Since the onset of COVID-19 I’ve started wondering about the role of the End-of-Life Doula, which led me to ponder the idea of an End-of-the-Day Doula. Why wait until our time becomes compressed and fleeting? What would happen if we lived each moment in a way that prepared us for the instinctive desires all people have at the end of their lives:
We desire forgiveness
We want our lives to have meant something
We desire remembrance
The pandemic has been difficult, divisive, and laden with fear and grief. But most importantly it has pushed the reality upon us, our lives on Earth are temporary AND our lives are sacred. But in this chaos might we find the grace to ask, “What if we acted on the single most message that this chaos is giving us?” Build meaning in every moment!
Ah ha! Where to start? In doula practice we help patients move away from the hamster wheel thoughts of their busy brains and instead simply ask them to find their heartbeat. The heart has it’s own wisdom. We acknowledge this when we say, “Trust your heart”, “The Answer is in your Heart”.
What is our heart saying about forgiveness, remembrance, and meaning? We challenge you to be your own End-of-the-Day Doula.
Practice! kindness and forgiveness.
Be ready! in every moment.
Do your drill! find your heart in your actions.
We know that people who live this way are ready and able to embrace death when their life on Earth is closing. The fear and uncertainty of COVID-19, disease, frailty, or sudden death are mitigated by how we live our lives.
BE . HERE . NOW.


I developed a fondness for “Grace” through hospice. She was in a facility after a massive stroke that compromised much of her ability to speak and walk.
I am so grateful that we had and end of life doula for the final months of my mother’s life. Throughout the process, her first priority was my mom: they had a beautiful connection with each other and my mother was noticeably comforted by her doula’s presence, even after she was no longer able to verbally communicate. My mom had doubts and fears about death and the afterlife; over multiple visits her doula helped her to explore these doubts in a way that brought her comfort and peace.
A man’s father came to a swift end. The son didn’t have a lot of time to get his head around the fact that his father was suddenly dying.
The night before a woman’s death, her daughter-in-law called me and asked if I would come in the morning so we could meet with the hospice nurse together. She was unsure about whether they were handling medications properly for their mother who was in the end stage of terminal illness. The elderly father and mother were very private people who did not want strangers in their home, and waited until just a week before the death to allow hospice care in.