Blog
Planning for a good death
I spent the past several days talking about dying and how to care for our own dead at home. If that sounds gruesome to you, just hang on a minute.
Death's got a bad rap it doesn't deserve. We're all going to die; maybe that's the hard part. But when we give just a little thought and consideration as to how we'll deal with this reality, death can remind us of all the wonderful parts of being alive, connected to people we love, and how to not sweat the small stuff.
I just returned from the National Home Funeral Alliance conference in Raleigh, North Carolina. We had a number of inspiring speakers, and a room full of talented, experienced home funeral educators and guides who are helping to grow the movement of home funerals across the country.
Did you know you can bring your loved one home and have a funeral for them in the comfort and ease of your own home?You can clear a spot and make it beautiful. Your friends and family can come and sing and light candles and bring flowers and eat together and decorate the room. I've been a part of this work for the past several years now and I have seen beautiful, touching, and profound home funerals. The families have felt supported, the community has been enriched. Home funerals may not be for everyone, but helping people understand the option is critical.
Caring for the dead, just like caring for the new mother and the newborn, is community work. When we don't take up that work and we pay someone else to do it, we lose our ties to our community. We don't know how to wash and dress a body. How to dig a hole. How to gather our family and friends around us to help us grieve.
But it wasn't so long ago that we all knew how to do these things. We all used to do it this way before embalming became the norm. Embalming is the primary factor that drives the way funerals are done today. Because here's the fact that so many people don't know: You don't have to embalm dead bodies. Really. There is no state in the country that says you have to, expect in some oddball cases. We don't have to embalm for safety or sanitary reasons.
The idea of a home funeral may seem new and uncomfortable. But as more people understand and experience home funerals, the movement is growing across the country. And well it should. It was only ten or fifteen years ago that people didn't know or understand what hospice care was. Today, every major medical institution has a hospice unit. It makes sense to help people be comfortable while they're dying. Many people chose hospice in their home: where they are most comfortable.
Here is my hope: that in another ten or fifteen years, we'll all know what a home funeral is. That we'll understand our options and be clear that taking our loved one home, or keeping them home if he died there, is something we know we can do.
A good death, one that is properly respected and cared for, can show us a lot about good living. It's time to give death its due.
Four secrets of the good life
The other day a woman I
scarcely know stumbled across my work here at Tending the Fire Within. Next
time she saw me, she said, “Did you come up with this stuff yourself? What’s
your secret?”
She was asking
particularly about the upcoming communication series, “Say what you’ve gotta
say: compassionate and effective communication.” I’m running the three-part series October 24, November 7 and 21 at my home and I’m also offering a two-day
session November 23 and 24 at the Calliope Center that will delve deep into
these practices. I hope you join us; it’s a great bit of work that can help you
become a more confident and successful communicator. And then who knows what
you can do in your life?
But the question of how I
came up with the content for this work is a good one. I’ve been walking around
this planet now for 45 years, but what in that time has particularly prepared
me to help other people learn anything about how to walk through it a bit more
happily?
I’ve written some in the
past about the challenges and choices of my youth, particularly this piece about how I overcame my drunkenness and the dark days that accompanied
it. And the ways that I learned to live
more healthily and happily back 28 years ago still play out today and every
day. There is so much more that I’ve learned along the way, but I always feel
pretty certain that I wouldn’t have learned much if I haven’t been sober and
clean for all this time.
Once I had this spiritual
awakening as a young woman, I understood that what I really want in this life is
deep, true connection. I’ve spent much of the past three decades committed to that
idea and I love the way it shows up in my life. I’m not telling you my life is
perfect, but I have created a great life for myself and my kids. I think that I’m
contributing good stuff into the world. I can do this because of the boatloads
of self-development work over that I’ve done over the years. I’m a graduate of
The Hoffman Process and I’m an initiate in the Wheel of Initiation. I have
ongoing groups that I work with and have been a part of for years.
The Tending the Fire
Within work is an amalgamation of all this work and living and experience and
consideration. Facing every day and every situation without altering my
perception with drugs or alcohol, and continuing my own practices of well-being
has taught me to stay open, stay honest, stay responsible for creating my life,
and to stay with the work.
And if there were any “secrets”
to living happily, I would say that list of four are right up there at the top.
When we understand that we are the ones making our lives, when we commit to
fully taking on every bit that we create, when we stay honest with ourselves
and others about these things, and when we just keep in the game of paying
attention, our lives get better. We can have what we want.
Those are big ideas. Big
ideas are great, but they don’t often help people by themselves. What we really
need are specific, clear, and effective practices for changing the way we do
things. The ways we think. The ways we interact with others. The ways that we
choose what comes out of our mouths. What we choose to do with our anger, our
penchant for sarcasm, our habit of beating ourselves up when we don’t live up
to our expectations, however impossible.
A Tending the Fire Within
workshop gives participants specific practices that can change the way they
think, the way they behave, and the way they live. These practices aren’t
rocket science. But when we apply them to our lives they can rocket us into new
and beautiful places. The upcoming communication series is part of that work. We’ll
learn how to start being honest and clear, with ourselves and with others. Good
communication is a foundational skill. Good communication helps us get what we
need, to hear and see other people, to set clear boundaries, and to think good
thoughts.
Why I live in the middle of nowhere
Ten years ago, I moved to
this part of the world from the Twin Cities. Born in Chicago I’d spend my whole
life in cities before finding my way to Viroqua. A decade in, I’ve come to
understand the ways that I love this tiny town of 5079 in rural Southwest
Wisconsin.
You can’t believe this
place. I’ll tell you about it, but I suspect you still won’t believe it. Viroqua
is a small-town that draws people with some force that I can’t quite define. I’ve
stopped trying. What I know is that people who drive through often stop, find
people they love, and marvel. That if your car breaks down in town, you may end
up moving here. That if you visit, you may visit for years while you figure out
how to get here and stay here. And if you have a need for deep, true connection
this place will call to you.
So today, in celebration, a
list of reasons I call Viroqua my home.
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The Viroqua Food Coop: crown jewel of the food system here in a place with all kinds of ways to get good food. photo Anne O'Connor |
1.
The foodscape. This may seem ironic since you can
count the total number of restaurants in my town on one hand. The good ones
will take fewer fingers still. Here, you have to think differently about food. You
have to remember where food comes from. You have to consider the amazing
potlucks that regularly have vegetarian, gluten-free, and raw options. And the
dinner parties. And the picnics. We are in the heart of some of the best growing
land in the world. We are home to Organic Valley, the largest organic
cooperative in the world and people here love good, clean, organic food. We
have more organic farmers here—density wise—than anywhere else in the country. My
egg farmer delivers fresh, organic eggs to my door every Saturday.
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Fresh, organic eggs delivered to my door. photo by Anne O'Connor |
I can get
organic milk from several farmers I know. Same with meat. There’s this Portlandia spoof "ordering the chicken", but it’s funny because there's some truth in there. Most
nights, I know the farmers who are providing the Driftless Café with food. I grow
shiitake mushrooms on a log in my backyard. A friend of mine makes the only pop I've ever really liked at Wisco Pop Soda. The roadside stands offer everything
in season: strawberries and peas and corn and tomatoes and melons and grapes
fresh out of the rich soil. I love these informal networks of food; they are a
vital and sustainable way to feed my family. A little more formal are the
abundant CSAs and the farmers’ market—a festive party downtown every
Saturday.We have a local grocery store, Village Market, that is owned by a real family for more than 20 years. And the Viroqua Food Coop is the crown jewel where food and people
meet, a community as much as a grocery store. People come from all around the country, many
from cities with up to 50,000 people, to study how our tiny town has such a
kick-ass coop. It’s hard to imagine any other place that has a more vibrant,
thriving, and healthy food system.
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We have just a few restaurants, but the ones we have are great. Like The Rooted Spoon: yum! photo courtesy of Tony Macasaet |
2.
The
collaboration. When my kids were younger, I was part of a mamas group that met
every week with the kids. We’d pick one mama’s home and while one of us hung
out with the kids, the rest of us would work. This is kind of the norm around
here. We are home to the coop. We have coops for everything: food, animal feed,
electricity, mental health (yep), home-funeral services (really), housing cooperatives, a bank, and the Viroqua Healing Arts Center. These are
just the formal cooperatives. There are so many informal networks of people
gathered together to take on fantastic projects. We work together to make this
a great place to live, to have a new running track and get parks and a community arena built, to restore a grand old theater, and a new library constructed.
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Our new library is going to be an wonderful place. Drawings courtesy of the library board. |
3.
The caring. We also take care of one
another. When a family is expecting a baby, or someone is ill or injured, or
someone dies, friends step forward and make meals and cut grass and sweep
floors and care for children. When I recently moved to a new house, more than 50 people showed up for the moving party. Yes: 50. It was a true party. We aren’t alone unless we chose to be alone. Many
people are in long-term women’s groups or men’s groups: we help each other live
better lives. But this caring is reflected outside of organized groups. We
prepare mothers for birth with days of love and rose petals and massage and
words of encouragement and listening. We stand together when our loved ones die
and hold one another up. We work to maintain our love and respect for one
another even when we don’t like what someone does. It’s not utopia: we are
humans still. And there is a varied experience. Maybe there is a tone that
permeates much of life here—we accept that you’re flawed and love you anyway. Or
at least recognize that as another human being on the planet, you have a right
to respect and dignity and—yes—care.
4.
The creativity. This place fosters and supports
creative endeavors. Artists and writers and musicians and philosophers and
dancers find their way here. We are a small place and life happens on a small
scale. But there are many nights when there are too many options. Good options.
World-class musicians playing jazz or a Beckett show at the Underground, the
town’s alternative theater? Alternative so as not to be confused with the
Viroqua Community Theatre that just put on a fantastic Wizard of Oz. Oh, and
there’s the Women’s Theater Project. People take up work here and make
interesting things happen. We are about to have our fourth annual Viroqua Harvest Festival and Parade, an extraordinary community event. The Driftless Folk School teaches lost arts. Tons of art and writing and performance work happens at The Ark, a community arts center. And WDRT is a community radio station. VIVA, an
artists’ cooperative (naturally) on Main Street, is a showcase for local work that
has turned First Thursdays downtown into a fun and go-to event. You can browse for books at Driftless Books or on Main Street's Bramble Books. Viroqua Public Market is forever interesting. And there are
the private groups of musicians on a porch or writers in a living room or fantastic
cooks around a full table or the knitters’ circle, or the group canning
together or the people making sausage together. There’s the
ladies’ bike rides (no one left behind) and the power rides on our great hills and all that Bluedog Cycles has brought.
There’s the group that canoes and kayaks on the Mississippi and the Wisconsin. There’s
horseback riding. There’s the wild flower group at the Kickapoo Valley Reserve and the birders.
There is so much that happens here, so much to learn and to discover about what
makes life full and rich and varied.
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The Viroqua Harvest Parade demonstrates the creativity of the place. photo courtesy of Tony Macasaet |
5.
The landscape. This area is called the Driftless
region—no glacial drift has flattened out the landscape like it did all the
rest of the Midwest. The drift went around us. So instead of flat, we have
gorgeous rocks standing up out of the land. Viroqua is the heart and hub of the
Kickapoo Valley, the land of rolling hills, luscious valleys, wind-swept ridges
and rock outcroppings of limestone around and along one of the country’s most
winding rivers—the Kickapoo. There are ancient plant and animal species not found
anywhere else. You can literally dig a rock out of the earth and you will
almost surely find something craggy and full of crystals and beauty. I almost
don’t want to tell you about the reserve, because once people realize what we
have hidden in plain sight here, well, I imagine my favorite trail will occasionally
have people on it.
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The Three Chimneys rocks are impressive, but just one part of the stunning landscape of the Driftelss region. photo courtesy of Tony Macasaet. |
6.
The schools. There are excellent school options
in this small place. The public schools, the alternative schools, a thriving
home-school community, and religious schools. My kids attend incredible
schools. Pleasant Ridge Waldorf School and the Youth Initiative High School (YIHS)
work to teach kids a holistic approach to life: “an education for head, hands,
and heart.” This commitment plays out in very real ways for my kids, my family,
and my entire community. The schools teach kids about any particular subject by
giving them such a wonderful context for life and knowing and learning. They expect the children to develop
and be full, open, free, and participating people. What I mean is that they
draw the best from my kids. And from me. These schools call people from around the
world to this place. This year alone, nine of the 50 students at YIHS are international
boarding students. My daughter has her own little international community every time she goes to high school. It’s like that here.
7.
The people. When I leave my town and go to
bigger places, I remember how much people know me here. Know my children. How I
can forget my checkbook but the store will still let me “buy” something because
they know I’ll be back tomorrow with the money. There is great comfort in being
known, being seen, being part of a whole. Of course this can feel like being
scrutinized, being judged, or being unable to escape, but I guess it all
depends on your perspective. Small towns—and especially this small town, push
us towards one another. We have so many chances to figure out more of ourselves,
who we are in the world and how we want to live our lives. We are all here in
Viroqua and there’s some recognition that we have to be kind because we are in
it for the long haul. You can’t shake your fist in anger at someone on the
highway and expect to never see them again. Likely, they’ll be sitting next to
you at your kid’s track meet. Living in close proximity to people is
challenging. And immensely rewarding. I’ve been living with and learning from
these people for the past ten years. I can’t wait to see what they’ve got for
me in the next decade.
I was skeptical when I moved here. I've lived in big cities my whole life and, for the most part, really loved that. But there's something tremendously grounding for me about being surrounded by natural beauty each day. It is, for me, undeniably nurturing. And all these human-made endeavors help to make this place part of a genuine community.Whatever its call, I'm not alone. This land and the people it calls has been working its magic for a long time.One thing I've realized is that where there people, there is life. And even in "the middle of nowhere," we get to make the kind of life we want. What a luxury! What a life!
Why do you live where you live? How do you make it work for you? What are you building? Tell me about it in the comments, or drop me a line.
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