Experiencing life-threatening illness, surgery, cancer and other confrontations with mortality changes a person.

Experiencing life-threatening illness, surgery, cancer and other confrontations with mortality changes a person. Others who have not been through this experience do not know it as intimately as those who have. Going through it can feel very lonely, for you alone are ill or face surgery and stare directly into your mortality.

My experience of these situations is very personal, but also professional: supporting people as they make their way through cancer, chemo, surgery and other treatment options has been interwoven with these experiences in my personal life.Attending those who are dying is also life-altering. Again, my personal experience of being with friends as they die is intimately woven together with my support for clients whose loved ones are dying or have died.

I have clients who are immersed in the hospice practice of repeatedly entering into loving relationship with dying people: I find myself moved and changed by their work. Life and grief are inseparable – everything is lost in the end. But being with grief in a direct way is transformative. This transformative process is at work in cancer and illness, during treatment, in dying, and in the grief beyond death that deeply changes those left behind. How may I support you in this journey? Let us be in touch.

"Glenn, I am so grateful to have you in my life - I can't thank you enough..........."
B J

When life’s challenges make you say “Enough already,” or even “Too much”…call (415) 448-6008 or: