What if death isn’t something to fear, but something that teaches us how to live?
In this profound Kenosis Conversation, we explore death as a universal human experience, a teacher, and a mirror for meaning. Drawing from trauma work, hospice experiences, faith traditions, and deeply personal stories, this episode reflects on how people relate to death, why some fear it, and how grief can become a pathway to connection rather than finality.
In this episode, we discuss:
- Why people who haven’t made peace with life often fear death
- Death as the “great equalizer” and the finite nature of life
- Anticipated vs. traumatic death and how meaning is made afterward
- Being present at the bedside of loved ones at the moment of death
- How grief can extend the life and legacy of those we’ve lost
- Suicide loss, post-traumatic growth, and remembrance rituals
- Faith, impermanence, and the transformation of energy after death
Through stories of parents, clients, mentors, and loved ones, including experiences in hospice care and even living in a mortuary, this conversation gently challenges us to ask deeper questions: How do we want to die? How do we want to be remembered? And how do we continue relationships after death ends a life—but not a connection?
Content Note: This episode includes discussion of death, grief, suicide, trauma, and terminal illness.

