Call A Death Doula

Conversations with the people behind the work

Short video conversations exploring the human stories behind death doulas — how they were called to this work, what they have learned through this work, and how this path has shaped the way they live.

The intention of this project is to help people become more familiar with what a death doula is through honest human conversation.

Many people have never met a death doula, and the word death itself can feel distant, frightening, or like something meant for “later.” Through these conversations, I hope to gently humanize both death doulas and the experiences that often lead people to this work.

Behind every death doula is a human being who has loved, grieved, witnessed loss, and moved through life’s thresholds in their own way. These conversations are an opportunity to hear the stories, wisdom, tenderness, and humanity behind the work — and to remind us that none of us walk these experiences alone.

If you are a death doula and feel called to participate, I would love to hear from you.

What We’ll Explore

The moment death became personal

The path into becoming a death doula

What surprised you most about this work

How this work has changed your relationship with life

What you uniquely bring to this work

The humanity behind walking alongside death

Conversation Details

Conversations are scheduled for approximately 30 minutes to allow time to settle in, connect, and record a short conversation together.

Recorded online video conversation

Conducted through Zoom

Shared as part of the Call a Death Doula project

Casual, conversational, and reflective

No formal preparation needed

About Pamela

I am a death doula, guide, and the creator of Reunion Tour: Making Peace with Your Life.

My work centers around helping people approach life, death, grief, transition, and self-understanding with compassionate curiosity and loving awareness.

Through Call a Death Doula, I am creating a growing collection of conversations that reflect the humanity, diversity, tenderness, and wisdom within death work.

I look forward hearing your story.