Grief & Bereavement
Grief Websites
A trusted source on palliative care, end-of-life care, and grief
Our aim is for all grievers to be better supported.
For adults to grieve at their own pace
How children grieve and how to support them
For teens living with serious illness diagnosis, and teens who have experienced family loss
By grieving youth, for grieving youthGrief Podcasts
In this nine-episode series, American broadcaster Anderson Cooper starts recording while packing up the possessions of his late mother Gloria Vanderbilt. Going through her diaries and heirlooms, as well as items left behind by his father and brother, the CNN anchor takes listeners on a personal exploration of grief. In a succession of moving conversations with experts and celebrity friends, Cooper discusses loss, the things people leave behind and how to live on.
Described as a “grief support group in a podcast”, Good Mourning is two fun, slightly sweary mates – one Australian; the other a British expat – talking about loss. Hosts Sally Douglas and Imogen Carn share tips from doctors, scientists and family members on how to cope. The pair were brought together in what Carn describes as “really f— up circumstances” after losing their mothers during “that in between age” of adult life and finding they had few people to turn to. One for adulthood bereavement.
The Grief Gang is described as the gang “you never asked to be part of”. In this heart-warming podcast, host Amber Jeffrey speaks to a range of friends and experts to get to grips with their experiences of loss and how it affects them. Jeffrey created the podcast after her mother died of a sudden heart attack in 2016 when she was just 19. “Above all this show aims to provide you with hope,” she writes.
Creator and host Lisa Keefauver is on a mission to reimagine grief, one conversation at a time. She and her guests explore the expansiveness and pervasiveness of grief in our lives, because let’s face it, 100% of us experience grief, multiple times in our lives. And yet, individually, and collectively, we’re so grief-illiterate and that is causing us all harm. So, Lisa’s on a mission to reimagine grief, one conversation at a time. So glad you’re joining us.
Host Cariad Lloyd describes this as “funny people talking about death and grief.” Expect candid, humorous and often deeply moving conversations between Lloyd, a comedian, and celebrity guests as they open up about loved ones they have lost. Lloyd set up Griefcast in 2016, drawing on the loss of her father to pancreatic cancer during her teens.
The Marie Curie charity produces its own award-nominated podcast dealing with grief that is well worth a listen. The show invites a host of well-known guests to open up and share their experiences of grief on the therapy couch with bereavement expert Jason Davidson – whose soothing tones have a way of getting people talking. Guests are also encouraged to share their end of life plans – which may be particularly useful for anyone preparing for a bereavement.
This is a podcast that breaks down taboos surrounding grief, starting with that oh so innocuous question: how are you? “It’s a question we ask (and get asked) all the time: ‘How are you?’ And normally we just respond with ‘Fine!’ even if we’re totally dying inside,” writes host Nora McInerny. In this podcast, McInerny, an American author, speaks to normal people about their experiences of loss in all its forms, be that bereavement, divorce or to do with their career. During these conversations, McInerny draws on her personal experience of miscarrying a child and losing both her father and husband to cancer within several weeks in 2014. “It’s sometimes sad, sometimes funny, and almost always both,” she writes about the show.
The last conversation you want to have shouldn’t be the last one you do have. The When You Die Project is here to facilitate a cultural dialogue most often avoided — one that begins at the end. We believe talking about death isn’t dangerous but, conversely, can nurture happier, healthier individuals and families who approach death informed, inspired and with a sense of humor. The podcast covers a wide range of death and dying topics from diverse perspectives.Group Support
Support for those grieving the death or approaching death of a loved one at no cost to participants. Twice a month sessions take place in Kentville, Berwick and Bridgetown. Contact Jennifer Longley at 902-681-8239 or friendsinbereavement@gmail.com
Bernie’s Buddies Workshops offer a peer support environment where youth connect with other youth who’ve experienced a death loss of an important person in their lives. They participate together in a therapy dog visit, yoga exercise movement and mindfulness, and creative grief conversation. Our goal is to help kids find community and feel less alone while navigating their bereavement.
Email berniesbuddiesnovascotia@gmail.com
Meets at the New Hope Wesleyan Church, Thursdays at 7:00 pm. Please join us as we navigate the grief journey together.
Get support through online discussion groups