The Art of Dying: A Soul’s Homecoming

I walk with souls through life’s final devotion—guiding both the dying and the living in love’s return home.

Begin a Sacred Conversation

Across cultures, death has never been a finish line. It is a doorway.

Preparing for the Journey

A gentle unlearning

Death asks us to live differently long before it asks us to die.
In this work, we begin to soften our attachments—to roles, outcomes, even our identities. We learn to listen for what the soul is ready to release.
Together, we explore presence, forgiveness, completion, and the deep stillness that makes surrender possible.
Sometimes this means meditating or praying together. Sometimes it means creating ritual, or simply breathing in silence. Always, it is about remembering that love does not end—it changes form.

For Families and Loved Ones

Those who walk beside the dying are also transforming. Grief is not a problem to solve but a holy apprenticeship in love.
I offer support for families who wish to stay present and open-hearted during this threshold time. We practice the art of letting go without abandoning love, learning to hold the mystery with reverence instead of fear.

The soul never dies. We are simply learning to recognize what was never born.

If You Feel the Call

Whether you are facing your own transition, accompanying someone you love, or simply curious about conscious dying, you are welcome here. This work is available to all, and it begins with a single, sacred conversation—an opening to grace.

Let's start the conversation.

How I Came to This Work

The first time I was asked to sit with someone who was dying, I didn’t feel ready. What did I know about death? But as I held her hand and watched her breath grow shallow, something ancient awakened in me. The fear dissolved, and what remained was presence—pure, wordless, infinite.

Since then, I’ve accompanied many souls through that same doorway. My work with plant medicine taught me how to die before dying—how to let the ego fall away so the soul can be seen clearly. Every time I sit beside the dying, I remember that same truth: nothing essential is ever lost.

Thank you for arriving here, for reading these words, for being willing to face what most turn away from. May they bring you a measure of peace, and remind you that love never leaves—it only changes form.

Below is a poem that speaks tenderly to this mystery, one that has stayed close to my heart.

Begin a Sacred Conversation

When Death Came to Visit

A Poem by Andrea Gibson

When death first came to visit, I refused
to let her enter my home. She sat outside
in the garden picking buttercups, painting
her face the color of the sun.

I stood at the window for hours
watching her, thinking, Why is she still here?
It’s not like she has nowhere to go. 
I’d try to sleep,

but as soon as I closed my eyes

I would hear her outside talking
daisies into blooming at night.
I suspect she knew, I too am the type
to open my petals for the moon.

On my eighth night awake, I did it.
I don’t know how, but I did it––I walked out
to the garden and invited her in. I poured her
a cup of lavender tea. I made up her bed

and turned down the lights. I wished her good
dreams, though I knew her good dream
was to one day take my life.
I used to believe I knew my purpose,

thought for sure I understood my calling.
But my calling, I now know, has always been
this: to parent my own departure.
To never punish the child for being who she is.

To keep a roof over the head of the truth.
To raise what will end me, with love.

Now people often ask how it feels
raising a delinquent, a child capable

of such awful behavior.
But what rule has she ever broken
besides the ones we make up in our minds?
Ask me instead how it feels to raise a genius,

a child with a boundless IQ.
She could get away with anything, yes.
She could get away with me any minute.
But I trust her. I have to.

I see some of the letters on a chart on a wall.
She has infinity/infinity vision.
Besides, who would I be if I were someone
who would say, I’m gonna ground you

for wanting to heaven me?
I won’t do that, ever. It doesn’t matter
if I made her with my body or not. She’s mine.
I owe her a stable home. I owe her an allowance

without the stipulation
that she use it to buy me more time.
At night when I tuck her in, I read her a story
with the same three words on every page:

You are innocent. You are innocent. You are innocent,
I say. Before I close the book she asks,
But have you ever known anyone who is so unwanted?
It’s the saddest question in the universe,

and she asks it everytime.
“People don’t know you,” I say. “They’ll want you
when they meet you, won’t they?” She says yes,
looking me dead in the eye.

And you, she adds. You’re really okay
with who I want to be when I grow up?
I know I have to answer honestly.
I say, “I don’t want you to grow up too fast.

You know that. You know I can’t help
but be one of those parents who wishes their child
could stay a child forever. It’s only because I’ve cherished
these years so much. But when you’re ready,

I’ll be ready, I promise. I’ve committed
the rest of my days to learning how

to give you my blessing when it’s time
for you to follow your dreams.

I know it’s how you say, I love you.
I know others will hear it as a curse
and try to rinse your mouth out with soap.
But I will hear your I love you.

I will hear it so clearly my last words will be
I love you too, as I watch you
make something of yourself,

as I open my petals for the moon.”

Let’s Begin

A sacred conversation starts with a single breath. If you feel called to explore the art of dying—or of living fully—reach out using this form.

I’ll meet you there.