
COMMUNITY
Other incredible initiatives that are creating a community around death and dying:
Dead Good - *award-winning* creative death workers and arts-based death educators
Talk Death - We are the hub for death-conscious education, advocacy, and community
This Mortal Life - Community spaces in Weston Super Mare that support people to engage more consciously
Good life, good death, good grief - Create a Scotland where everyone knows how to help when someone is dying or grieving
​The Red hand files - Unique online project where Nick Cave invites fans to ask him anything
We are DEAD GOOD sisters, Katy and Lindsey Vigurs.
We are *award-winning* creative death workers and arts-based death educators. We are passionate about death education. For us, death is not taboo. Our practice is open and compassionate about all things death and dying.​​ We work with the living, the dying and the dead; with individuals, families, groups and organisations.​ We will support you to participate creatively, emotionally and physically in tailoring your own meaningful farewells, rituals and legacy projects.

TalkDeath encourages generative conversations around death and dying. We are the hub for death-conscious education, advocacy, and community. TalkDeath is a community that uplifts, affirms, and engages with mortality and grief directly, empathetically, and without reservation. Through our online forums and community events, we create spaces that connect individuals and encourage them to participate in community care.
This Mortal Life creates accessible community spaces in Weston Super Mare that support people to engage more consciously with life, mortality and change through conversation, creativity and shared experience.
Esther describes, we’re a growing community project creating gentle, creative spaces for people to reconnect with nature, ourselves and each other.

We believe that people usually want to do the right thing when someone they know is affected by ill health, death or grief.
But sometimes other things get in the way – lack of knowledge, time, experience or confidence can mean people don’t offer help. Structures, culture and conventions can create barriers to individuals acting on their intuition.
Good Life, Good Death, Good Grief wants to address this. We want to create a Scotland where everyone knows how to help when someone is dying or grieving.

Stay in touch
Just a few times per year, I send out a newsletter with updates and upcoming events

