Making preparations for your death is not morbid, but a great act of love to those you leave behind.
Artist, maker and designer Dom Foffani was 24 years old when he and his brother walked into the family kitchen to find their father dead on the floor.
They eventually decided against a “quiet and solemn and shy and sad” ceremony. “We wanted something that was fun and silly and stupid because that was him,” Foffani says.“We found out that our dad wanted to be buried, but we decided he would be cremated, and we only found that when his will came to the surface, which none of us had read.”
After years of a pandemic-induced focus on death, and voluntary assisted dying now legal in all states , Australians are being urged to talk aboutHaving the first conversation about death can be the difference between leaving your family and friends drowning in paperwork and having real space to grieve, says Cherelle Martin, a campaigner for the August 8 Dying to Know Day, a day encouraging Australians to become “death literate”.
“All of a sudden people are able to grieve for their loved one,” she says. “They are completely focused on honouring that person and feeling their own personal grief, rather than being caught up in decisions.”
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Dom is only 29, but he’s making plans for a ‘good death’Artist, maker and designer Dom Foffani was 24 when he and his brother walked into to the family kitchen to find their father dead on the floor. What followed changed his thinking anthonysegaert
Read more »
Dom is only 29, but he’s making plans for a ‘good death’After years of a pandemic-induced focus on death, and voluntary assisted dying now legal in all states, Australians are being urged to talk about plans for the inevitable | anthonysegaert
Read more »
Dom is only 29, but he’s making plans for a ‘good death’After years of a pandemic-induced focus on death, and voluntary assisted dying now legal in all states, Australians are being urged to talk about plans for the inevitable | anthonysegaert
Read more »
Dom is only 29, but he’s making plans for a ‘good death’Artist, maker and designer Dom Foffani was 24 when he and his brother walked into to the family kitchen to find their father dead on the floor. What followed changed his thinking anthonysegaert
Read more »
‘The food sector in Australia is hopelessly, grossly undervalued’Activist investor Lee Iafrate made returns from underperforming financial companies after the royal commission. Now, he’s targeting agriculture micro-caps.
Read more »
‘The food sector in Australia is hopelessly, grossly undervalued’Activist investor Lee Iafrate made returns from underperforming financial companies after the royal commission. Now, he’s targeting the undervalued food sector.
Read more »