Location:Serving the Front RangePO Box 472462AuroraCO80047homeBusiness Phone:719-430-5272workEmail:gnjaln@qrneqrcnegherf.pbzmoc.serutrapedraed@aynwatINTERNETWebsite:DearDepartures.com
Categories: Advance Care Planning, Affiliate End-of-Life Services, Celebration of Life, Ceremonies/Rituals, Client Advocacy, Companioning for Dying Person, Education/Training, Funerals, Grief and Bereavement Support, Home Funerals, LGBTQIA+ Ally/Advocate, Living Funerals, Memorial Services, Officiant/Minister, Pregnancy/Infant Loss Support
Tawnya is a Home Funeral Guide, Life-Cycle Celebrant & Grief Companion. She offers home funeral education and support, custom ceremonies across the life-cycle with an emphasis in death and dying, and bereavement support.
Home funerals are when the bereaved choose to tend to the decedent themselves and/or hold a home vigil/viewing/wake with the decedent in the privacy of their own home or space. Home funerals are legal in all fifty states. See Dear Departures’ FAQ page for more information.
As a Life-Cycle Celebrant specializing in funerals, memorials, celebrations-of-life, graveside services, ash-scatterings, pregnancy and infant loss ceremonies, memorial dedications, virtual ceremonies, and more, Tawnya is strongly suited to tell authentic stories.
Living funerals are events where, when someone is nearing the end-of-life, they become the guest of honor at their own exit-party! More and more people are coming around the idea that, rather than have everyone sit around and tell stories about how great you were after you’re gone, it’s a much richer experience to be a part of that conversation while you’re still alive!
She strives to convey legacies with candor, tact, and grace.
Living Funerals are also an opportunity for the dying person to share with others what an impact those people have made on their life.
She offers ceremonies for those whose relationship with the dead was complicated, especially when trauma is a part the survivors’ past with the dead. It is critical to acknowledge the gravity of the situation in a way that gives voice to the survivors’ pain, by staying true to the narrative. Humans are fallible, after all.
“Do-over” memorials are for those who either never had a meaningful memorial for a loved one at all, or, if the one they did have was unsatisfactory. Whether your loved one has been gone for a year, or a decade, it’s never too late to create a meaningful tribute. This process can be therapeutic, especially as it relates to our past culture around miscarriages and/or infant deaths that weren’t given the acknowledgment that they deserved.
Tawnya also offers guidance in eulogy writing, as well as in crafting your own obituary! Obituaries don’t have to be simple timelines of events. They can be fun, witty, reverent, and lush! One need not be dying to start writing an obituary. Getting a head start means that when the inevitable happens, (be it tomorrow or years from now,) the things that are important to YOU about your life’s story have been highlighted!
Additionally, she offers pet-honoring ceremonies before, during, or after a pet death.
She’s even crafted send-offs for non-living beloveds, like vehicles lost to accidents, and homes lost to fire.
The sky is the limit in how we acknowledge and honor our grief!
TESTIMONIALS
“The event was beautiful! Tawnya over delivered! I got numerous compliments from attendees. I felt her compassion and empathy from beginning to end. She had great attention to detail. All of this taken together will ensure that I recommend her to someone else.” -Janet C., Memorial Client
“Tawnya was very personable. Her expertise made the service extra special. I wouldn’t change a thing.” -Agaitha B. Memorial Client
EDUCATION & AFFILIATIONS
Life-Cycle Celebrant Certificate, Specializing in Funerals, Celebrant Foundation & Institute
Bereaved Sibling Support Group Facilitator
Holding Space for Pregnancy Loss Certificate (plus the advanced course), Institute of Birth Breath & Death
Sacred Passage Guide Certificate, Conscious Dying Institute
Board of Directors, National Home Funeral Alliance (NHFA)
National End-of-Life Doula Alliance (NEDA) Member
Denver Hospice Volunteer
Shifting Deathcare: Tool for a New Paradigm, Going With Grace
Trauma Informed Death Work, Narinder Bazen
Bachelors of Science in Human Services/Counseling & Mental Health, Metro State College of Denver
Speakers Bureau
Tawnya offers presentations and workshops on topics that include but are not limited to:
Home Funerals & Community Death Care (law, logistics, ritual, & more)
Medical Aid in Dying
Voluntary Stopping of Eating & Drinking
Eulogy & Obituary Writing
Eco-Friendly Options in Death
Grief in the Workplace
Disenfranchised Grief
Suicidal Ideation
Have a special request? Tawnya is happy to custom craft and/or co-create presentations and workshops on just about any topic in the death, dying, and grief space. Feel free reach out to share your ideas & requests!
Labyrinth of the Heart Center, LLCContact Name:DiannaVagianos Armentrout
Location:P.O. Box 621076LittletonColorado80127United StateshomeEmail:qvnaan@qvnaanintvnabf.pbzmoc.sonaigavannaid@annaidINTERNETWebsite:Website and Blog
Categories: Affiliate End-of-Life Services, Client Advocacy, Education/Training, Grief and Bereavement Support, Pregnancy/Infant Loss Support, Spiritual Guidance
The Labyrinth of the Heart Center, LLC was created to support families going through pregnancy and infant loss and grief in order to honor our dead and our journeys with them in unity and love. Classes are offered to support families by learning appropriate communication skills around death, using ritual and creative arts for healing, and strengthening networks and communities. Writing classes are offered to individuals who are seeking a modality to express grief and honor loved ones. Motherhood includes all of our losses at the Center. We honor each other through compassion, and work with the ancestors who have also lost pregnancies and babies from the beginning of humanity. All are welcome at our table.
Dianna’s pregnancy with her daughter, Mary Rose, who died an hour after birth of trisomy 18, changed her life completely. Dianna wishes to change the cultural fear of death and social awkwardness around the bereaved by educating others to be present and open to the natural process of death. Miscarriage rates and infant death rates are high in our country, yet little support is available to families over the years.
She has written a poetry collection and novel and is in the process of seeking publication for both manuscripts. Find her poems, short fiction and essays online and on her YouTube channel.
My baby is dead. For five months of my pregnancy I knew that my daughter, Mary Rose, would die, though I did not know when she would die. What surprises me most is that I am alive. I am alive after the heartache of knowing about her condition, alive after holding her still body in my arms moments after her birth. Afterpains came with empty arms, as did my baby’s milk. Those months of pregnancy with the knowledge that our baby had trisomy 18 felt like a million years of sadness. . . During my pregnancy I did not find much to comfort me. I am writing the book that I wish I could have read when I was pregnant with my daughter. . .
I see life as spiritual path. I can only make sense of Mary Rose’s life if I look at it from a distance. I put myself in the context of my grandmothers and great-grandmothers. Women have been burying their children since the beginning of time. I am one woman who has walked this searing path of pain. Yet somewhere inside our hearts we have the strength to carry on, not to move on, as some would want us to do. We can continue our lives taking our babies with us. Our arms are empty, but our hearts are full. The love we have for our children, living or dead, grows. I do not believe in a final good-bye.
Dianna Vagianos Armentrout offers workshops and classes on grief and loss. Her class on Pregnancy and Infant Loss is modeled after her book Walking the Labyrinth of Heart: A Journey of Pregnancy, Grief and Newborn Death which details her pregnancy and grief journey of receiving a life-limiting diagnosis for her unborn baby mid-pregnancy. Her book has helped people let go of their loved ones at the end of their life, including Kirsty Reyes who said Dianna’s words helped her take care of her mother who was dying of Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases.
Additionally, Dianna teaches poetry, creative nonfiction and fiction. She has spoken to many audiences on poetry and other topics related to creative arts in her career. She currently has classes on grief, motherhood and gardening open on her website http://www.diannavagianos.com.
Phone:719-430-5272homeEmail:gnjaln@qrneqrcnegherf.pbzmoc.serutrapedraed@aynwatINTERNETWebsite:DearDepartures.comCEOLC Member Profile:Dear Departures
Categories: Advance Care Planning, Affiliate End-of-Life Services, Celebration of Life, Ceremonies/Rituals, Companioning for Dying Person, Education/Training, Funerals, Grief and Bereavement Support, Home Funerals, LGBTQIA+ Ally/Advocate, Living Funerals, Memorial Services, Officiant/Minister, Pregnancy/Infant Loss Support
Tawnya offers presentations and workshops on topics that include but are not limited to:
Home Funerals & Community Death Care (law, logistics, ritual, & more)
Medical Aid in Dying
Voluntary Stopping of Eating & Drinking
Eulogy & Obituary Writing
Eco-Friendly Options in Death
Grief in the Workplace
Disenfranchised Grief
Suicidal Ideation
Have a special request? Tawnya is happy to custom craft and/or co-create presentations and workshops on just about any topic in the death, dying, and grief space. Feel free reach out to share your ideas & requests!
Dianna Vagianos Armentrout offers workshops and classes on grief and loss. Her class on Pregnancy and Infant Loss is modeled after her book Walking the Labyrinth of Heart: A Journey of Pregnancy, Grief and Newborn Death which details her pregnancy and grief journey of receiving a life-limiting diagnosis for her unborn baby mid-pregnancy. Her book has helped people let go of their loved ones at the end of their life, including Kirsty Reyes who said Dianna’s words helped her take care of her mother who was dying of Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases.
Additionally, Dianna teaches poetry, creative nonfiction and fiction. She has spoken to many audiences on poetry and other topics related to creative arts in her career. She currently has classes on grief, motherhood and gardening open on her website http://www.diannavagianos.com.