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A childhood experience with death may have been what made Elizabeth so particular about her own passing. She lost her mother at age Three days before she died, Elizabeth met with two death doulas. Together, along with friends and family, they ensured her death would go as planned.
A home vigil was organized. But an emerging cohort of death doulas in Regina is bringing death, dying and grief out of the shadows and into the light. During a week online course, participants learn advanced planning, home funerals, post-death body care, end of life financial considerations, grief, celebrant skills, death care rituals and more. A practicum is recommended, but not required. Sharon Pulvermacher — who also met with Elizabeth — did her training in She has been fascinated by death and the stages of grief since Grade 12 when she wrote a paper on death and dying.
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A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Headline News will soon be in your inbox. We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again. Definitions vary, but the core role of death doulas is to provide comfort and support to the dying and their families.
Death doulas do one-on-one sessions, home vigils, simply sit with the dying person in the hospital holding their hand, and more. She works with a variety of people — those who may have lost a limb or a pet, recently divorced or, like Elizabeth, someone who is in the last days of their life. Besides the practical services death doulas offer, such as planning home funerals or helping with living wills, they also act as a sounding board for people to express their fears and musings about death, the afterlife and more.