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Interview: Cincinnati Enquirer “A Stillborn Baby Stunned a Family. This Death Expert was There to Help.”
Journalists from the Cincinnati Enquirer covered my work serving my community as a Death Companion in 2018. Article and video are linked inside.
Grief Needs Salt, Fat, Water and Heat
These things won’t make the grief any easier, but they might make the process feel a little smoother. They’re not classes, treatments, or exercises either. They’re just salt, fat, water and heat. In my years working with death, dying, grief and loss from all the angles that I have, I have found four things that tend to work well for 99% of grieving humans. Grieving people need salt, fat, water and heat.
Grieving? Read Romance.
I’ve made a change—I no longer recommend books directly about grief to people that are actively grieving. I used to reply with a selection of educational grief, death and dying books. But, my mind has been changed. I now recommend reading romance to those that are actively grieving, and suggest saving the more academic or education-type books for when the grief has settled a bit.
I was a Victim of a Crime
At a funeral, we become part of a temporary nation of people, founded on the same sad history. Death is what causes the ache in the heart but Shadowloss is what causes tears in the soul. Shadowloss can be the people that betray you, or don’t show up. The people that do show up when they shouldn’t. The people that don’t keep you safe. The systems that set you up to fail. The loss of safety, of family—that breaks the soul. Death comes for us all, but not all of us are visited by Shadowloss.
Food, Place and Loss
When you visit a place where you find the dying, you see that it’s also a place where the truth comes out. Everyone’s issues and insecurities bubble to the surface and as an observer, you watch a very important decision being made—to lean into the discomfort of the truth or to run from it. This is where families branch apart, or twist more tightly together—in the face of loss.
How to Write Sympathy Notes: What to Write, What to Avoid, and Why
Before you read the rest of this column, the most important thing you need to know about sympathy notes is that done is better than perfect. It’s better to send a sympathy note than not to send one at all. Don’t get too hung up on it, and just get it out there. Done is better than perfect. A sent sympathy note is better than an unsent sympathy note.
Grief is the Way Home
I’ve seen losses tear friends, families and communities apart. But, it’s not the loss that brings them back together, it’s the grief.
You see, the tragedy is what destroys you, and its the grief that rebuilds you.
Seek Joy, Not Happiness
The secret for me, at least, is not to pursue happiness, but to pursue joy. You can’t control happiness, but you can control joy. No one can infiltrate the things that bring you joy because joy springs from within, and happiness lives outside ourselves.
Speaking at the Exploratorium in San Francisco
Getting to speak at the Exploratorium about food, death and ritual was such a treat. The Exploratorium is a public learning laboratory exploring the world through science, art, and human perception.
Ologies with Alie Ward Podcast: Quarantinology
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