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What we can learn about life from watching others die with Sundari Malcolm

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Manage episode 398632683 series 3461794
Content provided by Aransas Savas. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aransas Savas or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

At the end, almost everyone says, “I wish I had listened to other people less. I wish I had lived larger.” It makes me cry to think about it, to imagine myself at the end of my life, and to think I had the chance, but I didn't out of fear or out of self-imposed limitations. I want to go out knowing I tried everything and I did everything.

Today, as part of our month-long series on grief, we are joined by Sundari Malcolm, who has experienced way more than her fair share of grief (if there is such a thing).

Check out other episodes from the series HERE and HERE.

At 27 years old, and after seven years of being her Caregiver, Sundari lost her mother to Breast Cancer. Four years later, she lost her father. As a death doula and a BIPOC Grief Educator and Care Curator for The Dinner Party, she has immersed herself in life’s final moments and what comes afterward for those who grieve. Along the way, she’s learned how to live.

In this conversation we discuss

  • Anticipatory grief during caregiving
  • How Sundari found roots after losing both parents at an early age
  • The importance of setting boundaries during intense periods of loss and caregiving
  • How to find and create safe spaces for grieving
  • The power of seasonal reflection and intention-setting
  • How Sundari uses a "self-care bowl" to bring play to her self-care

Please join us on May 17 for Uplifters Live. You can learn all about it HERE.

Sundari

Sundari is a native New Yorker, born to Yogi parents, and raised with the teachings of Integral Yoga. Since losing her parents, Sundari has made it her mission to equip people with the tools they need to manage life’s greatest transitions. She sits as the BIPOC Grief Educator and Care Curator for The Dinner Party. Sundari is a Birth, Grief, and Death Doula. She is the founder of A Healing Doula. She is a Yoga and Meditation teacher and a recent publisher of the book Grief Gems.

Thank you to Lia De Feo for nominating Sundari as an Uplifter.

  continue reading

69 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 398632683 series 3461794
Content provided by Aransas Savas. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aransas Savas or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

At the end, almost everyone says, “I wish I had listened to other people less. I wish I had lived larger.” It makes me cry to think about it, to imagine myself at the end of my life, and to think I had the chance, but I didn't out of fear or out of self-imposed limitations. I want to go out knowing I tried everything and I did everything.

Today, as part of our month-long series on grief, we are joined by Sundari Malcolm, who has experienced way more than her fair share of grief (if there is such a thing).

Check out other episodes from the series HERE and HERE.

At 27 years old, and after seven years of being her Caregiver, Sundari lost her mother to Breast Cancer. Four years later, she lost her father. As a death doula and a BIPOC Grief Educator and Care Curator for The Dinner Party, she has immersed herself in life’s final moments and what comes afterward for those who grieve. Along the way, she’s learned how to live.

In this conversation we discuss

  • Anticipatory grief during caregiving
  • How Sundari found roots after losing both parents at an early age
  • The importance of setting boundaries during intense periods of loss and caregiving
  • How to find and create safe spaces for grieving
  • The power of seasonal reflection and intention-setting
  • How Sundari uses a "self-care bowl" to bring play to her self-care

Please join us on May 17 for Uplifters Live. You can learn all about it HERE.

Sundari

Sundari is a native New Yorker, born to Yogi parents, and raised with the teachings of Integral Yoga. Since losing her parents, Sundari has made it her mission to equip people with the tools they need to manage life’s greatest transitions. She sits as the BIPOC Grief Educator and Care Curator for The Dinner Party. Sundari is a Birth, Grief, and Death Doula. She is the founder of A Healing Doula. She is a Yoga and Meditation teacher and a recent publisher of the book Grief Gems.

Thank you to Lia De Feo for nominating Sundari as an Uplifter.

  continue reading

69 episodes

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