A Bit of Optimism - Revisited: What Dying Teaches Us About Living with Death Doula Alua Arthur
Episode Date: March 17, 2026Team Simon here! While A Bit of Optimism is on a short break, we’re revisiting a few episodes you helped make some of our favorites. We’ll be back with brand-new conversations next week, on March... 24th, 2026. In the meantime, we’re bringing back an episode that explores a word most people like to avoid: death. We dance around the subject or use vague euphemisms to not hurt anybody. But what if being open about our deaths meant we could live happier lives? That’s where Alua Arthur comes in. Alua is one of the most prominent death doulas in the country, which means it’s her job to help people die. She offers support to her clients and their families as they embark on their dying journey, tackling everything from financial planning and insurance policy to emotional support and grief. Before this work, Alua was a lawyer, but after a life-changing encounter that forced her to confront mortality in a new way, she shifted her path entirely. Now she has dedicated her career to helping others prepare for the end of life with clarity, compassion, and even a bit of humor. In this conversation, Simon and Alua talk about why our culture struggles to talk honestly about death, what she’s learned from the people she’s accompanied in their final days, and why remembering that life is finite can help us live with more presence, gratitude, and intention. This… is A Bit of Optimism. --------------------------- For more on Alua and her work, check out: https://goingwithgrace.com/ & @GoingwithGrace ---------------------------
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What is the most interesting secret or story you've ever heard somebody tell you on their deathbed?
I've heard so many secrets.
Oh, tell one.
What's your favorite?
Come on, come on.
About the kids.
About the mistresses.
Yeah.
Other families.
Other families.
There's so many other families.
So many other families.
And I think the 23 and me and Ancestry.com and all those places, we're about to find a whole lot of families.
That's right.
It's all coming out.
Yeah.
Nobody's dying with secrets anymore.
Let's talk about.
about death, dying, being dead.
Those words are so jarring, literally just hearing them
make many of a squirm.
It's such a morbid conversation, who wants to have it?
Or maybe we're thinking about it the wrong way.
That's where A. Lua Arthur comes in.
She's flipping the script.
She's a New York Times best-selling author
and one of the leading death doulas.
Like a doula helps some people prepare for birth,
death doulas help other people.
navigate life's final chapter with clarity and grace. But for those of us who aren't currently
in the process of dying and aren't navigating grief, thinking about death may actually be the
best hack to focus on life. This is a bit of optimism. So I'm always fascinated by people's
career paths, right? Doctors and lawyers tend to know pretty young that they're going to be a
doctor and lawyer because you have to make a decision, you know, pretty young to start going through
that amount of schooling, et cetera. And I have to believe that being a death dula wasn't like your
childhood dreams. You want helping your teddy bear take their final breaths. I'm so curious how
someone finds themselves doing this. It was a sharp right turn. I was a lawyer. I started out on the
path of lawyer. So I did all the schooling and took the bar and started practicing and was not having
a good time. It was not working for me. It wasn't a fit. And I also just felt frustrated and still do
that. We asked young people to choose their professions so early in their lives, you know, and like
commit to something, something with the big financial responsibility of law school, put that as a
side. But I was a lawyer and then life came and worked its magic on me and grief worked its magic
on me. And here we are, practicing death work instead. So did you start in
grief worth and find yourself to death work or do you do you talk about them or does that one thing?
To me, they're inextrably linked. You know, they belong together. They can be separate though because
grief doesn't exist only with death, but you know, it's like an open marriage where death is married
to grief and monogamous with grief, but grief is super polyamorous and goes wherever it wants to.
Yeah. So when talking about death, I can't help but talk about grief, but I'm mostly talking about it.
But I mean, but the way you got in, like what came, what was the chicken, what was the egg?
I guess that doesn't help resolve the problem because that's actually a debate.
but, you know, in the actual way and thick, the way things worked out.
Like, what happened?
Yeah.
What happened?
What happened?
What happened?
That you're doing what you're doing now?
Okay.
I didn't even know death doula was a thing.
It's super a thing.
So I was practicing law at legal aid.
I got really burnt out, absolutely depressed, and like a clinical depression.
And I took a leave of absence where I went to Cuba and I met a young fellow traveler
on the bus.
We started talking a lot about her life and we started talking about death.
She was traveling because she wanted to see.
the top six places in the world before she died because she had uterun cancer.
And so that initial spark was like, wait, hold on a minute, people die.
And I'd been privileged enough in my life not to have known anybody who died.
All my grandparents were dead by the time I was of age.
So nobody close to me had died.
I hadn't had that experience yet.
And I was really fascinated that she was looking at the end of her life or at least
contemplating it.
So we talked a lot about her relationship to her death.
I asked her a lot about her life and what meaning it had and what she'd made of it thus far.
and it helped me look at my own life through some lens that I hadn't previously considered.
And that lens helped me see that I did not like the life that I was living.
Like it wasn't what I wanted out of my life, you know?
So I on the bus was like, well, shoot, if we can talk about this and it can create purpose for people like it did for me during that very brief exchange that we had about our mortality, what was 14 hours, it wasn't brief.
But in that one moment of time, then it held so much, it held.
so much weight for me. And so I started really leaning into that for myself. When I came back from
Cuba, my brother-in-law became sick, my older sister's husband. His name was Peter St. John. And I got
to journey with him through the last two months of his life really, really closely. And I saw how
isolating it is to be in dying to be in the system and not have the support there that we needed.
You know, there were plenty of doctors. There were plenty of medical folks. But there wasn't
somebody just to hold our hearts and to, you know, remind us that it was hard and to offer
resources and a kind word and a listening heart. There was nobody like that. And so I really
decide that I wanted to do that for other people. So grief came first in the way that I was grieving
deeply. I was grieving my brother-in-law, but I was also grieving a system that I didn't feel cared for
the people within it. And so grief pushed me into death work ultimately. So the job that you
described, or the role that you played, I should say, you know, with your brother-in-law. I mean,
you were the sister-in-law. Yeah. So you were family sitting by his side as the doctors and
everybody came in and through. And I think perhaps the reason that the concept of a death
doula is not on the tip of everyone's tongue is because I guess there's an expectation that
that's what the family does. Yeah, it's kind of what the family does, but we're also so deeply,
emotionally entrenched in what's happening that it's hard to pull back. It's hard to take my
feelings out of it and be able to show up for the dying person the way that they need to.
The death dula is somebody who sits on the outside of the circle of support. Sometimes it's family,
but not everybody has a family around. So it could just be, you know, folks that love the person
or their chosen families that are around. And so the dula is kind of the person that sits on the
outer rung, kind of holding everybody else up and holding the whole thing together. There are, there's
a number of things that death dula's do that family members, I think, don't know how to do or wouldn't even know
where to begin. And that's where I found myself with Peter off and, like, how do we do this thing?
Is this a thing we should be considering? I wish that there was so much more we'd known at the time.
His death would have looked a little different. For example, so what was missing when Peter died
that you wished you knew or had been there? I wish somebody had said very clearly to us that he was dying.
That didn't happen. It was more that they couldn't treat him anymore.
That's what I say? May I ask, what was it that ultimately caused his death?
Brickett's lymphoma.
Okay.
So nobody said he's going to die.
They said this is no longer treatable.
They spoke in euphemisms to avoid the D word.
Everybody danced around it.
The palliative care team came in.
They would like nod and smile slowly when it was clear that something was happening
when he was not responding anymore.
A plus B equals C, you know, he has an incurable illness.
They cannot treat him anymore.
He's going to die.
But I did that.
You know, I did that in my own brain and my own body.
And it was really, really difficult to take in because it was also the unimaginable.
And I think anybody who's been in this situation understands when it's somebody close to you and they're getting close to the end, it's like this can't be it.
Like this cannot possibly be it.
And so aside from just somebody saying very clearly, hey, it looks like he's dying, they could have helped us find ways to engage my four-year-old niece at the time into his death.
You know, we didn't have support for that properly.
Nobody explained what the death rally was, which is something that I noticed in Peter, and I've seen many times before, many times since in my work.
Nobody explained how we could find certain hospital gowns that closed in the front because he had all these sores on his back or getting him up to change the gowns was difficult, getting his will in order trying to figure out what he wanted to do with his cremains.
Like there were so many items that I wish that we'd known beforehand that we just didn't have.
What's a death rally?
A death rally is often a surge of events.
energy nearing the end of life, that often looks like the miracle that people have been waiting for,
but in fact, it's a sign that life will soon reach its end.
I think it may be the body shedding off the last little bit of life force energy, but the person
often starts behaving like they did before.
Maybe they're making jokes or asking for food or asking to see certain people.
They look a little bit more robust than they have and typically happens right before the person
begins to actively die.
Do the doctors and the palliative care specialists,
are they avoiding the D word because there's some weird stigma?
Is the word death or die?
Is it too aggressive?
Because we do, at least in the West, you know, we speak around it, right?
Like, I'm sorry for your father's passing.
You know, what happened to your brother-in-law?
He's no longer with us.
We don't like the D-word.
We don't say, oh, yeah, he died a bunch of years ago.
Yeah, yeah, he's dead.
You know, it is a very sudden, even the D, it's a hard consonant, right?
Yeah.
It's an aggressive word.
Totally.
So, you know, why is it that even medical professionals are so afraid of using that word?
Is it because they've triggered families before and they've just learned over time not to use the word?
I think there's a lot of different reasons for it.
That may be part of it.
Because you don't call yourself a end-of-life dula.
No, I don't.
Yeah, I don't.
There are many that call themselves end-of-life doulas or end-of-life specialists or practitioners.
But, you know, I'm kind of a straight shooter.
Like what you see is what you get and people die.
It is a big word, one syllable that lands like an anvil.
But it really, it holds a lot of truths that many of us seek to avoid.
And I think doctors and medical professionals are also human.
You know, I think that on some level there isn't enough training in hospitals
or training in medical school about dealing with people nearing the end of life.
I think that oftentimes folks want to have saved the person.
They want the medicine to work and maybe it feels like a failure of some sort.
I think as long as we think of death as the opposite of health or we think of death as a failure in some way,
the folks that are meant to cure folks will always have a hard time with it.
But then also societally, we shy away from it like you were saying.
We speak in euphemism about it.
Passed away.
Somebody lost somebody.
One of the times recently somebody said that to me, not in the context of work.
So I did not have my death due a hat on, but she said she lost someone.
thought like she couldn't find her. I didn't realize she meant she died, you know. It's tricky.
I wish that we would be a lot more straight about it. I wonder where, I wonder if we're all
overly sensitive because we don't want to offend the people we're talking to or is that we're
offended by the word. I think we're offended by the word. Are we tiptoeing around a sensitive subject
and being overly cautious? It's like a weird end of life political correctness. Yeah.
We're all tiptoeing around for fear of offending somebody so we go the most sort of euphemistic
way, when in reality, if you just say what it is, everybody's actually okay with it.
And much better with it, in fact, if you just say what it is.
Now, I've noticed that sometimes it takes family members or the people close to the person
that died a while to come around to it because it is so final.
It sounds so final.
And yet, we, I think, do everybody a favor when we just call it plainly for what it is.
You know, when we speak in euphemisms, we also run the risk of continuing to pass on our
death avoidance and our death phobia and culture, particularly.
they went talking to children.
There was a guy I talked to not that long ago
who told me that when his grandmother died,
they told him that grandma had gone to sleep.
He was terrified to sleep for years.
He was seven when she died.
Terrified to go to sleep
because they thought he wouldn't come back either.
You know, thereby reinforcing the idea
that it's something that we don't talk about,
something that we don't address,
something that we put over there.
We don't say somebody died.
We say they went to heaven
or they went away for a long time.
You won't be seeing her anymore.
We cause more confusion and we reiterate death phobia in our culture.
It's so interesting, especially when it comes to children, right?
You're so right, because we don't upset the child and yet you can watch cartoons from the 50s, like Bambi.
It's wild.
And there's death all over these cartoons.
Everywhere.
These are for little children and none of them, you know, I don't think anybody would say that a Walt Disney film caused some sort of lifelong trauma.
Yeah.
But like I cried big grown-up tears at Moana very recently when the grandmother died.
Spoiler alert.
But we're children are watching these films and they have their own relationship with death and grief and loss,
either through the films or in their own lives or their grandparents die or their parents die or their siblings.
Like they know the experience and yet adults, we try to shield them from it.
I'm using air quotes, but they know it.
And when we don't address it, it creates a strange cognitive dissonance.
It also sends forward the message that it's not okay.
Whereas it's just a part of the cycle of life.
You know, we all are part of the cycle.
We all will meet our end at some point.
Are you afraid of death?
I won't say afraid.
I'm curious about it.
I'm very curious about it.
They're things.
Like if you're on a plane and there's really bad turbulence, you know,
do you have fear of death, like fear of dying, you know?
Or you're totally relaxed and you're like, well, if this is my time, this is my time.
I feel more like if it's my time, it's my time.
But I've also spent a lot of time thinking about my death and preparing for my mortality, you know.
But there are things that still make me a little uncomfortable about it.
I am so deeply in love right now.
And I would really, really, really like to see elderhood with this man.
And I think about him dying and it makes me want to cry.
So sometimes a fear of death will isn't somebody else, you know.
I'm maybe not afraid of my own mortality that way.
I would love to see elderhood with him.
But also I don't want him to die either.
That's a fear or death that's showing its head.
Who hires you?
Does the family hire you, or does the person dying hire you?
Does the hospital hire you?
It depends.
Never a hospital, or at least not yet.
But often the family members are the circle of support or the person themselves.
Because sometimes we're not there for the person that's dying.
Sometimes we're there for the circle of support.
Like they need an additional hand or they need some information or some comprehensive end-of-life planning.
I also want to be clear that,
Death Duelo's work with anybody who has some recognition of their mortality, which means that when somebody is still healthy, we can help them complete comprehensive end-of-life plans.
So we can help folks think through their end-of-life plans, think through their fears of death, think through their death avoidance when they're still healthy and they're not yet looking at the end of their life.
It's such a good point, right?
Because I think we all know that we're supposed to, whether we do or not, you've got to have your will, you've got to have your living will.
You know, you have to make your state in order, make sure somebody knows where all the paperwork is, where the bank account knows.
numbers are insurance policies you're good like it's I mean no I know the stuff as you get
older and you sort of reach a middle age you're like I got to do this you know and somebody
will say to you like I just finished my living will did you Simon did you do yours I'm like I got to
do it damn it you know and like you know because we don't think of about our mortality when
we're younger of course it's basically mostly financial it is helping our loved ones be
prepared or be you know there's insurance policies for example to make sure that they're
taken care of etc
but none of us think about the emotional care,
we think of the financial care.
People have insurance policies
so that their spouses will be taken care of after my dying.
My kids, you pay the mortgage.
But none of us think about
they're going to go through freaking hell,
emotional awfulness when this happens.
I'm going to also have a plan for them,
maybe for myself, but at least for them.
It's so interesting that death is a financial thought.
Yeah.
And we've completely neglect the emotional components to help our family grieve our loss.
Yeah.
That's an absolute mirror about the capitalistic society that we live in.
It shows us where our values lie.
What society does it well?
Many of them do.
I think a lot of societies don't really focus on the financials, but they focus on the community event of it.
You know, dying is a, it's a social event.
It's not a medical one.
It's not a financial one.
It does trigger a lot of financial responsibilities.
and conversations.
But it's a social event.
It's a community event.
And there are a lot of places that treated it as such,
which is part of the reason why a death duel in today's day and age
in this society, a Western society,
seems interesting or strange.
But it's a role that has been inhabited since time and memorial
because since humans have been alive,
humans have been dying.
And other humans have been supporting them through it.
Literally.
Literally.
And other humans have been there for them.
It just seems strange now maybe
because we live in the,
individual pods where, you know, the nuclear family is the center and I am the center of the
universe and my life matters and I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, such that I forget about all those
around me whose lives will continue after I die, who I would like to take care of in my dying
as well, who are going to be taking care of me. One of the things that I find also fascinating
about the concept of death, and I, you know, I studied anthropology in college, and a universal
is ceremonial burial
that every culture in the entire world,
everywhere, big or small, there's ceremonial burial.
And when anthropologists go back and look
at sort of early bones and, you know,
of early Homo sapiens, like they're amazed
that they find ceremonial burial.
Like, it's a thing.
And I wonder if that, you called dying a community event
that the concept of the ceremonial burial
is sort of the community death doulaing, if you will.
And to your point, which is the decline
in sort of,
ceremonial anything.
You know, we ship ourselves off to the cities
and leave our families far behind.
That I wonder if the need for a death dula
is a very modern construction
because we aren't so community-less
in this modern day and age.
I'd absolutely agree with you.
That role used to be inhabited by a member of the community.
There was somebody that the people knew
that when the dying is happening,
you call them over and they come in support.
There are still some cultures and some religions
that hold on to those.
There's a Chevro Cadecia within Judaism.
They're the folks that you call when the dying has occurred, and they prepare the body.
And there's ritual written into the religion about how to grieve afterward, but it's written into it.
So everybody knows that's what you do.
But in the absence of culture that dictates that, then what do we do?
You know, what we do is that we ship it off to hospitals.
People are dying in very sterile environments, not in the way that they want, not in the way that their whole humanity is being cared for.
and then we pass on their money
and we give them three days off
for bereavemently for their grief
and we don't give them any time
to be with this massive effect that is it.
I mean, I know I really want to talk about living
in just a second, but I'm really just so fascinated by this
which is if you think about it
when a couple gets pregnant, right?
When someone gets pregnant,
there is thought put to how I want to have my baby.
Do you want to do natural childbirth?
Do you want an epidural?
Do you want to be in a tub of water?
Like where do you want to be?
Do you want to be in a home?
Do you want to be in a hospital?
Do you want a C-section?
like what are the medical considerations?
Like there's lots of thought
and how to bring a child into this world.
And so little thought about how I would like to leave this world.
I've never thought about it.
I've never thought about it.
Here we are.
Now's the time to think about it.
Now's the time to think about it.
Okay, let's talk about living.
How did you change how you live your life
as a result of this experience?
And take me on the journey,
which is what changes did you make
right after that bus ride in Cuba?
So in the very short term,
before you decided to go,
do the work. How did you start living your life differently? Well, I also took that invitation
to start living like I was dying essentially. I was still, I was under a leave of absence at work,
but when I came back, I extended that leave of absence a little bit longer because I thought that I
need a little bit more time to decide what direction I want to take my life in, and I'm glad I did.
I applied immediately for a graduate degree program and death and spirituality, because I thought
maybe I wanted to be a therapist and sit and talk to people that were dying. So I started making
the changes. I downsized my apartment because I knew I wouldn't be able to afford it anymore,
given that I wasn't collecting my salary at the rate that I was. I made changes in my own life.
But since then, so much has changed, you know. Not only did I not go back to the practice of law
in any capacity, and I built a business and a career around supporting people and they're dying,
I also think I speak a little bit more clearly about how I feel. I brush up against my
vulnerability a lot more often. The idea of individualism,
seems to be fading in me that I'm more comfortable being needed and needing people in my life
because I see how communal our lives are and can be, and I want that for myself.
But, you know, this idea of individualism has us say that we can do everything on our own.
I also eat more delicious foods.
I'm not as concerned with my weight if we're going to be silly about it.
Like I eat whatever I won't because this life is short, and I want to use my taste buzz as long as I've got them.
And I love French fries and cake, so I'm trying to get them all I can.
Yes, and.
But if you eat too many French fries and too much cake, that day comes a little sooner.
Yeah.
Theoretically.
Theoretically, because I don't know.
Tomorrow could be it.
And if it is, I really hope I had a French fry.
And also, as I'm going about eating my cake and my French fries, at some point, I also want some kale and spinach, all right?
Like, I don't just want that.
When I eat a little bit of it, I satisfy it.
Then I want to eat something else.
I want to nourish my body.
Because you don't want to have diabetes along the way either.
No.
And I also really like squats.
Like I like squatting.
I like muscles.
I like exercise.
And so I do that point to you as well.
What do you think about the obsession right now of longevity?
I live in California.
So everybody's in some sort of, you know, supplement something or other.
Everything.
And you ask them the reason why are you doing this?
And longevity is the answer they give you.
I'm curious your thoughts.
Is it fear of death?
Is it a good thing?
I think it's death denial at its core.
I think we live in a highly death avoidant death.
culture and that tells you that you take pop enough supplements and you drink enough baby's blood
you'll live till 117 but why do you want to live to 117 anyway you know what is it that we're
trying to avoid by wanting to live for forever and what are you doing with that extra time that you
wouldn't do now with the finite time that you have that's such a great point which is I'm taking
all these vitamins and doing all these things and spending hours a day to prolong longevity so that for what
So it's, you know, you know, it's the equivalent of,
it's the same mentality of I'm going to make a lot of money
so that I can give to charity later.
Same mentality.
It's like, why not just give to charity now and give to charity later also?
With what you got.
Yeah, start with what you've got.
And none of us know how much time we have.
You know what I mean?
Like I could live 104 anyway, but I could also, tomorrow could be it.
And if that's the case,
then why not live my life right now with the fullness that I can while I'm still here?
What's the youngest person you've helped die?
Well, I supported a family with their newborn died.
Okay.
And what's the oldest?
She took like three breaths.
Probably about 95?
95.
So what have you learned from the people who...
A newborn doesn't help me with my argument here,
but like somebody who's in their 40s or 50s, right?
So we would say they've died young, right?
relative to the national averages versus somebody who lives way beyond the national averages,
80s, 90s, right?
Have you noticed any patterns in how the older ones have lived their lives?
What is their attitude to life?
How have they lived their life that you can perceive that they have lived longer than everybody else?
Can I tell you a story?
Yeah.
A client of mine, one of my absolute favorites, although they're all my favorites,
so don't tell anybody I said this.
One of my favorite clients, Ms. Bobby, she was about 95 when she died.
And in the time that I sat with her, she told me all these stories of her life, you know,
about how she was the first black woman to integrate multiple neighborhoods in Los Angeles.
She was a traveling nurse that traveled abroad and saw the French rolls in France.
And so she swear she was the one to bring it to America.
She chased off lovers with guns, a cheating husband with a gun.
She threw newspapers that nosy neighbor.
she did a big life while she was here.
Okay.
Near the end of her life,
I asked her if looking back on any of it made any sense or anything like that.
And she responded to me in a super husky, gravelly voice
because she's also smoked like packs a day
and drank a bunch of whiskey while she was living.
I think it was cognac, actually.
She drank a lot of cognac.
And she said, first of all,
none of it made any sense, but it was one hell of a ride.
to me the
indication of
the like how people
approach their dying is based on how
they view their lives themselves.
You know, if I'm spending my whole life resisting my death,
it's not going to be one hell of a ride.
But if I can just sink into it for what it is,
the utter miracle it is, the joy,
the benefit of being able to eat
food and travel places and meet people
and like be here for the times
that I'm here, then I think they've reached the end
feeling like, okay, that was all right.
And I noticed that same attitude.
in the younger folks.
There was a woman I supported
who was about 26, 27,
who also was like, so joyful.
She did not want to die young, air quotes.
She didn't want to die young,
but there she was,
and she embraced it with a wisdom
that a lot of older people didn't have
that I certainly didn't have it
at the time that I got to support her.
She had enjoyed her life
for the time that she was present in it.
And I think that's what we can all take away from it,
to be here.
It's like it never made sense to me why, you know, people would save their money to go on, you know,
like you see the retirees, we've gone these incredible world tours that they've been saving up
for for 30, 40, 50 years.
Yeah.
And I always think, why not just take a small trip every year, you know, as opposed to the grand tour
near the end?
People wait for your point.
I think a lot of what we're talking about is gratitude.
I'll tell you one thing that I find absolutely poetic and beautiful.
When I asked you what you changed about your life, you know, after, after that.
bus ride in Cuba, I've expected you to say, well, now I take more vacations.
I expected you to say those kinds of things, but you said something more beautiful, which is
you said, I've become very comfortable being needed and being needy.
Like, I've been very comfortable needing the help of others, and I've been very comfortable
feeling needed.
And I think that is absolutely beautiful, which is to recognize that, like, we're not alone
in this.
and to be open to being needed and needing others
is something you appreciate more since you've learned about death.
Significantly, significantly more.
I see how as we approach our dying,
those that are resistant to the support of others,
those that are so afraid to be vulnerable,
that are afraid to have a need are the ones that tend to struggle
because they're still trying to do it all by themselves.
There was a client that I got to be with, who, big burly guy, who in his dying and his illness got so thin and frail.
And he was a classic, you know, pulled himself up by his bootstraps.
And the American success story came from nothing, he made everything.
And then his dying struggled so much with the fact that he could no longer stand on his own or pull his pants up by himself.
He was angry.
He was frustrated.
It was breaking him.
He couldn't surrender into being vulnerable.
And that's not something that I want for myself.
I also see how all of us become vulnerable.
You know, dying is probably one of the most vulnerable acts
will ever undertake.
It's certainly one of the most intimate.
Everything, my whole life is going to be on display for other people.
Somebody's going to go through my sock drawer in that one drawer by the side of the bed
that I do not want my mom to see before anybody else goes.
You know what I mean?
That one drawer.
Like, everything's going to be on display.
My body's going to be cold and naked on a slab at some point.
I'm, it's vulnerable. It's very vulnerable. If I'm ill, even more vulnerable. Why not practice it a bit now?
Do you cry? All the time. When your clients die?
All the time. All the time. I grew close to them. Who helps you manage that grief?
My partner, my friends, the other death dolers in my life, the grief therapist in my life, everybody, the cashier at CVS, if they ask me how I'm doing that day.
They asked the wrong question. And they catch me at the wrong time or the right time.
You've been there for a lot of final words.
Some of the best final words that you've heard
that have left you like, yes, thank you.
I wish they were.
But it's more like, yes or no or mm-hmm.
Like there's not that much energy to come up with something poetic, you know?
No, I haven't heard anything that's been like, wow.
I think that's the stuff with the movies.
My grandmother died when she was about 95 or 96.
She had a weird relationship with death.
And, you know, I remember I'd visit her in the movie.
London. She was already in a home because her body had not worked like it used to. Her mind
was fine right until the end. And it was caused her endless frustration because she was an adventurous
woman and she couldn't really do the stuff she wanted to do. So she was in a home and I would like
visit her in London and I'd leave and say, well, I'll see you, you know, next year when I'm back
in London and she'd scream out, maybe not, you know? Like she's just this weird relationship
with death, very comfortable with it. When she died, some of the nurses from the home came, which
was very unusual because they're around death all the time.
They don't go to funerals, you know?
It's part of the job.
But a few of them came to her funeral, which I found really touching.
And the one who was with her when she died,
we were standing next to the grave with her.
And I said, I have to ask you, did she have any last words?
And she said, yeah.
She was sitting in bed, and she said to me,
I think I'll have another pillow.
and she left to get another pillow
and she'd come back and she died.
And, you know, I kind of love that.
You know, I kind of love that.
Me too.
I think I'll have another pillow.
Yeah.
And I think she was telling her to leave.
I think she knew that it,
and I think she wanted to be alone.
But those are like the best,
the best final ways I've ever heard.
That happens often where people want to be alone.
I'm so touched at that nurse not only remembered,
but shared that with you.
It is beautiful.
I also just love the idea that she was like,
oh, let me get a little bit more comfortable.
Sike, I'm out.
You know?
I think she, being English and polite,
didn't want to say,
could you get out for a moment, please?
I'd like to die.
It happens a lot, you know.
And I often talk to folks
that are experiencing some grief or sadness
because they stepped out of the room
because either the person dying needed something
or they stepped out to get a,
phone call or to go to the bathroom or so while they were gone, their person died.
Yeah.
They waited for their moment, right?
They waited for the moment.
They waited for the moment.
They wait for the moment.
What is the most interesting secret or story you've ever heard somebody tell you on their deathbed?
I've heard so many secrets.
Oh, tell one.
There are all types of secrets, family secrets about mistresses and babies and kids and people who died under mysterious circumstances.
Ooh.
Juicy stuff.
Were they confessions or were they more like you want to know something?
Both.
Wow.
There's a lot of you want to know something because I'm not going to die with this secret or this is so juicy.
What's your favorite? Come on, come on.
About the kids, about mistresses.
Other families.
Other families. There's so many other families.
So many other families.
And I think the 23 and me and Ancestry.com and all those places, we're about to find a whole lot of families.
That's right.
It's all coming out.
Yeah.
They don't have to be...
It's all coming out.
It's like...
That drawer next to your underwear drawer,
that's coming out,
and the 23 and me
that you have two other families.
Nobody's dying with secrets anymore.
Look, everything we're talking about,
obviously,
is partially about planning for death,
but it really is about a celebration of life.
And you've talked about the 26-year-old
who just lived in gratitude,
you know,
and the 96-year-old,
95-year-old,
who lived in gratitude for the wild ride
and whatever time you have,
make it something that you'll be grateful for
when your time is up, whether it's a short time or a long time, right?
But we speak in these faux philosophical, like every day is a blessing and, you know,
count your luck.
And, you know, like, we say nonsense like this all the time.
The only time we really, really, really appreciate that life is short and the only time
we really, really appreciate that how stupid most of our problems are is when we or someone
close to us suffers some sort of real awful tragedy, whether it is a cancer diagnosis or
natural disaster. And then we sort of all sit around and take account, you know, somebody says, did you hear, you know, Stanley has terminal cancer, you know, and you're like, oh, it really makes you want to appreciate every day. We say things like that. And by the way, we mean it. You know, every lesson I've learned about the value of life and the shortness of life, blah, blah, blah, blah, and the fragility of life, I've always for about a day, maybe a week at most, lived a better life. And then I forget. And I go back to the, go back to
normal. And A, is that okay? And if not, how do we stay aware, how do we, you know, without having to
suffer tragedy regularly to remind us or be surrounded by tragedy around us to remind us,
how do we find Joie de Veeve, how do we live a life of gratitude and joy and make joyful decisions
more often on just a regular normal day? Well, I think that's part of the beauty is in the question,
is that these regular normal days are where the magic lies.
You know, the magic is absolutely in the mundane.
It's not just in the tragedy,
and it's also not just in those perfect days
where the concert tickets to your favorite artists are half off
and you get like the last ones.
Or you're at the concert.
There is magic in both those things,
but it's in the every single day
where I can be reminded,
where I can remember what a wild miracle it is
that I get to touch
and look at you through these eyes, through a computer, no less, and speak.
I am sending air into my lungs, sending up, pushing my diaphragm out through these vocal
course to make noises, random noises, that somehow you understand and are alchemizing in your own
brain and making some sense of and causing a reaction in you and then thinking the same thing,
then you'll do the same thing and send it right back.
That is a miracle.
And that's happening trillions of times a day.
And yet we get so caught up in the little, the little annoyance.
of life, you know, taxes, a big annoyance, or like, traffic, or not having the particular
type of peanut butter I want at the grocery store, forgetting that peanut butter itself is a
miracle. Like, being alive is an absolute utter gift. It's an utter gift. When I can remember that,
when I can remember that, it allows me to be more, like, present. I was talking a bit about
gratitude when I was talking about summer that client I was telling you about the young one,
but also a lot more about presence.
Like she had a way of just zoning out and noticing raindrops,
noticing the pattern as the raindrops came down the window.
That may have been because she was approaching her end
and she was very present with her mortality
and could think, wow, I won't be seeing this much longer.
That gift is available to all of us every single moment.
I don't know when my end will be at all, at all.
I mean, like you're already making me feel bad, right?
because, and I don't mean
in this in a bad way,
but like,
I was snippy this morning.
I was annoyed by something
at lunchtime,
you know,
and it's so,
all of it was stupid.
Yeah.
And the reality is I don't care.
Like, if I really,
if you really push me,
I don't really care.
And so what I'm grappling with
in my mind is like,
I know everything we've been talking about.
Like,
and I think everybody knows
everything we've been talking about,
you know?
just to look around and be grateful for, as you said,
because I think we do sort of gratitude practice.
I think most of us who've tried a gratitude practice,
you run out of things real quick.
Like you have an amazing vacation.
I'm so grateful for that vacation and that dinner.
And by like the third or fourth or fifth day
or second or third week of this,
you're like, I'm grateful for my family again
like I was yesterday.
I'm grateful for, I guess, I'm safe at home again.
I think I said that yesterday.
But your point is you could say the same thing every single day and that's good.
Absolutely.
And get minute with it.
You know, you're safe with the home.
What about the roof?
It doesn't have any leaks.
You know, what about the fridge and the food that's in it?
What about the ability to chew?
What about teeth?
About saliva?
What about digestive enzymes?
Like we can get really, really minute with it.
And when I'm thinking about the minute is where the magic is.
Don't get me wrong.
There's a lot of suffering also in the world.
There's so much suffering.
And yet, when I can zoom out and think about what this life is for me at this moment,
it allows me to snap back into it.
I think the most effective practice of gratitude for this life itself is a reminder that I'm going to die.
When I can remind myself of that, it pulls me right back from the annoyances and the minor grievances and the frustrations.
and at the same time it allows me to be with them in a way that allows them to be so because I'm also human
and to be human is also to be like a little annoyed sometimes.
It makes me like not be so tight about the emails that I send.
You know what I mean?
So I didn't get all the wording right now.
I'm going to die.
But also you're going to die, you know?
And so when I'm thinking about that, I don't just hit the email on like the really nasty thing.
I don't hit send really easily.
When I'm standing and I'm being a jerk in line someplace and somebody else is having a bad day,
I think about their death and it allows me to be a lot more compassionate toward them.
One day, whatever it is that's troubling them is going to be a thing of the past.
All of their history, all their doubt, all their fear, all their regret, that's going to die too.
It allows me to, like, soften toward them.
It allows me to, like, hold my fellow human for being a human, to have, like, hard days,
to be angry about things, to one day be really vulnerable, to be laying there like a baby bird.
Like, it allows me to soften.
Oh, I love that, which is some, I'm standing in line at, you know, the coffee shop and the person
in front of me is having a conniction because they gave them oat milk instead of, you know,
almond milk, to, instead of being like, chill out or it's just a small set, to say,
you're going to die and this won't matter.
At all.
And it does.
It really sort of like gives you a little compassion for somebody else's troubles.
A lot of compassion.
I don't think that any society that reveres death, any individual that reveres death,
can also hold any of the systems that keep us disconnected from each other.
It's impossible.
because when I'm revering death, I'm honoring the individual for their entire right, for the totality of it.
Like, I can't do that and also walk down the street across all those people that are laying there and not think twice about it, you know, or hold up transphobia.
Like, it's impossible. You can't.
For people who say grace before a meal, I think that everyone should learn to say grace, even if you're not religious or that's not in your, in, that is not associated with the religion that you practice.
because I think sometimes when I've sat around a table with friends who say grace,
sometimes I sort of like giggle to myself.
Like, I always think of it.
It has to be this big religious thing.
And some of it's funny and silly, you know?
And I think it's good.
I think the more funny and silly it can be, the more genuine it is.
It's a little gratitude practice.
You know, thanks for this meal.
Thanks for having the friends and family around the table.
Thanks for the nice weather.
I think that's a way to do it, which is to build it into the, to build it into the routine of life, you know?
Say thank you when you're brushing your teeth for your teeth every single morning.
That would be great.
And when you lose your teeth, say thank you for your gums.
Yeah.
Thank you for having had teeth.
Thank you for having had teeth.
Yeah.
Boy, I'm grateful I had to chew.
Yeah.
Lucky me.
Lucky me.
Lucky me.
I'm really partial to the concept of grace overall.
I think I think of grace as like the basket that gets to hold all of us in our lives and also in our death.
I name my company going with grace for that reason that if we can go along in our lives but also into our deaths with grace,
that feels like a high bar, but it's also so available immediately for all of us at any turn.
And I swear that wasn't a plant.
I actually didn't know the name of your company.
Yeah, did it.
That was spontaneous.
But yes, it is.
is grace, to have grace, to go with grace.
And when you name the company to go with grace, how did you define grace?
Why grace?
Well, I actually, you're your anti-grace?
I don't know, no, right?
People often think my name is grace.
I think that's just so funny because I'm so not graceful.
But that's funny to go with grace.
It's like, I'm grace and I'll go with you.
And I'll come along with you.
Let's ride.
I don't know that I ever had a solid definition of what grace could be.
I grew up in evangelical.
I no longer practiced that particular.
faith tradition, but the concept of grace was through all of my upbringing, my religious
upbringing. And I started to think of grace as allowing things to be as they are, you know,
to be with the gratitude for what is, for that thing that holds us through everything that we
journey through. And so going with grace, like going into life, but also into death with grace,
that would be really pretty cool if we could, and we can. By the way, even though we're both
anti-euphemisms and we're both pro just like just say what it is because everybody knows everybody knows
they died just say they died right but let's be honest the best euphemism i've heard is going with grace
i win yeah i mean it's a really good euphemism it's pretty good we'll take it we'll take it
it's actually a very cheery conversation surprise surprise beautiful conclusions here
grace grace presence gratitude my favorite which is getting comfortable
with feeling needed and needing others,
all lessons that intellectually we all already know.
And I think to be reminded of the fragility
and temporariness of it all is one mechanism.
And I have to believe you know this,
but your life seems to help us feel inspired on two levels.
Tactically, the people you're holding their hand
and working with them, you know,
as they're coming to the end in their families,
and then talking about it.
talking about it with me and writing about it and TED talks and things like that that you've
offered to the world, you know, helps us all greatly benefit from the gifts that your dying
clients have given you to pass them to us. I'm the luckiest person in the world. I feel so grateful
to be constantly in relationship with my mortality in such a way that it has allowed me to
create a life that feels really good that ultimately I can feel comfortable leaving at some point
where I can live in service, where I can wear all the wild colors I want to work,
because I don't care because I'm going to die,
where I can just be myself while I'm living.
That, to me, is the greatest gift that I think this work has been able to give me,
and I just hope to pass a little bit of it on.
Well, thanks for letting me be a part of that journey with you.
Thank you, Simon.
Such a delight.
Yay.
So it wasn't so bad, right?
Just death talk, that's all.
It's just death talk, that's all.
I mean, that's what it is.
A bit of optimism is a production of the optimism company.
Lovingly produced by our team, Lindsay Garbenius, Phoebe Bradford, and Devin Johnson.
Subscribe wherever you enjoy listening to podcasts.
And if you want even more cool stuff, visit simic.com.
Thanks for listening.
Take care of yourself.
Take care of each other.
