Death Doula Reading Week 1 Chapter 2

Reading Week 1

Chapter 2

 

  1. What an End-of-Life Doula Does

“Preparing to die actually prepares people to live. I work in death—it enriches everything!”

Alua Arthur,
Going with Grace
www.goingwithgrace.com

You know that end-of-life doulas provide holistic, nonjudgmental, non-medical support to those nearing the end of life. They empower men and women to consider what a “good death” means to them and then support them as they seek that “good death.” They encourage those with life-ending illness to make the most of their last years, months, weeks, or days, so they can pass in peace. They also support the friends and family of the dying. 

But what does that look like, day by day? What does an end-of-life doula actually do?

This chapter looks at the broad range of areas where death doulas and midwives put their skills to work. 

You won’t apply or use every one of these techniques or services with every client. In fact, you shouldn’t! Your number one job is to listen to your client’s needs and start there. (See Sections 2.3 and 2.4.) However, after reading this chapter, you will be well prepared to meet those needs in a variety of ways. Your end-of-life “doula toolbox” will be well stocked.

2.1 Specializations

“Being a Death Midwife covers a wider range of opportunities than most folks think. They often visualize sitting by the bedside of the dying. Most likely, no one is an expert on all of the aspects. Find the piece that is your passion and anchor there. Much work is done with those who are very actively alive, and not even experiencing a health crisis. We need people to open doors, introduce concepts, be way showers as well as end of life companions, ministers, and ritualists.”

~ Patricia Ballentine,
Ordained Minister and Priestess,
Certified Death Midwife

End-of-life doula work has so many potential paths. The services that one death doula offers can look completely different from what another does, and neither is “doing” it wrong. As long as the basis of the work is nonjudgmental, nonmedical, empowering support for the terminally ill (at any age), elderly, or dying, it’s death doula work.

What are your options? Check them out below. Or click here for a concise overview.

TIP: Don’t feel overwhelmed by all the potential specializations! If you’re unsure what you should be offering or what your area of specialty should be, go back to your why. Why are you interested in death doula work? What has peaked your interest? Your path is hidden inside the answer to that question.

Also, be open to the fact that the more experience you gain, the more training, and the more education you receive, your specialty may shift, change, widen, or deepen. That’s okay. It’s good, in fact.

2.1.1 Elder Care

Elder care doula work could be considered a separate kind of doula work than death support. And yet, it also naturally fits alongside midwifery for the dying. Quite a few death doulas offer elder care doula services.

Elder care doula work involves practical, emotional, and (sometimes) physical (but not medical) support of elderly clients. This is also sometimes called companion care.

Your client may be healthy, well, and living at home. They may be living with a family member. Or, they may be a resident in a nursing home. With elder care work, the person you are serving may hire you, or you may be hired by a family member.

Elder care can look very different, depending on the needs of the client.

With one person, you may visit the client in their home weekly for a few hours, helping with light housework, providing companionship, and maybe running some simple errands for them or with them.

With another client, you may visit them in a nursing home setting, offering primarily social and emotional support, ensuring their basic needs are being met, and reporting back to the family that possibly lives far away and can’t visit regularly.

In either case, you are also hopefully offering more than just practical support, but also holding the space for them to talk about their lives, their legacy, and encouraging them to make the most of their final years. You are more than just a housekeeper. You are also a sort of life coach.

Unlike your terminally ill clients, planning for death isn’t the key focus. Yet, empowering your elderly clients to consider death planning may be a part of your job description.

In these ways, death doula work and elder care work fit together nicely.

Note that your elder care clients may one day become death doula clients. This may be a seamless transition, or there may be a gap in years of service. When there is a gap in service, they may come back to you during their final months because they remember your support fondly.

2.1.2 Providing Support and Comfort to the Terminally Ill

“While traveling, I met this woman from Germany on a bus, and we got to talking on this long ride. I found out she had uterine cancer, and she wanted to travel to her favorite places before she died. We spent time making meaning out of her life, and I realized then that I wanted to support people in preparing for their death. I never had seriously considered my mortality, and here I was having a conversation with this woman about hers. A year after getting clear that this was my life’s work, my brother-in-law became ill, and I supported him and his family through the last few months of his life. It was then I discovered the incongruency of the medical support team, the hospice team, and the funeral staff of how to really support families in this time.”

                                                                                        Alua Arthur,
End-of-Life Doula Going with Grace
 http://www.goingwithgrace.com/

Supporting those diagnosed with a life-limiting disease is possibly the essence of death doula work. However, this isn’t true for every death doula. Some choose to focus on just the very end, providing primarily vigil planning and support, and possibly home funeral guidance. (See Section 2.1.7 and 2.11.) For this reason, focusing on supporting those in the final years (as opposed to only the final weeks or days) could still be considered a “specialty” of death doula work.

As you can see from death doula Alua Arthur’s story, supporting a terminally ill patient may look more like life coaching, with an awareness of death planning—as it was with the woman on the bus, traveling after a diagnosis of uterine cancer—or it may be a much more intense, immediate support situation, like it was with Alua’s brother-in-law. 

The terminally ill or their family members may seek out your services early in the diagnosis period—possibly when they still have years to live—or they may not find you until the end is very near.

The kind of support and services you provide will vary based on the needs and health status of your client. But the essence is the same: empowerment, education, emotional support, and advocacy.

2.1.3 Respite Care for the Family

Respite care is short-term relief for primary caregivers. When someone is seriously ill, the ill or their family members may require or want someone present at all times. This can be difficult for the caregiver. Also, if someone is in the process of dying, leaving the dying person’s side can feel impossible. And yet, the dying process can take days (or weeks.) It’s simply not healthy for one or even two primary caregivers to be there every moment until the end.

An end-of-life doula may offer services to sit with an ill or dying family member so the caregivers can get a break. Sometimes, this respite care doubles as death doula care for the dying as well. In other words, the doula may be offering non-medical comfort measures, a compassionate ear, or helping them plan for their death; while also giving the caregivers time to themselves.

In other situations, the ill or dying person is not conscious, or they may be mentally unable to engage with the doula. The death doula will still use their knowledge and skills to provide a calming, peaceful presence for the ill or dying, but it’s a slightly different kind of support.

Not every death doula does respite care specifically. They may refer clients to respite care service providers or work alongside respite care professionals.

2.1.4 Facilitating Legacy and Life Review Projects

“No person dies without a reason. And no person lives without a reason. Life has to have purpose and meaning in terms of value and fulfillment. Without that, it is empty. In whatever work I chose to do, the purpose of my life is not to be something else or someone else, but to become more of myself.”

                                                                          Carol Neustadt,
Certified End-of-Life Specialist (CEOLS)

In the context of doula work, legacy projects are a way for someone— anyone, they don’t have to be dying—to create a physical remembrance of their life story or values. They are usually intended to be passed onto the next generation or be left as a memorial, a gift to those left behind.

Life review projects are similar to legacy projects, though there may not be an intention to share with others what’s created. They might remain private to the individual.

Both legacy and life review projects enable the terminally ill to consider the whole of their lived experience so far. Life review is a natural part of the dying process. Creating a project can take what’s typically an internal “project” and make it something tangible. This can be healing for not only the dying person but also their loved ones.

Some doulas specialize in facilitating legacy or life review projects. Not every doula offers this as a service, though even those that don’t make it an official part of their business may get clients who would like to work on a legacy project.

Section 2.5.2 will give you more guidance on how to facilitate legacy or life review projects.

2.1.5 Conducting Living Funerals

A living funeral gives your client the chance to be there when their family and friends are actively remembering and reminiscing about the client’s life 

Sometimes also known as a pre-funeral or living wake, it moves the celebration of a person’s life from after death to before death, so the celebrated person can be there to cry, laugh, and enjoy the memorial held in their honor. Living funerals can also help families and the terminally ill come to terms with the upcoming death and recognize a good life lived.

Living funerals may also be held for those who are healthy and well. They are not exclusively for the terminally ill. In this context, they can help people consider their own mortality and the kind of legacy they want to leave behind before they leave this world.

Death doula Emily Cross offers a living funeral ceremony intended for healthy participants.

Living Funeral attendee Sam Sanford had this to say about the experience:

“It can be hard for me to immerse myself in an experience, as I tend to maintain a detached, analytical stance and sort of view what’s happening to me from a distance rather than experiencing it. But Emily’s ceremony really opened my heart, both in making me think about my life and what I will leave behind when I die, and in hearing the other participants’ thoughts about their own lives. Hearing everyone’s reflections on their lives, messages to their loved ones, regrets and wishes read aloud was deeply moving and connected all the participants intimately. This heart- opening experience was the perfect preparation for the visualization of dying that followed, and when we were subsequently guided back to life, we felt real joy at being alive and having a second chance to create the lives we really wanted. It can be hard to market a ceremony like Emily’s – people see the word ‘funeral’ and assume it’s not for them. Our culture does not like to talk about death. But nearly everyone has the feeling that they are not living their best life, and a ceremony like this is a powerful way to make big changes toward living the life you dream of.”

2.1.6 Planning and Conducting Vigils

Planning a vigil is a common service offered by most end-of-life doulas. However, the degree to which the doula is actively involved can vary significantly.

For many death doulas, they are primarily a consultant with the family and the dying individual. They assist the dying and their loved ones to come up with a plan, but they don’t carry out the plan. The dying person’s caregivers do.

However, there are doulas that focus almost exclusively on “vigiling”—not just planning the vigil but also being there alongside the dying in the last days.

Just like a birth doula sits with an actively laboring woman and provides comfort, support, and advocacy, a death doula who offers active vigil care does the same—but for the active dying phase.

Frequently, because the active dying phase can take place over a number of days, doulas that offer these services will work as a team or with a partner.

Doulas who offer active vigil service are “on call.” That is to say, they must be prepared to go whenever the family or hospice professionals say the time is near. This could be in the middle of the night or on a weekend or holiday. While other aspects of death doula work can be scheduled, this kind of doula’ing can’t be planned in advance.

Sometimes, death workers who focus on vigiling prefer to call themselves death midwives. A childbirth midwife is there for the birth and transition into life; a death midwife is there for the transition into death. Others object to the title of midwife for death vigiling because the root of the word midwife means with woman—and of course, death doulas/midwives sit with the dying no matter what their gender. What you decide to call yourself, if you offer this service, is a personal choice.

2.1.7 Mourning and Post-Loss Support

Mourning doulas provide support for those who have recently lost a loved one. They may offer practical and emotional support. They may also help them with post-death arrangements, especially when death was sudden or there were no pre-existing plans.

There are some that confuse this kind of support with taking the place of a funeral director, but that’s not so. A mourning doula is not a funeral director. That said, the doula might refer clients to local funeral directors or help inform their clients of alternative options for disposition of the body. They may also discuss options like green burial and home funeral arrangements.

2.1.8 Facilitating with post-Death Home Organization

Also known as material artifact support, some death doulas specialize in offering post-death home organization. Going through the belongings of a friend or family member who has recently passed can be emotional and overwhelming.

Death doulas that offer material artifact support may work with the family after the death, or they may work directly with a person diagnosed with a life limiting illness. For a dying individual, making decisions on what to give to their loved ones, what to dispose of, and what to display (possibly as part of a legacy project) can be comforting.

Dying individuals often worry about “being a burden” to their family. Taking care of this typically post-death activity can relieve some of that anxiety.

Material artifact support may involve primarily consultations, or it may include hands-on support. This will depend on the desires of the client.

2.1.9 Pet Death Doula Services

Some death doulas specialize in helping people cope with the loss of their pets. They may create rituals or ceremonies for when a pet owner has to euthanize their beloved companion. They can offer practical and emotional support to both the pet and the owner before, during, and after the loss of a pet.

Pet death doula work is much needed. “It’s underestimated,” explained Ute Luppertz, a pet death doula in Portland, Oregon. “Most of our animals will die sooner than we do. The veterinarians are really compassionate, and they have to [put animals to sleep] every day, and other than that, people are on their own.” 

As pet death doula, both the pet and the people will be your clients. “I also take the animal into consideration,” explains Ute. “Because I do a lot of healing work and intuitive work. The animal is my client, and I support the person too. They are both my clients. I have done a lot of active support. People have hired me to be there during euthanasia. We prep the family; we prep the children. And when I say prepping, I mean, ‘How can we make this as inclusive as possible and as dignified as possible, and not run with a panic?’ when trying to figure out when is the right time to put an animal to sleep.”

Ute continues: “There are all these things that veterinarians say, and bless their heart, I understand why, but they will say, “You know when it’s time.’ And I cannot tell you how many people tell me that they didn’t know. And I say, I understand. It depends on the illness. Sometimes, it’s very clear. Very often, it’s a roller-coaster ride, and you don’t quite know when it’s time. It’s not easy to gauge. There are so many things that people think they should anticipate, and sometimes that’s the case, but you know, where you see a predictable outcome, usually with a terminal illness, it is predictable, but also, I tell people that animals only show anything when the stress is insurmountable because their DNA dictates to them, not just to show it. Because in the wild, they will not survive if they complain like you and I.”

Check out Ute Luppertz’s beautiful website:
Pets Point of View: Death Doula Service for Pets
https://www.pets-point-of-view.com

What Does Pet Death Doula Work Look Like?

Ute Luppertz’s shares two stories of what it may look like to support a pet and the family during death:

“I was working with one family for many years. And one of their dogs died, and he was also the special needs child of the family, so in his younger years, I did a lot of behavioral work with him when he was younger. They had us over the day before the dog was euthanized. We just talked about the what, if, and when. Because she [one of the dog’s owners] wanted it a certain way, with only her veterinarian, on a certain day, etcetera. And I said, “Look, I understand… but what do you need to look at if he takes a turn for the worse that night?” And the dog actually did.

“She ended up having to use someone she didn’t know. I know the company, it’s a group of veterinarians, they are absolutely fantastic.
“Next, the practical… and so I said, okay, you know how to do this yourself but… if you want me to, I make the phone call to the vet. I have the credit card. I will meet them at the door. I have someone come over to take care of the other dogs. I ask, “Do you need someone to bring food?”

“Simple things, but when you’re in the thick of things, very practical things. What I did the entire time is I gave them space, husband and wife, to be with their dog. Everything else was taken care of, and it looked like a very practical measure. However, I also made sure that the energy field was harmonious for him by the time the vet came… I would check and ask, Are there Kleenex? Do we need to do this, do we need to do that? Do you want to bring him to the cremation place today? Do they know you are coming? What else do you want me to do?

“In essence, it’s something that anybody could do, but because I understand the nature of the situation, I do it in a very calm way. I make sure everybody is supported. I make sure if they need their favorite junk food or a glass of water, whatever it is, I make sure they have it. Do they have blankets for the dogs because they might urinate or defecate after they take their last breath? Simple things, but they are so massively important.”

“I had another situation with a dog… they called me for the euthanasia, and the dog was very far gone even prior to the arrival of the veterinarian. He probably would have died within an hour. Totally gone. And I arrive at the scene, and the whole group of girlfriends are gathered around the dog, and that was good. And then the dog started very labored breathing, and there is the same thing when you go into labor with giving birth, it is the same thing with death. It’s called the death rattle… and it doesn’t look pretty when you don’t expect it from a pet. The women were just getting really emotional, they clustered around him, and I could feel he was in distress. And I said, ladies, you need take one step back. This is very natural. He is preparing to die. And the breath gets very erratic, and it’s not pretty. But this is what he has to do to separate from his body. This is a very natural process. One of the girls asked, “Is he in pain?!” And I said, no. He was not mentally there, he was far far gone. But he could sense when they got really emotional, I said please, just take it a notch down. It will not help him. I have seen animals pull themselves back in when someone says, ‘Oh no Fluffy, please don’t go, don’t go, don’t go.’ And I completely understand it. But if someone hires me for that occasion, I say, “What can we do to keep it calm and peaceful for your dog?”

“Different situations call for different interventions. What it comes down to it for me is… how can I create the most peaceful environment possible for the animal to do what they need to do? And it’s also super super intense for the person.

“If people work with me ahead of time, we can usually achieve a better situation. We know we need to pay attention when is the right time for euthanasia and how… but also, how can you all prepare one another? Tell each other stories, write letters, do whatever it takes. I like rituals, any kind of traditions, every culture has something ritualistic around death, and I encourage people to think about what works for them. I don’t care what it is. It’s not that you have to do something religious. But something that gives you a feeling of significance, that the death is not less because it’s not a person.”

2.2 Tools of the Trade – And How to Use Them

The primary tools of death doula’ing are your own heart and soul. There are, of course, also physical tools—practical items—you may want to have on hand or easily available to you.

What you bring with you will depend on if you’re meeting a client for an initial consultation, reviewing advanced care directives, working on a legacy project, or sitting by the bedside. What you bring for a vigil will be different from what you bring for a mourning doula visit, post-death, or what you might bring for a living funeral ceremony. You also may not always know what awaits you when you’re called in to support someone.

The following list isn’t broken up into specific categories of service because many of the items can be used in multiple settings.

Your use of items also depends on your style. For example, some may approach working on advanced care directives in a formal, meeting style way. Others may approach it with a spiritual, more ritualized style. In one case, writing devices will be your primary tools. In the other case, having lit candles or even relaxing music playing while you work on the paperwork together may not be unusual.

Here are items you may want to have available or on-hand as you work as a death doula or midwife.

Candles

Make sure you have both unscented traditional candles as well as electric, “flameless” candles. You can’t use real candles where an oxygen tank is in use or in the hospital environment. This is where electric candles can really come in handy.

Also, for your real-flame candles, have something to place the candle in or on, both for safety’s sake and for beauty. 

Aromatherapy Tools

Appealing to the sense of smell can calm the dying and the well. You may want to use aromatherapy tools during consultations, visits with your client, or during vigiling.

 

Some people have allergies or sensitivities to aromatherapy oils, so always make sure to discuss this with your clients and their visiting friends and family before you use them. If you’re working inside a hospital, hospice, or nursing home, check with staff before using any aromatherapy tools that will diffuse the scent beyond the bedside of your client.

Also, be cautious with using oils on the skin, especially on the terminally ill or elderly. Aromatherapy oils can cause irritation and even serious burns. They can also interact with medications. Those who are not well are at higher risk for these negative side effects. Those who are not fully conscious may not be able to tell you if something is causing pain or physical damage.

If you bring a diffuser for the oils, make sure it is flameless. Choose and use the oils lightly. Don’t overdo it. Just a hint of scent can be best.

Note: Aromatherapy oils can be dangerous if used improperly. They can cause damage to a person’s health, skin, or lungs. Make sure you are well educated in their safe use before you add them to your toolbox.

Softer Scented Items 

Using scent to calm and comfort doesn’t have to be limited to essential oils. You might also consider having other sources of pleasant scents, like…

      • Dried herbs
      • Sage sticks
      • Twig of rosemary
      • Mint leaves
      • Cinnamon sticks
      • Fresh or dried flowers

You may consider just having these items nearby for a quick whiff or on a table by the bedside. As with aromatherapy oils, always talk to your clients first about possible allergies or sensitivities before you bring anything like this into their environment.

Gentle Moisturizing Creams, Lotions, or Massage Oil

Lotions, creams, and massage oils can be used to offer physical, non-medical comfort. Having a variety of options—including hypoallergenic non-scented oils, and perhaps some with soothing or relaxing scents—is a good idea.

As with aromatherapy use, always ask your client and their family first about allergies or sensitivities to chemicals or scents.

Music Player and Auditory Tools

The sense of hearing is one of the last to go in the dying phase. Having relaxing or beloved music softly playing can be a source of comfort.

If you meet the client while they are able to communicate their wishes, you can ask what music they prefer or would enjoy. If not, talk to family members about what they think their relative would have wanted if they could tell you.

You could play music from your smart phone, but having a Bluetooth speaker (preferably battery operated or cordless) can be better. You will still likely want to play the music softly, but the quality will be higher.

You may also want to have headphones with disposable ear bud tips. Another option is over-the-ear headphones and an alcohol-based spray cleaner to sanitize them after client use.

Besides music, you may also want to have available:

      • Books on tape—especially sacred texts
      • Guided imagery recordings—ones you’ve created yourself or purchased recordings

Visual and Audio Recording Devices

You could use your personal phone to take photos or video, but there are several reasons why this may be less than ideal. For one, you’ll want to protect the privacy of your clients. Having your personal pictures and video along with client images on your phone could make that difficult. Also, you may want or need to use your phone for something else.

Whether you decide to use your personal phone, an older smart phone you’re not using personally, a camera, a video camera, a laptop with video or audio recording functions, or an old fashioned audio recording, having these available in your death doula work can be helpful.

You might use these recording devices to…

      • Take pictures for the family—like to capture a touching moment when a family pet lies on the bed near their master
      • Video tape or audio record life stories, so the family and friends can watch and remember these tales
      • Help create a legacy project

Charging Cords and Backup Batteries – For Everything

For your personal phone, a smart phone you might be using to play music with or record video with, for the Bluetooth speaker, for the flameless candles, (possibly) for the aromatherapy diffuser.

Art Supplies and Journaling Paper

Art supplies may come in handy for legacy work, especially if your client wants to go this direction when creating one.

Art supplies can also be nice to have simply for comfort or distraction, for clients or family members. Adult and even children coloring books may come in handy.

Blank journals or fancy journaling paper can be used for legacy projects, letter writing, or simply self-reflection.

They may also be used to keep a diary, especially if individuals holding vigil changes over the hours and days. This way, there is continuity in the narrative for the living.

A Notebook or Legal Pad

You always will want to have a notebook, legal pad, or computer to take notes. You want to keep track of the needs of your clients, work on paperwork or consultation paperwork, mark down changes in plans, and so on.

A big part of your role is helping plan. Writing these plans down is essential. Plus, you’ll want to mark down questions you need to research for your client.

Even if you’re not specifically working on formal paperwork, you will still want to have notes. Right now, when you’re starting off, you might figure you can remember the details of each client’s situation, their likes and dislikes, their fears and desires, etc. However, as you gain clients, it will naturally be harder to keep track. Better to develop a habit of taking notes. 

Official Forms, Documents, and Guides

Especially if you’re helping people with advanced care directives, or helping to create vigil plans, you might have forms—ones you’ve created yourself, purchased, or found for free online—that you use to guide clients.

You’ll want to have at least a few copies of your primary documents and forms.

Sacred Texts

You might want to keep on hand at least the most popular sacred texts from various religions.

That might include having a copy or excerpts from…

      • The Bible
      • The Koran
      • The Torah
      • The Book of Mormon
      • A hymn book or two
      • A Jewish prayer book (known as a siddur in Hebrew)

You can have all these in electronic format. Don’t picture carrying around a huge stack of books!

As a doula, you are not there to convert or pressure any client into any particular belief. That would be unethical.

However, you will likely serve people who gain comfort from religion. Sometimes, even someone who has not been actively involved in religion in decades will suddenly wish for someone to read Biblical or other sacred texts to him or her.

The family may have these texts available. Many hospitals and hospices have some texts available to borrow. 

But, just in case, it can be nice for you to be prepared.

Books of Poetry or Classic Tales

Besides sacred texts, having a variety of secular literature to read out loud can be nice. Look at poetry and even classic children’s story collections.

It’s also possible that your client will request a specific book or books to be read to them. You should accommodate this as best you can. If they don’t have the reading material available for you, remember that most libraries offer electronic book borrowing.

Non-Latex Gloves

You won’t be providing medical care, but you still will want to have non-latex gloves available. You can use them when applying physical comfort measures, like helping to apply Vaseline on dried out lips, or use them if you are gently applying massage oil or lotion to the arms, hands, or feet of your client.

Any activities of daily living that a family member may be expected to do, you might find yourself also providing or assisting with. This can include helping shift the position of the terminally ill client, helping with bathing, or assisting with keeping them clean and dry after urination or bowel movements.

How involved you’ll be with this kind of care will depend on your comfort level, the client’s, and their family. It will also depend on the environment. For example, in a hospital, hospice, or nursing home, there are certified staff who take care of these issues.

If the family has decided to personally wash the body of their loved one after death, you will want gloves to assist or stand by during this process.

Hand Sanitizer

You’ll want this for both before you walk into a client’s room or home—you don’t want to be responsible for passing on illnesses—and after working with clients. 

In a hospital, hospice, or nursing home, there will likely be plenty of places to wash and sanitize hands. Still, it’s good to have your own just in case.

(Inexpensive) Washcloths

When possible, it’s best to use the washcloths available in the person’s home, or those provided by the hospice or hospital. However, in the event nothing is easily accessible, having some cheap washcloths on hand can be useful. If they are cheap, you won’t feel bad throwing them away after use.

They can be used to carefully dab the forehead with cool water or be used to clean up spills or accidents.

Chapstick and/or Vaseline

In the last week or days of a person’s life, dry lips and mouth can be a problem and a major source of discomfort. Having something to relieve that discomfort can be helpful.

If you use something like Chapstick, use a gloved finger to apply it. Don’t directly apply the stick to the lips, unless you will then leave it with the client.

Oral Swabs

The mouth can feel dry and become uncomfortable at the end of life. Dental oral swaps can be used to apply moisture. These are sometimes known by the brand name “Toothettes.”

The swabs can be simply dipped in water or a saline solution.

Sometimes, a dying person doesn’t want to drink, but gentle sucking on fluid through a dental swap can be comforting. They can be dipped into a favorite drink for flavor. 

CloSYS Alcohol Free Mouthwash

Oral swabs may used to apply mouthwash, to help give a clean, fresher oral experience, but many mouthwashes are too strong for those near the end of life or in the active dying phase.

Jason Olson, a dental hygienist and former certified nurses aid, recommends using CloSYS Alcohol Free Mouthwash. This is a non-prescription mouthwash that is gentler than more common dental rinses.

Library of Books on Death and Dying

You might not be carrying around a library of books of death and dying—but having books available for clients to borrow might be something you consider. These might be books you read while training for your role as a death doula.

You might have a laminate sheet that lists your books open for borrowing.

TIP: Look into purchasing Barbara Karnes booklets on death and dying. They are easy to read, inexpensive (especially when bought in bulk), and can be a  source of comfort and reassurance to your clients and their families. Karnes books on death and dying are considered classics. If you have not read them yet, you should. https://bkbooks.com

Extra Change of Clothes for Yourself

Always have an extra set of clothes with you, either in your bag or in the car. You never know when you may get soiled with body fluids, especially when you’re working with the ill.

Also, if you’ll be sitting vigil for hours, you may want a fresh change of clothes available—even if you’re not necessarily “dirty.”

Should you wear scrubs? It’s your choice. There are advantages and disadvantages. 

Advantages include easier washing and care, you don’t have to worry as much about them getting dirty or stained (it’s not your favorite blouse), ease of movement, and it can indicate to healthcare professionals that you, too, are working in a professional role.

A disadvantage is they may make it look like you are part of the healthcare staff (which you aren’t.) They can also trigger negative feelings in clients who have had a bad or traumatizing experience with medical care.

TIP: What you wear can have an effect on those you are caring for. According to this fascinating article on death doula and hospice clothing choices (https://www.racked.com/2017/10/18/16469252/death-doula-clothing-hospice), wearing all white flowing clothes, all black, or reds can be problematic.

Care Items for Yourself

Especially if you’re sitting vigil, you will want basic care items with you, for yourself: toothbrush and toothpaste, mouthwash and/or breath freshener gum, a water bottle, snacks, or protein bars.

You might want to have items that you use for comfort after being with a patient as well. Don’t forget about your own emotional and physical care! For example, you might keep a private journal. You may have items you use after meeting with someone for ritual or spiritual comfort. You may have your own private music and headphones.

A Bag, Box, or Carry-On Suitcase

You will need something to carry all this in! Depending on what you’re carrying and when, you might have a simple backpack, a more formal briefcase, or even a small carry-on suitcase with rollers.

Your Pet-If They Are a Trained Therapy Animal

Yes, your pet may be a “tool” you include in your “doula bag.” This will only be true, however, if your animal is a trained therapy animal (https://www.akc.org/canine-partners/which-is-which-therapy-dog-or-service-dog/). You would not want to bring along your pet if you and they have not formally studied how to provide therapy through animal service.

As always, be sure to confirm with your client and their support team if a therapy animal is welcome and if there are any allergies (or animal fears) you should know about. Also, if the client has their own pet or animals present, bringing a therapy animal may not be appropriate.

2.3 How to “Hold the Space” for Someone: Your Most Vital Service

“Self reflection is key to cultivating an ability to hold space for others. In my opinion, too many enter this work because they feel enlightened by their own version of ‘death acceptance’ and wish to peddle that for others. We need to learn how to get our own agendas out of the way to meet folks where they are at.

Cassandra Yonder,
Community Deathcare Activist and Educator
www.deathcaring.ca

One of the most important services you offer is “holding the space.” If you are to succeed as a death doula, holding space for the dying and their loved ones will be the skill you must practice and perfect (as much as possible.)

You will likely find yourself holding space…

      • During initial and subsequent consultations
      • When sitting with your client, for any reason
      • When facilitating advanced care directive planning
      • When facilitating funeral and/or burial planning
      • When vigiling
      • In the moments just after death
      • In sitting with a mourning family 
      • Any time you are interacting with anyone as a doula

What does it mean to “hold the space” for someone? There’s no agreed upon definition, but it might be defined simply as…

      • Being with a person without judgment
      • Accepting their emotions as they are, without trying to fix them or take them away
      • Truly listening to what they are saying, without spending time in your head trying to “figure them out” or come up with a solution or response
      • Allowing your emotions to be present too, without having them overtake you. (It’s okay to tear up or laugh—but don’t lose your composure. Don’t make this about you.)

You likely know what it feels like personally when someone “holds the space” for you. Getting in touch with how it feels when someone holds the space for you can help you learn how to hold space for others.

When someone holds the space for you, it can be an amazing, healing experience. Calming. Comforting. Like everything is going to be okay, even if things are not “okay.”

It is the difference between being vulnerable with someone and finding yourself feeling defensive or shutdown—versus being vulnerable and feeling understood and accepted just as you are.

When someone tries to “fix” things too quickly or jumps in too fast with their own stories, you walk away feeling as bad or maybe even worse than when you shared your struggle.

When someone “holds the space” for you, you feel lighter, more at ease, and loved. You feel this way even if you’re actually more in touch with the depth of your sadness or difficult emotion.

A person holding space for you gives you permission to be with your intense emotions, and this allows your pain to flow. Flow is how emotions move through us. Trying to stop the flow doesn’t make it better. It creates flooding. Overwhelm. Going with the flow is how we process what we’re experiencing and (eventually, in our own time) move past into the next phase or emotion.

Whether you’re meeting with a client for the first or tenth time, or you’re sitting vigil by the bedside, here is how to get better at “holding space” for someone.

TIP: Practice these techniques and skills with your friends and loved ones. It’ll help you be a better doula and a better person. Ask a trusted friend to actively practice and provide feedback. In other words, let them know you’ll be holding space for each other for five minutes each. Then, after, agree to share with each other what helped and what could be worked on to improve your skills.

Get comfortable with silence.

“It’s not about you! Stop overlaying your own interpretations, belief structures, world view… Be present and attentive, but not overbearing. Get comfortable with silence. Words are not always necessary.”

Rev. Angie Buchanan
http://deathmidwife.org

We are uncomfortable with quiet in conversation. This is why we sometimes feel the need to quickly jump in with a solution or personal story. Resist sharing a personal story or experience.

Learning to get comfortable with silence is essential. Giving someone time and space to sit with what they just shared can help them process their own feelings and allow them time to think of what they want to share or say next.

Sometimes, an understanding nod, sound of affirmation (“mmm… “) or encouragement to share more (“Tell me more.”) can help. Sometimes, silence is what’s needed most.

Let go of having the “perfect response.”

When you make friends with silence, it’s easier to let go of having that perfect response. We can get so busy with trying to think of what to say that we’re not even listening to what the person in front of us is saying. 

When you’re comfortable with not having the “perfect” response, you can sit and listen.

You’ll spend less time trying to think of what you’ll say, more time “holding the space” for your client.

Let go of thinking you know “exactly” what this person needs or should do.

Being a doula is not about making decisions for others or telling them what a “good death” looks like. That’s not the doula’s role.

Here’s some wonderful advice from death doula Carol Neustadt:

“It’s not my story, so don’t get caught up with what’s going on with that patient and their family. Especially when I have to work with children, and I think, god, I would never do that. One of my managers, best advice I ever received, said, ‘Carol, it’s not your story.’ I thought, God, you’re so right, and I just need to be the greatest observer that I can be and just allow their story to unfold. Not to judge, to know this is exactly what needs to be, at this exact time for this person, and that on some greater level, there is more going on than I can understand. I tell myself all the time; this is not your story. It can be fun too, because then you’re just letting whatever is going to happen in the moment, and it writes its own story. And it can be magical.”

Carol Neustadt,
 Certified End-of-Life Specialist (CEOLS)

Be okay with “Not fixing” things.

You can’t take away painful feelings, and you really shouldn’t even aim to do so. People don’t want someone to “fix” their problems—they want someone to witness their pain and feel understood.

This can be a tricky space to be in since one of your roles is providing informational support. However, there is a fine line between offering guidance and empowerment, and “fixing” things and offering unasked for solutions. There is also a difference between offering options, compared to suggesting that you know “the best” option for them.

This is another skill you will learn with practice and time. 

Be okay with death not being “beautiful.”

In the end-of-life doula world, there is a focus on helping people have a “good death” and make choices. This is noble, and throughout this guide, helping people consider what a good death means to them is discussed in great detail.

However, death is not always beautiful or peaceful. Even with planning and support, death can be painful, messy, and heartbreaking. The last thing anyone wants is to make a dying person feel like they are “failing” at having a “good death.”

You can’t “hold the space” for someone if you’re concerned they are not getting the “good death” that they envisioned or that you hoped for them. Holding the space requires letting go of all expectations and just being present with what is.

TIP: Read this beautiful blog post on  “The Dangerous Myth of a Good Death,” by Kathleen Clohessy (http://blog.sevenponds.com/so-you-got-the-news/the-dangerous-myth-of-a-good-death).

Be comfortable (or at least work on getting comfortable) with your own mortality. Get clear on your personal thoughts on death, dying, and even the afterlife.

You cannot “hold the space” for a person who is dying if you haven’t yet confronted your own thoughts on your mortality and what a “good death” means to you.

Taking time to consider what a “good death” means to you isn’t so you can “figure out” what a good death means generally. That will differ from person to person. This is so you can know what a “good death” means to you personally, so you can support another person as they consider what a “good death” means to them personally.

It’s also vital to consider what it would mean for you if death didn’t go as planned for you personally. (For example, if it came on suddenly, or if your last days were terribly painful.) 

If you have not confronted these questions and thoughts yourself, you will automatically find yourself ruminating on them as you meet and work with clients. That means you won’t be able to be fully present as you sit with them. You’ll be in your own head, trying to figure things out for yourself.

See 3.1.2 for more on how to get comfortable with death and dying.

Be aware that anger—even if it seems to be directed at you—it’s likely not about you at all.

Emotions may run high for the dying and their loved ones. For that matter, friends and family of the dying may have more difficulty with their emotions than the dying person. Anger is just one possible emotion that may arise when you’re working with a family.

Of course, you should never accept or tolerate abuse. That said, if and when a family member lashes out at you, or loses their composure; try to remember that the anger is not about you personally.

Anger can mask fear and sadness. The person may be angry at the illness, at god, at circumstance, or at the situation. They may even be angry at the dying person—for past wrongs or even for “dying on them.”

However, you (or anyone) may become the target of these intense emotions. The best thing you can do is remind yourself that this isn’t about you. Breath deeply. Try not to go into defensive mode. And, as long as you’re not in danger of physical harm, continue to “hold the space.” That may mean standing there and listening quietly until the person calms themselves down. That may mean stepping out of the room.

Whatever you do, don’t fight back or respond with anger. More about handling difficult family emotions in section 2.6.4.

Carefully consider the time to offer options or provide education.

One of your vital roles is to empower your client to make decisions for themselves. This often means providing them with information and options. Death is less scary when you know what to expect, and few people know what to expect.

People frequently don’t know all their options, either. They may only be familiar with what has been offered to them by their medical team, or with what they’ve seen themselves when friends or relatives have been ill. For example, they may not know that home hospice care is a possibility. They may not know about green burial or home funeral.

You will want to help your client understand their options—but you don’t want to offer that information at the wrong time. This can interfere with your role as a compassionate listener.

You’ll learn with practice when is the time to “hold the space,” and when is the time to share your thoughts and suggestions.

TIP: Ask your client if it’s okay if you jot down notes as you talk together. Ensure them that this will help you listen to them better. This way, you can “hold the space” while they talk and share their wishes, fears, and questions. Then, after, offer suggestions or information. It’s better to ask your client to give you a moment to jot down a note, than to interject with information or education too soon or at the wrong moment.

Doula Reading Week 1

Reading Week 1

Chapter 1

 

1. Introduction

“We must practice the art of dying so that when our death is upon us we will not be afraid but recognize it as the most loving thing there is—and fall into it completely.”

Rev. Olivia Bareham,
Death Midwife, Home Funeral Guide,
Celebrant, Conscious Dying Educator
SacredCrossings.com

Welcome to the world of death doula’ing!

Some may accuse you of being morbid for wanting to work with people at the end of life. Strange. Weird. The topic of death is something the majority of people today try to avoid, refuse to discuss, and attempt not to think about. Yet, here you are, aspiring to walk alongside the dying. Is something wrong with you?

Absolutely not! There is nothing wrong with you at all.

Better words to describe someone like you: Brave. Gifted. Intuitive. Compassionate. Comfortable with your own mortality. You likely feel called to this work. Passionate. Inspired.

Death doulas are not “obsessed with death.” They are in love with life. End-of-life doulas are so in love with life that they hope to bring comfort and peace to the very last seconds of every person’s time in this world.

The transition from this world to the next—or the transition from a state of being alive to being dead, however you personally choose to describe it—can be as beautiful and meaningful as the time of birth. Certainly, it is sad to say goodbye. But it doesn’t need to be frightening.

“People will often say to me, ‘Isn’t [working as an end-of-life doula] depressing?’ And like, actually no, because it’s not my death. Just like it wasn’t painful for me to be a [childbirth] midwife, I wasn’t the one going through labor. When someone dies, it’s actually a wonderful thing to be able to make that a better experience. To empower people find meaning and make meaning and navigate and be fully present with that. You see such amazing things.”

Merilynne Rush,
MS in Hospice & Palliative Studies, RN, BSN
Lifespan Doula Association
https://www.lifespandoulas.com

As a death doula, you will help individuals—as well as their friends and families—face death with a little less fear and a little more love. 

This guide will give you everything you know to get started on this unique and important career path. 

1.1. A Career as a Death Doula

If you’re reading this guide, you already have a general idea of what a death doula is. But it’s very possible you have never actually met a death doula. You may have only discovered this as a career path after reading a news article, or after researching the world of death and dying. It’s possible your local area doesn’t have even a handful of end-of-life doula professionals. It’s also likely you have a limited definition of what being a death doula could mean. 

This is all great news. You may soon be surprised to learn about all the possibilities and directions open to end-of-life doulas. You are also very likely to be one of the first death doulas in your area. You’ll be a trailblazer in a new profession that desperately needs people.

Did You Know? There are many possible ways to title your work in this field, some which refer to specific specialties and others that can be more general. You may call yourself a death doula, an end-of-life doula, dying guide, a death coach, a deathwalker, a mourning doula, a death care or end-of-life specialist, a community death care advocate, a death midwife (sometimes specific to those who conduct home funerals or specifically offer vigil work), a soul midwife, a thanadoula (from the word thanatology, the scientific study of death), an elderly care doula, or a pet death doula. Throughout this book, you’ll notice that the experts quoted are referred to in a variety of ways and titles. This is because the choice of title is very personal. Eventually, you’ll need to decide how you’d like to refer to yourself in this work.

TIP: Be aware that there have been some legal challenges in Canada to those wishing to use the term “midwife” outside of the context of a licensed childbirth midwife. If you decide to use the phrase midwife in your title or business name, there’s a theoretical possibility that you will be pressured or forced to legally change it.

1.1.1 What an End-of-Life or Death Doula is

An end-of-life doula is a support person — man or woman — who provides nonjudgmental, non-medical holistic support to those nearing the end of life. An end-of-life doula also typically offers support to the friends and family of the elderly, dying, or recently dead. An end-of-life doula educates and empowers individuals to make decisions on their own end-of-life care and final burial or funeral.

Note that end-of-life doulas are all genders—despite the word “doula” grammatically referring to a female in the Greek origin of the word — and end-of-life doulas serve people of all genders.

End-of-life doulas also aim to provide information to the dying and their family, to help them become familiar with the normal and natural stages of dying. In demystifying the dying process, they help to reduce fear and anxiety.

End-of-life doulas are nonjudgmental. They support the dying without any preconceived notions of what dying should look like. Their job is not to inject their own meaning of death to a family but to help a dying person and their loved ones come to their own conclusions. A death doula is not there to tell a dying individual the “right” or “best” way to die, but to help the dying make their own decisions after learning about their options.

An end-of-life doula is also not there to impart a specific spiritual agenda, to “save” a person’s soul, or in any other way impose their personal beliefs onto the dying.

An end-of-life doula may explore spiritual beliefs with the dying— through active listening and conversation—or may provide support that respects the dying’s religious desires. They may serve as an active listener so the dying and their family can reevaluate their spiritual or religious thoughts on death and burial.

But the death doula does not push or try to “sell” any specific philosophy of death. They are only a mediator, supporter, or compassionate listener, while the dying considers their life legacy and what it means to die.

“Doulas support clients non-judgmentally, according to their needs, values and priorities, and are not agenda-driven. A certain humility is required to be truly effective and empowering in this work. [End-of- Life Doula]s can support families many months before active dying, and many months afterward. Training should include an awareness of this, even if particular doulas then choose to go on and only focus their work on the active dying phase or after death care. End-of-life doula really encompasses it all—the whole “dying year” or years.”

Merilynne Rush,
MS in Hospice & Palliative Studies, RN, BSN, 
Lifespan Doula Association
https://www.lifespandoulas.com

End-of-life doulas are non-medical. While many death doulas are inspired to enter the field after working on a medical team in hospice or palliative care, the role of a death doula is non-medical. A death doula does not provide medical care, though they may help advocate for the dying and help ensure they get the medical care they need from the healthcare support team.

A death doula may provide physical support. For example, a death doula may offer healing touch (like holding a person’s hand), gentle massage, and physical care needs that are often left for families to provide (like keeping the dying individual clean, dry, and comfortable.)

Death doula support is holistic. Holistic care is support that goes beyond the physical needs of a person but also considers their emotional, social, and (possibly) spiritual needs.

End-of-life doulas educate and empower the dying and their families on their end-of-life care, funeral, and burial options. They may introduce or help a dying individual walk through the steps of creating a living will or advanced care directives. After those documents are completed, the doula may help advocate for the dying’s end-of-life decisions, especially when they are no longer able to voice those wishes themselves.

The death doula may provide information on various funeral options, including the possibilities of having a living funeral — a ceremony that occurs while the dying are still alive and able to participate — or the option of a home funeral. They may help a dying person or the mourning family consider traditional funeral options as well. A death doula may also introduce them to options like green burial, or help the family find ways to reduce the cost of dying.

End-of-life doulas may serve…

      • the elderly (possibly for years before their death is due for arrival)
      • the terminally ill, at any age
      • the grieving, those who have lost or are about to say goodbye to a loved one
      • those facing the loss of a pet or beloved animal
      • those not near death but who want to wrestle with and confront their mortality now
      • those looking to practically plan for end-of-life, at any age, regardless of health status

1.1.2 Why Death Doulas Matter  

We are doing death and dying wrong. 

Just consider the following:

      • Most people near death are unable to express their end-of-life medical care desires. But few people take the time to put down on paper what they would want while they are alert and well.
      • A 2014 Kaiser Health study (https://www.kff.org/health-costs/ poll-finding/kaiser-health-tracking-poll-september-2015/) found that 9 in 10 felt doctors should discuss end-of-life care decisions, and 8 in 10 said they would feel “very comfortable” talking about end-of-life care with their family.
      • However, that same study found that only 17 percent—barely 2 in 10—have actually had conversations on end-of-life care with their doctor or health care provider.
      • Until very recently, discussions surrounding end-of-life care planning were not covered by health insurance. Talking about advanced care directives was referred to as “death panel” discussions in some political circles.
      • Even when patients have advanced care directives available, their doctors may not be aware they exist. One study found that only 1 in 4 doctors knew if their patient had advanced care directives in place (https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/facing-death/facts-and-figures/).
      • Studies have found that around 80 percent say they would prefer to die at home (https://palliative.stanford.edu/home-hospice-home-care-of-the-dying-patient/where-do-americans-die/). 
      • But less than 20 percent actually do die at home. Sixty percent die in the hospital and another 20 percent in nursing homes.

This gap between what people want and what they get is partially because the medical model of care is designed to keep people alive at all costs—sometimes at the expense of their quality of life. The medical model of care often leads to taking “extreme measures” to keep a person breathing and their heart beating long after there is hope for them to survive in the long term.

Of course, it’s a good and wonderful thing that doctors and nurses aim to keep people alive and well when prognosis is good and hopes for a decent quality of life is available.

Also, if a person wants so-called “extreme measures” to be taken, or wants to die in a hospital or hospice and not at home, those wishes should be respected.

But, dying with dignity — and having time to consider what that means to an individual—is important. “Staying alive” isn’t and shouldn’t always be the assumed goal.

Death doulas can help close these gaps between what people really want and what occurs.

More so than any other service provider, death doulas stand in a position to empower people to make decisions while they still can, to consider what a “good death” looks like to them, and then help advocate for those wishes at the end.

Note! There have been misconceptions that death doulas are there to assist in or push an “aid in dying” agenda (also known as euthanasia.) This is absolutely not true. While a death doula may be there to support a person who has chosen aid-in-dying, may help a person explore their local legal options, and may sit by the bedside of a person who has chosen this path, a death doula does not specifically encourage aid-in-dying and never assists in the medical tasks involved.

1.1.3 How End-of-Life Doula’ing Differs From Other End-of-Life Professionals

Every member of the end-of-life team is needed, and this is also true of death doulas. Your role and your services are unique from others who may offer care or provide services to the terminally ill, the dying, and the elderly. The profession of end-of-life doula may be new—but the need for this profession has always been there. 

Hospice nurse

A hospice nurse’s primary role is to attend to the medical needs of the patient. Remember that death doulas do not provide medical care. They do not take vitals, give medications, do patient assessments, or work with the attending physician to care for a client’s medical needs.

Hospice nurses  also provide emotional support to their patients and families. Compassionate care is a big part of hospice nurse work. However,  the time they have to offer support beyond medical needs is scarce. Both home and hospice center nurses have many other patients to care for, and many responsibilities, that make sitting by the bedside of a dying patient difficult to impossible.

Nurses rely on volunteers and people like death doulas to provide patients that extra time and personal touch that they wish they could provide, but just can’t.

Hospice nurses may look into becoming death doulas—professionally or in a volunteer role—because they want to have the flexibility and freedom to offer more holistic care. Expect to sit alongside hospice nurses if you attend a death or end-of-life doula training. You yourself may be a hospice nurse! 

Hospice volunteer

Hospice volunteers may provide support to both patients and staff. Their role may include sitting by the bedside as a patient is dying (No One Dies Alone projects), visiting patients at any stage of illness to provide company and companionship, or providing practical or office support to the hospice staff.

However, as a hospice volunteer, your role will be limited by the organization or hospice providing care. You will need to abide by regulations set by the hospice, which are of course vitally important but can limit how much and what kind of support you offer. You may want to provide services that go beyond the hospice bedside, but that would be outside of the scope of your volunteer position.

There are many services that end-of-life doulas can offer that just don’t fit inside the role of a hospice volunteer. (You’ll learn much more about this in Chapter 2.)

Also, practically speaking, volunteer work is wonderful—but we all need to make a living. You likely have a limited amount of time you can dedicate free of charge. Death doula work enables you to make this work your passion and (possibly) your living.

Many death doulas get their start as hospice volunteers. In your work as a death doula, you will likely work alongside hospice volunteer staff. Sometimes, there is a lack of volunteers. Volunteers may only be assigned to those without friends and family. Your presence is needed by those alone and those sitting with loved ones.

Nursing home staff

If you’re looking into elder care doula work, you may find yourself with clients in nursing homes. Hospice care may also occur in the nursing home setting, in some cases. This means you will be working alongside nursing home staff.

Nursing homes are notoriously understaffed. Reports have estimated that up to 90 percent of nursing homes do not have the staff required to care for their residents (https://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/18/us/9-of-10-nursing-homes-in-us-lack-adequate-staff-a-government-study-finds.html). 

Whether you find yourself delivering workshops on end-of-life decision-making, working with clients as an elder care doula, or offering vigil or hospice work specifically, your presence is desperately needed. The nurses, certified nursing assistants, and volunteers will all be grateful for your help.

Housekeepers and food delivery

If you decide to offer services as an elder care doula, you may offer light housekeeping and shopping assistance to your clients. As a death doula, you may or may not offer the same to help support the dying and their family. Couldn’t the family just hire a housekeeper or use a food delivery service? Yes…. and no.

While those services may be helpful—and as a doula you might refer and work alongside housekeeping and food delivery—your work is not comparable.

A housekeeper will clean things up… but he is unlikely to consult with the family about how to arrange the room to best support the dying and their loved ones. He is unlikely to help create sacred space for the dying, or, for the elderly, create rooms that offer encouragement to continue with beloved hobbies or social activities.

After death, a housekeeper won’t be there to consider how to organize the home or personal belongings of the dying, to help decide what to keep, what to give away, and offer the emotional support as family makes these decisions. Housekeepers are unlikely to assist in creating sacred rituals to make this process healing and cleansing.

Food delivery is helpful… but the delivery service won’t sit with your client and discuss what they want to eat (or what the family wants to eat), how to best nourish everyone’s physical and emotional needs, or to reduce time and effort put towards meal preparation.

As an elder care doula, you may sit with your client and help create a meal plan, and even cook some of those meals. Or cook or bake together with your client, in an act of companionship and practical help. 

You are much more than a housekeeper or food delivery service.

Therapists and counselors

Therapists, psychologists, and psychiatrists diagnose and treat mental health issues. End-of-life doulas may refer clients to psychological professionals and may help individuals and families recognize signs of depression or anxiety. However, doulas do not diagnose or treat mental illness.

As an end-of-life doula, you will likely find yourself having emotionally intense conversations about death and dying. You will use many skills that mental health professionals have, like active listening and offering compassionate support. But that’s not psychological therapy.

Some therapists do decide to add death doula work to their toolbox, and you may find yourself training alongside mental health professionals.

“I’m a social worker, too. I was volunteering with a senior aging in place, getting to know her and others like her who also needed services, through my organization, I started seeing how many gaps there are in services for sick people, and elders. Eventually, I was inspired to work for change in home health and hospice. But, even these programs were missing something. Families’ emotional needs weren’t being met. The missing piece was time, and unconditional support; emotional, practical, informational. I knew there was a way to bridge the gap. When a hospice nurse friend mentioned a Death Doula certification course, I knew I was starting down my true path.”

Emily Pinzur,
End-of-Life Doula
www.silverwheelhealing.com

Funeral directors

Death doulas are not funeral directors. While some death doulas also offer home funeral guidance and support, that’s an accessory service and not the essence of death doula work. 

As a death doula, you may help your clients consider their options before they die—or you may help a grieving family navigate the post-death arrangements. You may or may not help educate clients on all their funeral and burial options, including things like green burial, home funerals, and of course more traditional funerals.

You should get to know the local options for funeral services and burial, and be at least somewhat familiar with local laws, so you can offer consultation and referrals. If you don’t know what’s available, you can’t discuss it with your client.

But you don’t take the place of a funeral director.

1.1.4 Services Provided by an End-of-Life Doula

One of the most exciting things about becoming an end-of-life doula is the flexibility and openness of your job description. This is a new career with almost limitless possibilities. What does death doula work look like?

A day-in-the-life of a death doula may include…

      • Meeting with a healthy client and their family in the dining room of their home, going over advanced care directives, helping them understand their options for the future, facilitating conversation between the client and his or her family, and helping them get their wishes understood and documented.
      • Standing vigil by the hospital bedside of dying client. Creating sacred space for the dying and their loved ones by “lighting” electric candles, playing soft classical music, reading poetry, or using hospital-approved aromatherapy.
      • Visiting an elderly client at their home who has no immediate family living nearby, making sure their basic needs are being met, creating a plan to meet those needs, offering conversation and companionship, helping with meals or light housework, planning your next visit, and reporting back to the elderly client’s family on their father/mother/sister/brother’s well-being.
      • Giving a workshop on what a “good death” can mean at a local library to a diverse crowd, of all ages and backgrounds. Educating the group on what they can do now—while they are well and active—to ensure they die with dignity and peace.
      • Conducting a “living funeral” for a cancer patient at their hospice bedside. Helping plan the event and, on the day of, helping direct the ceremony, and possibly documenting the “funeral” through pictures or video or keeping a detailed written record.
      • Meeting with the friends and family of a recently passed loved one, who left this world suddenly and tragically. Helping them navigate their burial and funeral options, putting them in touch with appropriate resources, educating them on the natural and normal stages of grieving, and creating a plan together on how you can best support them in the coming days and weeks.
      • Holding the hand of a terminally ill client, and listening to their fears, life stories, and wishes for their end of life. Possibly offering guidance for taking those stories and creating a legacy project, something to help them process and admire the amazing life they have lived, and create a physical remembrance of that life.

All this freedom to create your career is also a possible disadvantage to death doula work—there are so many options that you may feel tempted to offer everything to everyone. Don’t do this!

Instead, consider all your current skills and talents. Consider what has brought you into this field of work and how you can best serve. Start there. Offer just a few services very well instead of offering lots of services just okay. Begin to seek out additional training and education in the field. With time, you may expand, shift, or re-define what end-of-life doula work means to you.

1.2 The End-of-Life and Dying Industry

“I absolutely think we can have any career we want, including as full time doulas. My approach, and the approach of MourningDoula.Com where I studied, is to offer a continuum of services, and roll out our method across the country. The idea is that people and families start having better conversations about death and dying earlier through talking with End-of-Life Doulas. Then, later on, those same individuals and families work with me as a Death Doula. Then, that family might want a Mourning Doula. Then they might want to have a home funeral, and later hire me as an organizer. For me, I get to help people in lots of different ways. I offer creative problem solving, energy healing, emotional support; all the things that work for me in my own life. It’s organic, it makes sense.”

Emily Pinzur,
End-of-Life Doula
www.silverwheelhealing.com

“I would encourage students to be suspicious or at least curious about any programs claiming that they will be professionals or have a career or job afterward. Not many people are making a reasonable living in this field and websites can be misleading.”

Cassandra Yonder,
Death Care Specialist
http://www.deathmidwifery.ca
http://www.deathcaring.ca

Can you make death doula work a career? Yes. Can you make a full-time living working as an end-of-life doula? Yes. Is this common and do most doulas make a full-time living with this work? No, not yet. But the potential is there for those who hustle, work hard at educating the public at what they do, and think outside the box.

The truth is that many of those looking to become end-of-life doulas aren’t interested in making a full-time income. They may want to supplement their income, or this may be a source of additional cash during retirement. Many end-of-life doulas intend to primarily do the work on a volunteer basis, or might hope to volunteer for the majority of their clients while getting paid from a few others to support the volunteer work.

When we asked working death doulas if you can make a living at this work, we received a variety of answers—everything from “it’s very unlikely” to “absolutely yes, and I am one of those doulas making a full-time income.” 

What are your prospects of making a living at this work? That’s up to you. Don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t do it, if this is your dream. At the same time, if making a full-time income from this work isn’t your goal, don’t let anyone dissuade you from pursuing your passion. No one says everything we do in life has to be all about money.

Regardless of your personal goals—whether to earn a living at this or simply make some extra cash on the side—the market and potential for end-of-life doula support is there.

Consider the following…

        • In Time Magazine article, on “7 New Jobs That Are So 2017” (http://time.com/money/4631366/new-jobs-2017/), profiling unique and exciting job possibilities, death doulas are on the list. The possible annual salary for a death doula is listed in the article as “$40,000 to $70,000 (private practice).” It’s unclear what their source is for this salary quote, but there are end-of-life doulas making full-time incomes.
        • The growing popularity and demand for death doulas has made news internationally. All published in 2018, a Home Health Care News article discusses the up and coming profession of death doulas, the Star Tribune (http://www.startribune.com/death-doulas-help- normalize-the-experience-for-life-s-final-journey/479570193/) covered death doulas, CBC Radio Canada did a story on the death doulas and home funeral movement (https://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent/the-current-for-march-28-2018-1.4595735/how-death-doulas-and-home-funerals-are-changing-the-way-we-grieve-1.4595770), and The New York Times covered the death positive movement (along with discussing death doulas.) Read this article at https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/22/nyregion/the-positive-death-movement-comes-to-life.html.
        • Remember that not too long ago, hospice care was a new concept. The first hospices to open in the USA and Canada only occurred in 1974 (http://www.chpca.net/about-us/history.aspx). Only in the 1980s and 90s were laws passed requiring health insurance companies to cover hospice care. Once considered unusual, hospice care is now considered the standard of care for those at the end of life, with research showing many benefits. In 2016, 1.43 million Medicare beneficiaries spent at least one day in hospice care. The emergence and increasing popularity of the death doula movement fits right in line with the increasing popularity of hospice.
        • The Baby Boomer Generation—those born between 1946 and 1964—have long been considered cultural changers and take- chargers of life transitions. They are frequently cited as being responsible for getting the homebirth and homeschooling movements off the ground. Now, as they move into retirement and near end-of-life, “taking charge” of death and dying is the next natural frontier. The U.S. Census Bureau estimated that there are 77 million baby boomers in the United States of America.
        • The National Funeral Directors Association lists “Advanced Funeral Planning,” “Green Burial,” and “The Popularity of Personalization,” in an article (http://www.nfda.org/news/trends-in-funeral-service) on trends seen in the funeral industry. These concepts all tie into the same umbrella as the death positive movement and end-of-life doula support services.

As you can see, interest in the death positive movement and the need for end-of-life doula care is rising. This guide will give you all the information you need to begin working in this field and plan for long-term success.

1.3 Benefits of Being an End-of-Life Doula

“I am drawn to work with dying and ill patients because it’s the song of my soul. It’s my passion. It is important to recognize the importance of who I am and to add that liveliness to what I do. This is the way my soul chooses to grow, and in return, I help those I meet along the way. We are in this together. We are all one.” 

           Carol Neustadt                                                      
Certified End-of-Life Specialist (CEOLS)

Being an end-of-life doula will enable you to be a part of one of the most important, transformational moments of people’s lives. The positive impact you will have on those at the end of life and their loved ones is immeasurable. As a career, end-of-life doula’ing enables you to choose your clients, be your own boss, and be a pioneer in death positive movement. Here are some of the many benefits of becoming an end-of-life doula or death midwife.

Be Inspired and Awed by Your Work

You could say that the most awe-inspiring moments in life are at the start—at the moment of birth, when the child takes his or her first breath—and at the end, when a woman or man takes their last breath.

As a death midwife, you will have the honor of attending and being present at this moment.

“There is no greater honor or privilege than to attend someone’s final rite of passage; to be present as they commit their last act as a human being. It is a profound, awe-inspiring event that leaves you forever changed. Each instance is different. Some are a whisper or a sigh – others more active. Sometimes I feel the presence of Others in varying degrees of strength. Other times, there’s nothing – just a slipping away, a peaceful absence of humanness, an empty vessel. Each time it leaves me with this awe-junkie sense of being grounded in my own mortality, the macro and microcosm aspects of my place in the world, and the vastness of energy in the universe as it cycles and constantly gives birth to itself.” 

Rev. Angie Buchanan,
Death Midwife
 www.DeathMidwife.org

Empower People to Live Life Fully to the End

Death doulas act as a kind of life coach for those at the end of life. They empower their clients to consider their last years, months, weeks, and even days carefully and thoughtfully. Whether you start working with an individual just after the diagnosis of a life limiting illness, or you start working with them towards the very end, your role in reducing fear and regret at the end of life will help them face their last days with increased inner strength, peace, and resolve. In other words, you will help them live life to the fullest potential—whatever that means for them at this moment.  

When you actively listen to your clients, you help them process and accept the many emotions that come on our last days. When you work with clients on legacy projects, you enable them to celebrate the amazing life they have lived. For those that are harboring regrets, your support and encouragement may help them resolve those regrets, sometimes by helping them directly reach out and make amends, and sometimes by compassionately listening to their story and life history.

When you guide people as they write advanced care directives and set their end-of-life wishes on paper, you enable them to make decisions for themselves long after the point when they would otherwise be capable of voicing those wishes.

The cycle of life and death can make some feel powerless—but you return some of that power to the men and women you work with.

Help People Have Better Deaths

As you already read in section 1.1.2, people are not dying the way they hope to die. Many people hope to die at home, but instead are dying in hospitals. We don’t always have a choice over where we die, or what our last moments look like—but sometimes, we do. Death doulas show people how they can make these choices and die the way they want.

Death can be sad. It’s never easy to say goodbye. But death and dying can also be beautiful and spiritual. Whether you help plan an active vigil, create sacred space or introduce rituals, or sit by the bedside of the dying, you are making a tremendous impact on the death experience.

Most people are afraid to die, afraid of the transition that every single living thing must make on this planet. But, when you come as an end-of-life doula to your client, and tell them you are there to help reduce some of the fears surrounding this inevitable part of life? That alone enables them to have a better death.

“[It is a] gift to be a source of comfort and ease for the dying and their families. Helping people wrap up loose ends and settle into the embrace of their death instead of succumbing to the fear of it.”

Rev. Angie Buchanan,
Death Midwife
 www.DeathMidwife.org

 

Don’t forget also the physical and emotional comfort you provide by sitting by the bedside, holding their hand, wiping a cool cloth on the forehead, playing soft comforting music, encouraging their loved ones to lie next to them, or talking to them softly in their last moments.

Be Involved in Work That is Completely Engrossing

There are no “boring” days at work when working with individuals at the end of life. Being completely present with people, serving them and offering comfort in their last days, and walking alongside them as they consider the meaning and legacies of their lives—these are not actions you can make half-heartedly.

“Working with people at the end of life is incredibly empowering and humbling at the same time. It requires you to be totally present.”

Nathalie Bonafé, PhD,
CEOLD (Certified End-of-Life Doula)
https://www.agentlerparting.com

Be a Source of Comfort for the Grieving

Let’s not forget that death midwives and end-of-life doulas are not only serving the dying—they also serve the loved ones of the dying. Sometimes, it’s a friend or family member that hires the services of an end-of-life doula. You also provide comfort to the mourning. 

Having a loved one die—whether over an extended period of time from illness, or suddenly in an unforeseen accident—can be traumatizing and overwhelming. There are so many practical issues to be dealt with, on top of the emotional experience itself.

 

As an end-of-life doula, you can take some of the burden away, be there to hold their hand as well, and guide them towards the path of healing.

Witness the Miracle and Mystery of Life and Death

Who truly understands the mystery of life and death? Probably no one. But, as an end-of-life doula, you will witness the living making their final transition… making this wonderment especially strong. 

“The biggest gift I have received is the profound understanding that I will never understand, that we are not meant to understand, that this miracle we call Life is a mystery and so is whatever comes next. My ‘work’ is to bow to the mystery and surrender to the divine.”

                                   Rev. Olivia Bareham,
 Death Midwife, Home Funeral Guide,
Celebrant, Conscious Dying Educator
 SacredCrossings.com

Be Your Own Boss and Define Your Own Career Path

As an end-of-life doula, you work for yourself. Yes, you work for your clients, but you decide what services to provide, you decide what you want your services to look like, and you decide how to deliver those services. 

Many end-of-life doulas were once hospice volunteers, hospice nurses or healthcare workers, or otherwise working with people at the end of life, but in a different role or under the supervision of another organization. You may have felt frustrated that you couldn’t do certain things, or you didn’t have the time you wanted to fully support your patients.

When you start a business as an end-of-life doula, you now can decide how much time you spend by the bedside and can provide a wider range of care and support (within the scope and practice of the death doula role) than you possibly could have previously.

Be Constantly Reminded to Live Your Own Life Well

What better way to remember that every day is precious than to work with those who are near the end of life? People often ask the question, “If you knew you were going to die next week, or next month, or tomorrow… what would you do?” Those who work with death have this idea at the top of their minds on a continual basis. Not in a fearful or morbid way—but in an empowering, positive way. In a way that reminds them to live every day to its fullest! 

“Working in the death positive community is incredibly gratifying. Death positive people are the most life-affirming people I know. We know life is fragile, and we spend our time well and wisely!”

Emily Pinzur,
End-of-Life Doula
www.silverwheelhealing.com

Be Greatly Respected in Your Community

“I could never do what you do.”Be prepared to hear these words frequently when you introduce yourself to people. Not everyone is meant to work with people at the end of life, and not everyone has the emotional and spiritual wherewithal to sit by the bedside of the dying.

Death midwives and end-of-life doulas are well respected for their work. People know how vital the service is, they know what kind of impact you can have on the dying and their loved ones, and they know it’s not a role or job that just anyone can do.

Be Energized by Your Work and Filled With Gratitude

People may assume this work can be exhausting and overwhelming. But for those that love working with the dying, it is anything but that. Yes, of course, you will need to take time for yourself. It is soul-intense work. Self-care is a must. However, that’s not because the work depletes your soul. For many in this profession, working with the dying fills up their cup—it doesn’t empty it.

“I do not experience this work as emotionally draining; on the contrary, I feel fed and upheld and filled with gratitude.”

                                   Rev. Olivia Bareham,
 Death Midwife, Home Funeral Guide,
Celebrant, Conscious Dying Educator
 SacredCrossings.com

Be a Part of a Cultural Revolution

The death positive movement is about embracing death and dying, talking about death and not ignoring it, respecting people’s wishes at the end of life, not viewing the dead body as “dangerous” or untouchable, and the belief that by personally being open about death and choices at the end of life, every individual can change the overall culture and attitude towards death.

End-of-Life doulas and death midwives are a huge part of the death positive movement. They aren’t just talking about what it means to have a “good death”—but helping people have one. When you as an individual become an end-of-life doula, you take a vital step towards changing the world’s attitudes around death and dying.

Receive Financial Rewards While Working Your Passion

Most end-of-life doulas get their start either by working with a family member or by volunteering in a hospice. In other words, they do this work for free. When you start an end-of-life doula business, you take your previous hobby and turn it into a career.

Whether you decide to go full speed and aim to do the work full-time, or you’re just looking to do death doula work on the side in addition to whatever you do full-time, either way, you will make money doing something you love. You will be providing a valuable service to others and making a difference in people’s lives (and deaths!), while earning an income that will allow you to continue to dedicate your time to this important work.

Death Doula Links Week 1

Important Links for this Week

Chapter 1

Why Death Doulas Matter

https://www.kff.org/health-costs/poll-finding/kaiser-health-tracking-poll-september-2015/
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/facing-death/facts-and-figures/
https://palliative.stanford.edu/home-hospice-home-care-of-the-dying-patient/where-do-americans-die/

Nursing Home Staff

https://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/18/us/9-of-10-nursing-homes-in-us-lack-adequate-staff-a-government-study-finds.html

Death Doula Industry

http://time.com/money/4631366/new-jobs-2017/
https://homehealthcarenews.com/2018/05/death-doulas-gain-buzz-start-making-hospice-connections/
http://www.startribune.com/death-doulas-help- normalize-the-experience-for-life-s-final-journey/479570193/
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent/the-current-for-march-28-2018-1.4595735/how-death-doulas-and-home-funerals-are-changing-the-way-we-grieve-1.4595770
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/22/nyregion/the-positive-death-movement-comes-to-life.html
http://www.chpca.net/about-us/history.aspx
http://www.nfda.org/news/trends-in-funeral-service

Chapter 2

Pet Death Doula Services

https://www.pets-point-of-view.com

Aromatherapy Tools

https://naha.org/explore-aromatherapy/safety
https://www.alliance-aromatherapists.org/aromatherapy-safety

Books on Death and Dying

https://bkbooks.com

Death Doula and Hospice Clothing Choices

https://www.racked.com/2017/10/18/16469252/death-doula-clothing-hospice

Therapy Dog or Service Dog

https://www.akc.org/canine-partners/which-is-which-therapy-dog-or-service-dog/

Holding the Space

http://blog.sevenponds.com/so-you-got-the-news/the-dangerous-myth-of-a-good-death

Last modified: Saturday, 1 May 2021, 3:59 AM