from one of our graduates, Melissa Seligman. We hold space in our hearts for those we’ve lost to suicide and also honor those grieving.
Read MoreSome inspiration rests solely in an exploration of collective human wisdom or wisdom traditions within spiritual study, and some of the fresh thinking results from a contemporary mindset of the 21st century. The overlap is found in new innovations that draw from accumulated human wisdom. The recent emergence of death doulas and end-of-life coaches is part of that innovation.
Read More[Poem] When Someone Wants to Die by Tarron Estes. Put yourself in this place of longing for death. Place this longing inside all the other dreams and wishes and extraordinary experiences life has ever given you or anyone. Prepare yourself to be bigger and better than you ever-felt possible. As you hold one of life’s most feared, unwanted, hated, inevitable realities in you own body and mind.
Read MoreWe often hear the question of how becoming an end-of-life doula is applicable in our world today. From NPR’s Morning Edition, this short interview sheds light on the importance of end of life or death doulas and their role in the care of loved ones.
Read MoreLet’s face it. Elder care isn’t ideal care. No one wants to age and die. We don’t like to hear about or see into the reality of aging, death, dying. Most of us don’t want to talk about it, much less know how to find ease in being with people who are facing the later stages of aging and death. The reality is, we have allowed medicine and politics to govern end-of-life, a sacred life event, with a bottom-line mentality. While we are facing the reality of an ageing baby boomer generation which will impact systems and economies, maybe what life is asking from us as a culture, is to wake up to the reality of our mortality and what quality-of-life means to us beyond the great saviors of medicine, politics and economies.
Read MoreI just graduated from the Boulder Sacred Passage: End-of-Life Doula training this past June, a powerful, life changing course. It felt to me like each person there, came to training at that exact moment, as if pulled by an unseen force, assuring that we connected and learned from one another.
Read MoreDeath literacy embraces a soulful interplay both through inspiration, exploration, and education. It embraces new forms of bringing forth the new death positive movement which includes sacred passage doulas. The intention for death literacy is to expand the conversation by being provocative using the term death literacy.
Read MoreHaving companioned many people as they transitioned in the last days of their lives as a soul midwife, the feel in the room was clear and instinct gnawed. Naomi, my mom, was beginning the process of her ascension and separating from this plane.
Read MoreSacred Passage End-of-Life Doula Brad Smith discusses fall and gratitude for death, and the ritual of Samhain. Creating physical space for those who have passed allows the living to offer gratitude and remembrance to our ancestors.
Read MoreOnce we know where we are going, we take an honest and courageous look at our life as it stands now in relation to this complete future reality. In my case, the two never lined up verbatim, giving me opportunity for growth and work.
Read MoreOne could argue that “wellness” is by nature an ever-shifting concept that serves to fill in what is missing and unhealthy across many sectors—whether healthcare, travel or real estate. And that it’s a fast-growing market because it addresses needs unmet, with a conceptual identity by nature “supplemental.” Death Doulas and those creating far more eco-friendly burials are practicing wellness. The medical world has simply not put enough resources into end-of-life care and research.
Read MoreIs this what happens when I die when anyone dies - but in a condensed way? I’m suspecting that when I die, my “life” as defined by that which is inside my Box will be just chucked out as useless stuff - good while it was needed to live my life - but now as I die, useful? Satisfying? Who I am?
Read MoreEven in my mother’s womb, the aura of grief surrounded me. Less than six weeks before I was born, my aunt passed away from cancer. She was only 31 years old and left behind a grieving husband, 3 young children, her parents, and 3 siblings. I was named after her. I was born into a world of tragic loss and equal celebration of life. You see, my birth gave hope to my family.
Read MoreThis is part of my story of becoming. Becoming who I am, a medicine for others to tap into and utilize. I am becoming a Sacred Passage End of Life (Death) Doula because like many reading this, I feel a pull towards facilitating people of all ages in acknowledging their mortality to more truly live the life they desire and supporting individuals in their more immediate dying process. Beyond this, something about it simply feels “right”.
Read MoreWisdom Traditions Offer Many Practices For Death last week’s blog, we explored the concept of practicing for death …. a concept presented in the first segment of the Conscious Dying Institute’s End of Life Doula Certificate program. The name of this first segment is: "Conscious Dying Practices For Awakening NOW!" What does this mean? Experiential transformational activities are designed specifically to help us focus on awakening our innate healing gifts and talents, awakening to the power of bold inquiry, awakening to the gift of presence. One powerful transformational activity is Maha Shavasana: Practice for Death © The Entire Activity is listed below. Choose a partner and practice together.
Read MoreFor us new age boomers and spiritual seekers, this last transformational movement of Practicing for Death, is the crown jewel of how to be fully in our lives. To occupy death is to embody life. We must wake up out of whatever sleeping or waking dreams we have left, whatever dull, mind numbing trances we are still in, whatever false hope we might have that we will get out of this life without facing our own mortality and death.
Some wonder about why we should entertain such gloomy topics anyway, lest we find ourselves bogged down by this unnecessary heaviness. To them I would say that death awareness itches all the time, that it rumbles continually just under the surface, that our real choice is between letting it fester in our unconscious or leveraging it to experience feelings of meaning and deeper connection.
Read More(Alexandria, Va) – National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, the leading hospice and palliative care membership organization in the U.S., is pleased to announce the formation of a Council to provide information and resources to its members, affiliated organizations, and the public regarding the role of end-of-life doulas.
The Council’s inaugural meeting took place April 25 in Washington, DC to define the Council’s purpose and design activities that will serve its mission.
End-of-life Doulas (EOLDs) are caregivers who offer non-medical, holistic support and comfort to dying people and their families. Services are varied to meet individual needs and requirements, and may include education and guidance, as well as emotional, spiritual or practical care. (continue reading)
Read More