THE CONVERSATIONNO ONE WANTS

Let's talk about the thing nobody wants to discuss: DEATH

Most of us have serious PTSD around this topic. We don't want to think about it. We definitely don't want to talk about it. And planning for it?

That feels like inviting it to happen sooner.

So we avoid. We deflect. We change the subject. We tell ourselves we'll deal with it "later" when we're older or sicker or when we absolutely have to.

Meanwhile, our avoidance creates chaos for the people we love. Our unwillingness to face mortality means we never have the conversations that matter. We never say the things that need to be said. We never make peace with the life we've actually lived instead of the one we thought we'd live.

Redefining What It Means to Face Death

Facing death differently means doing the hard work of acknowledging our mortality while we're still healthy enough to do something about it.

It’s about the deeper questions: What does it mean to live differently when you acknowledge you're going to die? How do you want to be remembered? What conversations need to happen now, not later? What does a 'good death' even look like?

These aren't morbid questions – they're

life-giving questions.

Because when you get clear about death,

you often get a lot clearer about life.

No platitudes. No pretending this is easy.

Just honest exploration of how we can face

the inevitable with more grace,

intention, and humanity.

These aren't morbid questions – they're

life-giving questions.

Because when you get clear about death,

you often get a lot clearer about life.

No platitudes. No pretending this is easy.

Just honest exploration of how we can face

the inevitable with more grace,

intention, and humanity.