(Dr. Srigley is a professor of Religions and Cultures at Nipissing University in Ontario, Canada. She teaches a variety of courses on death, dying, and spirituality, and is dedicated to teaching death awareness in postsecondary education. Her students are called “Death Ambassadors” because they are changing the conversation in our culture around death and breaking through the death phobias and societal taboos. She runs an Instagram account detailing the death education movement. She is a death doula and a palliative care volunteer. This article, used with permission via a Creative Commons agreement, appeared online at The Conversation.)
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A growing number of folks may have heard of the death-positive movement, death cafés, or death-friendly communities — each of which are animated by the understanding that welcoming our own mortality could improve the quality of our lives.
There is truth to these claims. As a person who has taught courses on death, dying, and spirituality for more than 20 years, and as a death doula, thinking about dying and working closely with the dying has fostered in me a deep appreciation for what it means to live well and meaningfully.
However, my university students have often told a different story. In informal class discussions, and also in a public presentation about why death education matters for the online Lifting The Lid International Festival of Death and Dying, many have expressed how their learning with me signals their first times talking about death.
When I hear this, I am aware of how our society needs to do a better job at nurturing more conversations about death, and building communities that support people navigating questions surrounding death and dying.
Students speak about why death education matters to them.
Denying death
The easiest way to exile death from our conversations is to label it “morbid,” ensuring we never need speak of it.
My first lecture in every death class begins with a discussion of the pervasiveness of death denial in dominant modern western culture.
I ask my students, “How do people react when you tell them you’re taking a course on death?” Invariably they have heard things like:
“That’s so morbid!”
“How depressing/dark/strange/weird!”
“Why would you want to study that!?”
My courses are designed to introduce students to the study of death through history, culture, religion and spirituality, ritual, literature, ethics, and social justice.
We explore social and cultural barriers affecting how services are structured and the implications for end-of-life care. For example, racism and inequities in health care and other institutions contributes to dangerous disparities in treatment and life outcomes, influencing Black, Indigenous, and racialized communities’ collective trauma surrounding dying and death.
Students read and learn about how humans have understood and interpreted death, as well as some of the pressing social issues that we face in contemporary death care and practices.
Inspired by the work of Dr. Naheed Dosani, palliative care physician and health justice activist, I now include a class on palliative care for people experiencing homelessness and dying in the streets.
Anishinaabe death doula Chrystal Toop, a member of Pikwàkanagàn First Nation, also visits my class to speak about compounded trauma of death and collective grief experienced by Indigenous Peoples, and why she created her own Indigenous death doula training to reclaim cultural teachings.
I also bring what I have learned as an end-of-life companion from hours of sitting with and listening to people who are facing their own death or the death of those they love.
The gentle skills learned there are discernment, attention and compassion. As students reflect on what they will take with them from the course, they perceive the value in this kind of experience I bring to the classroom as much as in an article on palliative care and its history.
Negative consequences of denying death
My courses on dying and death have always drawn students from other humanities programs like English, fine arts, and history. But over the years, more students from the professional programs, such as nursing, criminal justice, and social work are enrolling.
While students’ professional programs — for example, in nursing or social work — seek to address various topics surrounding aging, trauma, death, or end-of-life care in varying ways, students also need opportunities to think about their own mortality to cultivate some self-awareness, in order to be present for others experiencing death and dying.
Some of my nursing students raise questions like: How do they talk to the loved ones of patients who are dying? What should they say?
These questions are hard enough when death is expected. They are exceptionally difficult when it isn’t, when the death is of a young person, a child, or a baby.
New level of awareness
Students also express their disappointment and confusion because what they face in the aftermath of death and loss is often isolation and solitude.
While research about how to support children and young people navigating death amplifies the need for open and sensitive discussion, some students, especially white, middle-class students, speak of experiences of having been shielded from death by those who thought shielding them was the best way to protect them from fear and anxiety.
Simply providing the safe space to begin to have these conversations goes a very long way toward assuaging their fear and grief.
In part, this is because supporting the passage of life to death, and supporting grief, is (or should be) a collective experience.
Community death care is everyone’s business, and while awareness of our own mortality is an important part of that, awareness and activism around racism, violence, and injustice in end-of-life care is essential.
Death ambassadors
Figures like Dosani are making social media outreach part of their teaching and care practices. In recognition of the importance of creating death-supportive communities, I also started an Instagram account, @death.ambassadors, to chronicle my death teaching.
At the end of each death course, I offer students the opportunity to be a “death ambassador,” in recognition of their new level of death awareness that could help to foster healthy conversations about death and dying in our culture.
Some of my students have also created their own death-awareness social media accounts, and found themselves supported by a death-positive community of educators, end-of-life companions, funeral directors, and death doulas.
It is a universal truth that one day we are all going to die, and that means we all have a serious stake in death education.
When it’s your turn, or the turn of someone you love, don’t we all need people who have considered how to support us in navigating dying and death? Let’s do the work to make that a reality for everyone.
(Please scroll down to comment.)
Final Exit Network (FEN) is a network of dedicated professionals and caring, trained volunteers who support mentally competent adults as they navigate their end-of-life journey. Established in 2004, FEN seeks to educate qualified individuals in practical, peaceful ways to end their lives, offer a compassionate bedside presence and defend a person’s right to choose. For more information, go to www.finalexitnetwork.org.
Payments and donations are tax deductible to the full extent allowed by law. Final Exit Network is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization.
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Yes let’s change the language and the image of our dying, and that will change our whole way of relating to it: living and dying are dancing a duet within us, and we are choosing what music to play for the dance. LivingDyingDuet.com
What wonderful work you are doing. Thank you!!
I like the thought of each of us being a death ambassador and working toward building a community of support for each individual’s very personal journey to death. I am going to bring Wally’s image of the dance to this year’s Thanksgiving conversation. I can never let a holiday gathering pass without broaching the death and dying subject. I am always amazed I keep getting invited back. Here is to more conversations at any time of year.