Sorry for Your Loss cover art

Sorry for Your Loss

Sorry for Your Loss

By: The Walrus Lab
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About this listen

Let's talk about death. It's a conversation many shy away from, but it’s something everyone will experience. In Sorry for Your Loss, we explore the questions we often avoid: What happens to a body after it’s taken away? How do you talk about death with kids? And what should you say—or not say—to someone in their final days?


Hosted by author and former media executive Denise Donlon and death care professional John Monahan, this podcast aims to normalize the inevitable and help us all navigate the often uncomfortable conversations surrounding death.


Join us as we explore what happens when you die, how to prepare, the costs of death care, the options for sustainable burials, and how professionals like embalmers cope with working in a death-centered industry. Through expert guests and candid discussions, Sorry for Your Loss pulls back the veil on the world of dying and death, offering a sensitive and informative approach to understanding what lies ahead.


This podcast is your user guide to the end—or beyond. Join us on this journey.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Walrus
Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Honouring Lives: The Art of Eulogies and Obituaries
    Dec 31 2025

    In this episode of Sorry For Your Loss, we explore how we speak about the dead—and why it matters. From traditional newspaper tributes to personal videos and self-written obits, the way we honour people after they’re gone is changing. First, Denise and John hear about the art of writing and delivering eulogies from Reverend Dr. Brent Hawkes, who was Senior Pastor at the Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto for over 40 years.


    Then, longtime Globe & Mail obituary writer and author Sandra Martin joins Denise in conversation to unpack what makes a good obituary, how to find the right words in the face of loss, and why these tributes can be just as meaningful for the living as they are for the dead.


    Links & Resources

    • Visit the Mount Pleasant Group website for more information and resources
    • A Good Death: Making The Most of Our Final Choices by Sandra Martin
    • Great Canadian Lives: A Cultural History of Modern Canada through the Art of the Obit by Sandra Martin


    Please note that the opinions expressed by the hosts and guests are their own and do not necessarily represent the views or beliefs of Mount Pleasant Group.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    39 mins
  • Small Voices, Big Questions: Talking to Kids About Death
    Dec 17 2025

    In this episode of Sorry For Your Loss, we explore how to talk to children about death—what to say, how to say it, and how to support them through grief. Sarah Keast shares her story of losing her husband and how she spoke with her young daughters about his death.


    Then, Denise sits down with Kitrina Fex, Executive Director of Hospice Mississauga and creator of the HUUG program, to learn how grief shows up in children and how caregivers can help them feel seen, supported, and safe.


    Links & Resources


    • Visit the Mount Pleasant Group website for more information and resources.
    • Learn more about the HUUG program


    Please note that the opinions expressed by the hosts and guests are their own and do not necessarily represent the views or beliefs of Mount Pleasant Group.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    37 mins
  • Green Goodbyes: Exploring Sustainable Death Care
    Dec 3 2025

    In this episode of Sorry For Your Loss, we explore what it means to die in a way that honours not just the individual, but the planet. We begin with Jim Cassimatis, the former registrar at the Bereavement Authority of Ontario, who helps us understand how death care is regulated, what protections are in place for consumers, and where sustainability fits into the current system. Then, we meet Quinn Hunter, a licensed funeral director and passionate advocate for greener practices, whose own journey into the field began with helping her mother plan a funeral. From aquamation to forest interment, we hear about the alternatives to traditional burials and cremations, the barriers that still exist, and what’s changing as more people begin to ask: can death be sustainable?


    Links & Resources

    • Visit the Mount Pleasant Group website for more information and resources.
    • Bereavement Authority of Ontario’s Consumer Information Guide
    • Quinn Hunter’s green burial co-op, Return To The Earth
    • Tillwell, Manitoba’s first licensed aquamation provider


    Please note that the opinions expressed by the hosts and guests are their own and do not necessarily represent the views or beliefs of Mount Pleasant Group.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
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