What makes a Compassionate Community?
Burdekin Life Article - 22.02.24
A couple of weeks ago, we touched on the idea of a Compassionate Community and rallying around to provide a support network for people experiencing challenges in life.
This week, we would like to talk about Compassionate Communities from the perspective of death, dying and grief.
Compassionate Communities is a way of recognising that we all can care for and support those dying. In the past, people often died at home, and their families knew how to take care of them. But nowadays, dying has become more of a medical issue, and we’ve lost some of that knowledge and confidence to help our loved ones at the end of their lives. Compassionate Communities is about bringing back that sense of community support and care for those who are dying.
Did you know the Neighbourhood Centre has access to resources for death, dying and grief that we can make available to you or link you with?
The Neighbourhood Centre, over the last couple of years, has held community education opportunities in collaboration with Palliative Care Queensland. We have covered subjects including What Matters Most to Me, How to Have Conversations About Dying and Grief, Last Aid, Community PalliNavigator, Getting Your Affairs in Order: Enduring Power of Attorney and Advanced Care Planning.
Life has a 100% mortality rate regardless of who we are and what our situation is. It is a normal part of life, and the more we learn how to talk about it, the less confronting it becomes to us.
We’ve all been touched by death, whether it is a sibling, parent, child, partner, friend, or pet. There is something to learn from each of our stories.
Would you like to come together and have conversations that contribute to building a Compassionate Community in the Burdekin? Finding ways, together, to be able to bring up the conversations about death, dying and grief in a way that can help us all have a better life and, ultimately, a better death.
Join us at the Centre on Wednesday, 28th February, at 5:30 pm for an informal chat to get the ball rolling.
The Team – Burdekin Neighbourhood Centre