The Order Of the Good Death
Building a meaningful, eco-friendly, equitable end-of-life through education, resources, & legislation #DeathPositive |Account run by @sarah_calavera

Are you new here?
Yeah.
Great! Hi and welcome. Death is universal and inevitable. Unless you have some secret immortality formula you haven’t shared, every one of us will die. We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do.
Learn more about the issues, our work, and how you can get involved at our Start Here page (link in bio)

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the problems, solutions, and what you can do on our START HERE page (link in bio)
Art by Jessica Peng @jgp.psd

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the problems, solutions, and what you can do on our START HERE page (link in bio)
Art by Jessica Peng @jgp.psd

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the problems, solutions, and what you can do on our START HERE page (link in bio)
Art by Jessica Peng @jgp.psd

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the problems, solutions, and what you can do on our START HERE page (link in bio)
Art by Jessica Peng @jgp.psd

When you join our NEW MEMBERSHIP PROGRAM you’re investing in a more meaningful, eco-friendly, & equitable future of death. (Details in our bio under ORDER MEMBERSHIP)
Members get access to:
🎟 Exclusive events like Living Funeral Ceremonies, workshops, fascinating talks, & other unique opportunities.
👩🏽💻A virtual members-only community where you can connect and engage with other death positive advocates from around the world and share stories and resources.
📰 An insiders-only newsletter series that features resources, news & updates about death legislation, pop culture recommendations from some of the most interesting people working in death, and our Teach-In series that aims to educate and inform about death issues through social, political, and historical teachings and work toward solutions and direct action.
Our FIRST EVENT is THIS WEEK! Join now and take part in a Living Funeral Ceremony, guided by the amazing @oceanaendoflifedoula!

Who gets remembered after death and who is forgotten?
On May 18th, join us for a free, virtual screening of the Emmy Award–winning short documentary No Olvidado (Not Forgotten) and a conversation with filmmaker Alexandra King on memory, mourning, and the responsibility of honoring the dead.
REGISTER AT THE LINK IN BIO
No Olvidado follows the people who search the desert for bodies of the missing, the medical examiners who work to identify their remains, and the families waiting for answers. The series also documents the funerals and burial efforts that seek to restore dignity to the dead.

Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places | Natural Path Sanctuary
In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
Natural Path Sanctuary is part of the Linda & Gene Farley Center for Peace, Justice, and Sustainability @farley_center in Verona, Wisconsin. Set across meadow and woodland, it’s a green burial ground where the land isn’t manicured, but tended through prescribed burns, invasive species removal, and the quiet work of caring for an ecosystem that will, in turn, care for the people buried within it.
What makes Natural Path Sanctuary stand out, (and why they were one of our Good Death Fellow Finalists), is their dedication to the lives, and afterlives, of their local community.
@farley_center is also home to farmland growing produce for local food pantries andprograms like Supporting Healthy Black Agriculture. They host art exhibitions, festivals, andMock Burial Workshops, where participants can pallbear, witness a shroud demonstration, lower weight into a grave, and have an opportunity to ask all the questions about death they’ve been afraid to. It’s death positive education in the most grounded, literal sense.
NPS is an extraordinary place that shows us what a green burial ground that truly serves its community in life and death looks like. A place where you can walk the land in life, grow food for your neighbors, learn where you might one day rest, and maybe even practice getting there.

Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places | Natural Path Sanctuary
In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
Natural Path Sanctuary is part of the Linda & Gene Farley Center for Peace, Justice, and Sustainability @farley_center in Verona, Wisconsin. Set across meadow and woodland, it’s a green burial ground where the land isn’t manicured, but tended through prescribed burns, invasive species removal, and the quiet work of caring for an ecosystem that will, in turn, care for the people buried within it.
What makes Natural Path Sanctuary stand out, (and why they were one of our Good Death Fellow Finalists), is their dedication to the lives, and afterlives, of their local community.
@farley_center is also home to farmland growing produce for local food pantries andprograms like Supporting Healthy Black Agriculture. They host art exhibitions, festivals, andMock Burial Workshops, where participants can pallbear, witness a shroud demonstration, lower weight into a grave, and have an opportunity to ask all the questions about death they’ve been afraid to. It’s death positive education in the most grounded, literal sense.
NPS is an extraordinary place that shows us what a green burial ground that truly serves its community in life and death looks like. A place where you can walk the land in life, grow food for your neighbors, learn where you might one day rest, and maybe even practice getting there.

Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places | Natural Path Sanctuary
In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
Natural Path Sanctuary is part of the Linda & Gene Farley Center for Peace, Justice, and Sustainability @farley_center in Verona, Wisconsin. Set across meadow and woodland, it’s a green burial ground where the land isn’t manicured, but tended through prescribed burns, invasive species removal, and the quiet work of caring for an ecosystem that will, in turn, care for the people buried within it.
What makes Natural Path Sanctuary stand out, (and why they were one of our Good Death Fellow Finalists), is their dedication to the lives, and afterlives, of their local community.
@farley_center is also home to farmland growing produce for local food pantries andprograms like Supporting Healthy Black Agriculture. They host art exhibitions, festivals, andMock Burial Workshops, where participants can pallbear, witness a shroud demonstration, lower weight into a grave, and have an opportunity to ask all the questions about death they’ve been afraid to. It’s death positive education in the most grounded, literal sense.
NPS is an extraordinary place that shows us what a green burial ground that truly serves its community in life and death looks like. A place where you can walk the land in life, grow food for your neighbors, learn where you might one day rest, and maybe even practice getting there.

Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places | Natural Path Sanctuary
In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
Natural Path Sanctuary is part of the Linda & Gene Farley Center for Peace, Justice, and Sustainability @farley_center in Verona, Wisconsin. Set across meadow and woodland, it’s a green burial ground where the land isn’t manicured, but tended through prescribed burns, invasive species removal, and the quiet work of caring for an ecosystem that will, in turn, care for the people buried within it.
What makes Natural Path Sanctuary stand out, (and why they were one of our Good Death Fellow Finalists), is their dedication to the lives, and afterlives, of their local community.
@farley_center is also home to farmland growing produce for local food pantries andprograms like Supporting Healthy Black Agriculture. They host art exhibitions, festivals, andMock Burial Workshops, where participants can pallbear, witness a shroud demonstration, lower weight into a grave, and have an opportunity to ask all the questions about death they’ve been afraid to. It’s death positive education in the most grounded, literal sense.
NPS is an extraordinary place that shows us what a green burial ground that truly serves its community in life and death looks like. A place where you can walk the land in life, grow food for your neighbors, learn where you might one day rest, and maybe even practice getting there.

Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places | Natural Path Sanctuary
In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
Natural Path Sanctuary is part of the Linda & Gene Farley Center for Peace, Justice, and Sustainability @farley_center in Verona, Wisconsin. Set across meadow and woodland, it’s a green burial ground where the land isn’t manicured, but tended through prescribed burns, invasive species removal, and the quiet work of caring for an ecosystem that will, in turn, care for the people buried within it.
What makes Natural Path Sanctuary stand out, (and why they were one of our Good Death Fellow Finalists), is their dedication to the lives, and afterlives, of their local community.
@farley_center is also home to farmland growing produce for local food pantries andprograms like Supporting Healthy Black Agriculture. They host art exhibitions, festivals, andMock Burial Workshops, where participants can pallbear, witness a shroud demonstration, lower weight into a grave, and have an opportunity to ask all the questions about death they’ve been afraid to. It’s death positive education in the most grounded, literal sense.
NPS is an extraordinary place that shows us what a green burial ground that truly serves its community in life and death looks like. A place where you can walk the land in life, grow food for your neighbors, learn where you might one day rest, and maybe even practice getting there.

Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places | Natural Path Sanctuary
In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
Natural Path Sanctuary is part of the Linda & Gene Farley Center for Peace, Justice, and Sustainability @farley_center in Verona, Wisconsin. Set across meadow and woodland, it’s a green burial ground where the land isn’t manicured, but tended through prescribed burns, invasive species removal, and the quiet work of caring for an ecosystem that will, in turn, care for the people buried within it.
What makes Natural Path Sanctuary stand out, (and why they were one of our Good Death Fellow Finalists), is their dedication to the lives, and afterlives, of their local community.
@farley_center is also home to farmland growing produce for local food pantries andprograms like Supporting Healthy Black Agriculture. They host art exhibitions, festivals, andMock Burial Workshops, where participants can pallbear, witness a shroud demonstration, lower weight into a grave, and have an opportunity to ask all the questions about death they’ve been afraid to. It’s death positive education in the most grounded, literal sense.
NPS is an extraordinary place that shows us what a green burial ground that truly serves its community in life and death looks like. A place where you can walk the land in life, grow food for your neighbors, learn where you might one day rest, and maybe even practice getting there.
What happens to a body after death? 🤔
For the very first episode of Memento Morbid, Joanna Ebenstein is joined by Caitlin Doughty, mortician, author and Founder of the Order of the Good Death.💀 @thegooddeath @ordergooddeath
They chat funeral industry myths, human composting, bone rituals and the strange ways we hide mortality from view.
Listen now wherever you get your podcasts! 🎤 @overcoatmedia @audioboom @jess_gunasekara @fervelazcomusic
Artwork by @ahhsweetdeath
#MorbidAnatomy #Death #Mortician #CaitlinDoughty MementoMorbid

Every year on Earth Day we talk about sustainable living. But what about sustainable dying?
Modern deathcare can carry a surprising environmental footprint. Conventional burial often involves hardwood caskets, concrete vaults, and embalming chemicals. Cremation relies on fossil fuels and produces emissions. These practices became the norm during an era when environmental impact wasn’t always part of the conversation.
Now, more people are asking a new question:
How can our final act reflect the same care for the planet that guided our lives?
Today, emerging and revived options offer different possibilities:
• Green Burial returns the body directly to the soil using biodegradable materials.
• Human Composting gently transforms the body into soil.
• Aquamation, a green alternative to cremation, uses water and alkali instead of flame to return the body to its basic elements.
These options remind us that death isn’t separate from the natural world but part of the same cycles of decay, renewal, and transformation that sustain forests, rivers, and soil. Cycles that sustain LIFE.
So this #EarthDay consider the question:
What do you want your final impact on the Earth to be?
For more info on green funeral options visit orderofthegooddeath.com

With Earth Day coming up next week, we’ve been thinking about music that holds space for decay and renewal, grief and transformation, and the understanding that nothing truly disappears. Songs to listen to while walking through a cemetery, just vibing in nature, or maybe we’re just that one friend who needs to make a playlist for everything. (The last one is true).
Artists like Hozier give decomposition a lush, visual and aural landscape, while Rabbitology sings an ode to bog bodies. And then there’s Juliet Ivy’s “We’re All Eating Each Other,” (a song we’ve previously dubbed a “death positive anthem”), which is a meditation on the reality that all living things are part of the same ongoing exchange matter passing from one body to another, endlessly.
What are some songs that can help us envision our bodies not as something separate from nature, but as something that will one day rejoin it? Drop your suggestions in the comments!
Here’s what we’ve got so far:
Hozier - In a Week
Rabbitology - The Bog Bodies
Ivy Sole - Bones
Juliet Ivy - We’re All Eating Each Other
Paris Paloma - Triassic Love Song
*artwork is from an album of Ivy Sole’s. Front Cover Design and Illustration by Gabrielle Patterson, Original Portrait by Araba Ankuma
Have you told someone about human composting today? It’s only like 2pm there is still plenty of time! More fascinating data from the Wake Forest Survey of Funeral Preferences, with funding and design help from the Order of the Good Death. 🍃

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

In our new Sacred Spaces: Green Resting Places series, we’re highlighting green burial grounds and the people caring for them. Cemeteries where the goal isn’t preservation, but participation in the same ecosystem that sustains life.
@naturalburialnewmexico sits within a living landscape. Coyotes and owls move through the yucca, sagebrush, and cacti at dusk while jackrabbits dart between the graves. Terry, the resident desert box turtle, keeps quiet watch as the sound of a train whistle drifts across the prairie.
But La Puerta is more than a resting place, it’s also a gathering space. They host green burial demonstrations, storytelling events, and maintain a community built labyrinth that invites visitors to walk and reflect. This May 2nd, they’ll join the global celebration of World Labyrinth Day, inviting people to walk the labyrinth at 1pm alongside thousands of others around the world in a shared gesture toward peace. It’s the kind of moment La Puerta seems made for.
One family, after losing their father there, described working with Bryan Beard and Claire McFadyen at La Puerta as “a healing experience amongst the great sadness that is losing my father.”. Another visitor wrote simply: “I’ve never felt good, pure energy at cemeteries, until visiting La Puerta.”
This is what green burial can be, not just an environmentally conscious choice but a place where the living come to grieve, gather, and feel held.
🌵for more about La Puerta follow @naturalburialnewmexico
🌱to learn more about green burial or find a green burial ground near you check the link in our bio

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the issues and solutions at the link in bio ❤️
Art by @jgp.psd

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the issues and solutions at the link in bio ❤️
Art by @jgp.psd

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the issues and solutions at the link in bio ❤️
Art by @jgp.psd

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the issues and solutions at the link in bio ❤️
Art by @jgp.psd

We believe our deaths should be supported—financially, emotionally, and culturally—in ways our modern culture and death services often fail to do. Learn more about the issues and solutions at the link in bio ❤️
Art by @jgp.psd

Attention Washington State (& maybe even Canadian?) #deathpositive folks: I’ll be up in Port Angeles WA on 3/8 speaking and signing books as part of an event at Field Hall called Port Angeles Fine Arts Center Presents: The Living Experience with Death Salon pals @deathunderglass and some folks I look forward to meeting, like hair artist Gina Iacovelli and death doulas Carmen Watson-Charles and Astrid Raffinpeyloz. It’s a big space so let’s pack it out as much as we can! Tix on the events link in my bio.This event is in conjunction with @portangelesfinearts’s exhibition Eternal Echoes, up now through March 29, featuring some of my very favorite artists including @landisblair , @rebeccachaperon , @mister_caitlin , and @timberchouse . Plus I’ll finally get to see @ajhawkinsx’s @shop_kalma in person! It’ll feel like an @ordergooddeath reunion.

Attention Washington State (& maybe even Canadian?) #deathpositive folks: I’ll be up in Port Angeles WA on 3/8 speaking and signing books as part of an event at Field Hall called Port Angeles Fine Arts Center Presents: The Living Experience with Death Salon pals @deathunderglass and some folks I look forward to meeting, like hair artist Gina Iacovelli and death doulas Carmen Watson-Charles and Astrid Raffinpeyloz. It’s a big space so let’s pack it out as much as we can! Tix on the events link in my bio.This event is in conjunction with @portangelesfinearts’s exhibition Eternal Echoes, up now through March 29, featuring some of my very favorite artists including @landisblair , @rebeccachaperon , @mister_caitlin , and @timberchouse . Plus I’ll finally get to see @ajhawkinsx’s @shop_kalma in person! It’ll feel like an @ordergooddeath reunion.

Attention Washington State (& maybe even Canadian?) #deathpositive folks: I’ll be up in Port Angeles WA on 3/8 speaking and signing books as part of an event at Field Hall called Port Angeles Fine Arts Center Presents: The Living Experience with Death Salon pals @deathunderglass and some folks I look forward to meeting, like hair artist Gina Iacovelli and death doulas Carmen Watson-Charles and Astrid Raffinpeyloz. It’s a big space so let’s pack it out as much as we can! Tix on the events link in my bio.This event is in conjunction with @portangelesfinearts’s exhibition Eternal Echoes, up now through March 29, featuring some of my very favorite artists including @landisblair , @rebeccachaperon , @mister_caitlin , and @timberchouse . Plus I’ll finally get to see @ajhawkinsx’s @shop_kalma in person! It’ll feel like an @ordergooddeath reunion.

Attention Washington State (& maybe even Canadian?) #deathpositive folks: I’ll be up in Port Angeles WA on 3/8 speaking and signing books as part of an event at Field Hall called Port Angeles Fine Arts Center Presents: The Living Experience with Death Salon pals @deathunderglass and some folks I look forward to meeting, like hair artist Gina Iacovelli and death doulas Carmen Watson-Charles and Astrid Raffinpeyloz. It’s a big space so let’s pack it out as much as we can! Tix on the events link in my bio.This event is in conjunction with @portangelesfinearts’s exhibition Eternal Echoes, up now through March 29, featuring some of my very favorite artists including @landisblair , @rebeccachaperon , @mister_caitlin , and @timberchouse . Plus I’ll finally get to see @ajhawkinsx’s @shop_kalma in person! It’ll feel like an @ordergooddeath reunion.
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