A beautiful article featuring many of the amazing humans I am fortunate to call friends. A special shout out to Thea and Shelley for sharing their wonderful mums. I was fortunate to meet and work with Lorraine and Ana for death, but while both were alive.
Four days after her mother died, Shelley Anson walked into a candlelit room at a funeral home. The experience, in December, was transformative for Anson’s grief. https://t.co/pDnC63n3vB
Four days after her mother died, Shelley Anson walked into a candlelit room at a funeral home. The experience, in December, was transformative for Anson’s grief. https://t.co/pDnC63n3vB
@Kat_Daley@BuchananLiana@MorganCataldo @SGSC_RMIT @RMIT Amazing work Kat! I wondered if you have connected in with anyone from MPAN? (Missing Persons Advocacy Network)… we should chat over coffee if we are ever back on campus…
@JessYoungTweets If you’re worried about IP- consider adding a slide at the start/end about slide usage, or put a watermark on each slide with something like ‘for personal use only, not to be reproduced without permission’ 🤷🏻♀️
It’s not often that I write about my work, so this was a lot of fun. Thanks to the team at @Biodesigned for the opportunity. Now go forth and overcome your disgust of #deadthings. I’ve got a lizard to dispose of.
Designer Pia Interlandi @DressingTheDead reframes feelings of disgust around death and decay by interlacing fashion, sustainability, and funeral rites. #DeathPositive
https://t.co/mvgZeWlPzU
1. It is impossible to consider what constitutes a good death while so many are forced to endure the constant reality of bad, violent deaths, and exist in a perpetual state of fear and mourning.