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Death cafes are casual get-togethers; Social workers and chaplains host the meetings; Internet is spreading awareness of the gatherings; No one wants to talk about death at the dinner table, at a ...
Someone recently forwarded an invitation for an upcoming Death Cafe. What is that, you might ask, as did I. I called the facilitator of the Raleigh-based Death Cafe, Heather Hill.
The Death Cafe in Tiburon—which was co-founded by Grimason and end-of-life doula Karen Murray, who is now its main administrator—is part of a larger, organized "social franchise" network.
Death Cafes Breathe Life Into Conversations About Dying Jon Underwood, a British Web designer and self-named "death entrepreneur," helps people talk about the taboo topic over tea and cake.
Death cafes are modeled after 19th-century salons where people convened for intellectual discussions. Bernard Crettaz, a Swiss sociologist, introduced the idea of death cafes in 2004 and Jon ...
Death cafes, part of a broader “death-positive” movement to encourage more open discussion about grief, trauma and loss, are held around the world, in nearly 100 countries.
Column One Passing thoughts at L.A.'s first Death Cafe Life's end is a conversation-starter at Betsy Trapasso's Topanga Canyon home, where there is no point of view beyond the broad notion that ...
Death Café Orlando is the city's take on a concept that, in just over three years time, evolved from an initial gathering in a London home where Death Café was born, to meetings that occur ...
The death cafe: where people want us to talk about dying. The growing ‘death positivity’ movement wants to change our attitudes towards mortality. We find out what it’s all about.
The death cafe can sometimes feel like group therapy. But Lui makes no claims to being a therapist. “I think in a good way, we’re not therapists,” she told me.