Interview: Cincinnati Enquirer “A Stillborn Baby Stunned a Family. This Death Expert was There to Help.”

People working as Death Doulas, Death Companions, Death Midwives, etc. are far more common now than even just a few years ago.

Cole Imperi Death Companion

The reality is that this role in society is nothing new, and that’s because there have always been people in our communities that know what to do when it comes to death, dying, grief, and loss. These titles (Death Doula, Death Companion, Death Midwife, etc.) tend be associated with secular and community-independent individuals serving in these roles, and that is the part that is new. Otherwise, the people that carried on these traditions of care would function beneath other titles you are probably also familiar with, title like Clergy, Bereavement Committee, Chevra Kadisha member, Healer, Curandeiro/a, Bruja or even just….Grandma. This type of care has traditionally been housed within our communities of origin and many times those communities have been deeply enmeshed with religious traditions. As America becomes less and less religious, so too are we becoming less and less connected to robust communities.

I am so grateful that this interview feature happened many years ago (December of 2018!), mostly because one of the issues plaguing the burgeoning Death Doula training world today is that a lot of people offering and charging for these trainings do not have experience that can be verified. If you happen to find this post and are considering taking training in this area, please make sure your program is offering training from real humans that have actually served in this role.

I’m grateful to have had my work separately vetted and verified, and I continue to feel immense gratitude to the families I get to work with.

You can read the full article and watch a companion video here.

Cole Imperi

Cole Imperi is a triple-certified thanatologist, a two-time TedX speaker, and one of America’s experts on death, dying and grief. She is best known for her work pioneering the fields of Thanabotany and Deathwork (which includes Death Companioning) and through her development of Shadowloss, Shadowlight and Dremains. Cole is the founder of the School of American Thanatology, which has students from 20 countries across 12 timezones. Cole has worked as a chaplain-thanatologist in a jail, mortuary college professor, crematory operator, hospice volunteer, grief support group leader for children as young as 3 to adults, and served on the board of a green burial startup. Cole served as the first female Board President of the 178-year-old Historic Linden Grove Cemetery & Arboretum in Covington, Kentucky, works with death-related businesses through her consulting firm, Doth, and publishes death and loss-related content. Her forthcoming book, A Guide to Your Grief, will be published by Kids Can Press in 2024.

https://coleimperi.com
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Death is Not a Taboo, but Grief Is

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