Grief During Holidays and Anniversaries

Category: Resources - Tips

The calendar can feel like a warning system when you’re grieving. A birthday approaches. The holidays come around again. The anniversary of a loss appears on the horizon—sometimes expected, sometimes catching you off guard. These “hard dates” can stir up everything at once: Learn More

Supporting a Grieving Friend or Colleague: What to Say, How to Help, and What to Avoid

Category: Resources - Tips

When someone you know is grieving, it’s normal to feel unsure. You might worry about saying the wrong thing, bringing up painful memories, or making it worse. In reality, most grieving people don’t expect perfect words—they hope for presence, patience, and proof they’re Learn More

Creative Outlets for Healing: How Art, Music, Writing, and Journaling Can Help You Cope With Loss

Category: Resources - Tips

Grief doesn’t move in straight lines. It loops, it pauses, it surprises us in the middle of an ordinary day. When we lose someone we love—or when we’re living through a change that feels like a kind of loss—our usual ways of coping Learn More

My Life’s Message Records Roadmap

Category: Resources - Tips

We invite you join our mailing list to download our Records Roadmap. Subscribe * indicates required Email Address * /* real people should not fill this in and expect good things – do not remove this or risk form bot signups */ Learn More

How To Terminate The On-Line Accounts of a Deceased Person

Category: Resources - Tips

It’s a little unsettling to receive a note in Linked In or a Friend request on Facebook from someone whom I know passed away several months or even years ago.  Although  a warm memory might come to mind, there’s nothing else I can Learn More

On Death and Dying – Random Passages and Thoughts

Categories: Resources - Inspiration Resources - Tips

“The undertaker, Winthrop Ogletree, was waiting in the foyer of the large, rambling Victorian house at the end of the Street of Tides where he practiced his trade. . . . “I’ll get right to the point, Winthrop,” my grandmother said officiously.  “I’ll Learn More