Skip to content

Rising Through Grief

For Women Experiencing the Death of a Mother

Empowering Motherless Daughters

Free Workshop

The bond between mother and daughter is a mighty force in a woman’s life.  For this reason, whether the relationship is one of affection and closeness or strained and full of tug-of-war struggles, processing the death of a mom takes attention, acknowledgement, and care.

This free workshop on Wednesday, February 14th, 2024, is for women who have said goodbye to their moms or will soon.

 

Register Here Free

Why Attend?

“I want to feel better”

Letting go of a mom for good, holds a significant weight.  Many carry on, managing life and its duties . . . mostly.  All the while, the heart shoulders a load.  But it waits patiently, as you continue to take care of things and others.  Until weeks, months, or years have passed, and the significance of being motherless begins to set in.

 

For some, the extent of the impact on their lives can come as a shock.  It’s the undercurrent of feelings and the gradual absorbing of this massive transition as one’s system works hard to integrate a new reality that requires time, attention, and support.

 

To . . .

 

~~~ feel better,
~~~ more inspired,
~~~ better understood,
~~~ and less alone in the life-altering effects of your mom’s life ending.

 

And if . . .

~~~ You have a sense that with some help, powerful and precious parts of yourself can be uncovered within this experience.

 

 

Grief, by its nature, is a Fullness.  One that yearns to be shared and poured out.  And it must, to get the healing started.  But it requires from us ~ acknowledgement.  And it doesn’t happen just anywhere or with anyone. It happens most naturally when witnessed by other women who share in the depth of this particular type of loss.

 

Moving beyond the limited messages we’ve been fed about grief can make it a whole lot more doable.

 

Join us to learn 3 surprising aspects of grief,

and to receive support with:

 

   Understanding Grief 
and how it can be underlying & overwhelming

   Tending to Grief 
with compassion & consistency,  rather than something to conquer or triumph over

   Effectively Grieving 
instead of ‘running & numbing’

 

Laura Miner, CT

Certified End-of-Life Educator, Mentor, & Grief Coach

 

 

 

Laura brings a lightness of spirit to a subject that can be challenging.

A former hospice worker and death doula with over 20 years’ experience in the field of end-of-life care, she is certified in Thanatology (death, dying, and bereavement) through the Association for Death Education and Counseling.  (CT# 18176)

 

 

 

It’s been her honor and privilege to guide a group of women the past nine months through a grief process who have come to recognize that dedicated, loving support was not just necessary, but vital to discovering where their lives’ most precious gems lie.

Details

 

  • Wednesday, February 14th, 2024 @ 11am Pacific
  • Live and online via Zoom
  • 90 Minutes
  • Have a pen and paper handy for a writing exercise and an open heart for receiving essential support

 

Click Here to Register Free

 

I was touching on grief with a counselor but nothing like this. I feel like I have made such an amazing turn around in dealing with all the things that I thought I had dealt with and really just hadn’t.

Debby Galagher
Dallas, TX

At 76, I figured I’d learned all there was to know about dying and death, and I’d come to some acceptance, at least of my own death when it’s time. Almost immediately, though, I realized there was a LOT more to learn. Our culture does us such a disservice by treating talk of death, dying, and grief as taboo. Through work with Laura I’m learning to honor those who have passed on already and experiencing less fear of the unknown. I’m learning the importance of being present to another’s grief, and how and when to share my stories…and that death can be sacred and beautiful and a natural conclusion to life.

Linda Kay
Denver, CO