Atsiliepimai
Aprašymas
Village-inspired approaches to befriending death, awakening aliveness, and belonging to each other at the end of life
In a world where death is medicalized, sanitized, isolated, and outsourced, Dying Together: The Art of Community Death Care introduces the radical notion that mortality is a gift—and a teacher.
Author Lee Warren, a cultural pioneer and leading voice in the conscious dying movement, draws from three decades of ecovillage living, where six significant deaths over two years changed the landscape of their collective.
Through firsthand accounts, embodied exercises, and a community-building toolkit, Dying Together offers a visionary yet grounded approach that returns death to the center of our personal and collective lives—and guides us to belong to each other in the tenderness of loss and grief.
Inside you'll find:
Essential reading for anyone ready to face the inevitability of dying with honesty and heart—caregivers, community builders, sustainability seekers, and all who sense that learning to die well is part of remembering how to live.
Village-inspired approaches to befriending death, awakening aliveness, and belonging to each other at the end of life
In a world where death is medicalized, sanitized, isolated, and outsourced, Dying Together: The Art of Community Death Care introduces the radical notion that mortality is a gift—and a teacher.
Author Lee Warren, a cultural pioneer and leading voice in the conscious dying movement, draws from three decades of ecovillage living, where six significant deaths over two years changed the landscape of their collective.
Through firsthand accounts, embodied exercises, and a community-building toolkit, Dying Together offers a visionary yet grounded approach that returns death to the center of our personal and collective lives—and guides us to belong to each other in the tenderness of loss and grief.
Inside you'll find:
Essential reading for anyone ready to face the inevitability of dying with honesty and heart—caregivers, community builders, sustainability seekers, and all who sense that learning to die well is part of remembering how to live.
Atsiliepimai