Use when a community member is actively dying — weeks, days, or hours remain. This skill covers the threshold between living and dead: the community's physical and relational presence with the dying person, practical home dying, after-death care, protecting the dying person's agency, and supporting the community through anticipatory grief. Distinct from elder-care (aging toward death) and grief-transition (after death has occurred and the community is in loss). Does not cover sudden or traumatic death. Works within Louisoix but can be invoked directly. Say "Let's use the dying-and-death-accompaniment skill" or describe what's happening as a member approaches death.
Death is not a medical event that happens to individuals in isolation. It is a passage that belongs to the dying person and to all who love them. Communities of care have the capacity — and, this skill argues, the responsibility — to be present for this passage in ways that hospitals and facilities structurally cannot be.
This guide is not about medical management. It is about presence, organization, courage, and the practices that let your community accompany someone through dying without looking away. It assumes you are willing to be changed by what you witness.
For most of human history, people died at home, surrounded by family and community. The body was washed by the people who loved it. The grief was communal and immediate. Death was woven into ordinary life, not segregated from it.
In the last century, dying was medicalized and institutionalized. Hospitals became the default place to die — not because it produces better deaths, but because the medical system is organized to treat illness, and dying came to be treated as a failure of treatment rather than a natural completion. The result is that most people in contemporary Western culture have never sat with a dying person. They don't know what it looks, sounds, or smells like. They don't know what to do with their hands. They are afraid.
This fear is learned. It can be unlearned.
Your community has something rare: the relational density, the shared commitment, and the time to do this differently. You can accompany someone through dying with knowledge, presence, and love. You can let death be witnessed rather than managed. This does not mean rejecting medical support — hospice care, pain management, and palliative medicine are real goods that your community should absolutely use. It means refusing to let the medical system be the primary context in which dying happens.
This guide exists to give you the knowledge and the framework to do that.
Community members who have never been present for a death often don't know what to expect. This lack of knowledge produces fear, and fear produces absence — or the kind of hovering, anxious presence that actually makes things harder. What follows is honest. It is meant to prepare you.
When death is weeks away, the pattern of decline accelerates. The dying person will often:
As death comes within days, the signs become more obvious:
In the final hours:
What community members need to know: You do not have to do anything when these things happen. You do not need to fix them or stop them. You need to be present, to speak calmly, and to let the process complete. If a person is enrolled in hospice, the hospice nurse does not need to be called immediately — unless there is unexpected distress or the family needs support. The nurse will come to pronounce death when called. There is no rush.
This distinction matters. The default cultural response to a dying person is to call 911, which summons emergency responders trained to prevent death. If your community member is in hospice care and following their advance directive, calling 911 is likely to result in unwanted resuscitation attempts, hospitalization, and a death that happens in an ER rather than at home. Know this ahead of time. Post the hospice number. Don't call 911 unless the person has collapsed unexpectedly or there is an acute emergency outside the anticipated dying process.
The single most common thing people say after sitting with someone dying is: I didn't know what to do. This is the wrong question. The right question is: what does it mean to be present?
You do not need to say the right thing. You do not need to provide insight, comfort, or meaning. You need to be in the room. You need to stay.
The dying person knows you are there even when they cannot respond. The quality of your presence — calm, warm, unhurried — communicates something that words cannot. A quiet presence says: you are not alone, and I am not afraid of what is happening to you. That is profound.
What this means practically:
This is not a joke — people genuinely don't know. Options:
The dying person does not need you to be riveted on them every second. They need to know you're there.
Not everyone in your community needs to be present at every moment. Over days or weeks, you need a rotation. Think of it like a vigil:
Designate a core circle: Close family and the people who are closest to the dying person. They are the primary presence. Everyone else orbits around them.
Build a rotation for sitting: Identify who can sit for two-to-four hour stretches. Overnight shifts are harder; identify who can do them. Make a schedule. The goal is that the dying person is never alone who doesn't want to be alone — and that no one caregiver is utterly depleted.
Create a secondary circle for logistics: People not in the room but providing meals, childcare, errand-running, cleaning, communication management. This support is as essential as direct presence.
Assign a single communication point: One person fields outside questions and updates the broader community. This prevents the core caregivers from spending their limited energy answering the same question twelve times.
Plan for unexpected timing: Deaths don't happen on schedule. Your rotation needs to be flexible. Someone needs to be reachable at 2am.
Some dying people want a crowd. Some want only one or two people. Some want children present; some don't. Some want certain people excluded — a family member they're estranged from, someone with whom there is unresolved conflict. Their preferences are sovereign.
This can create tension in communities, especially when someone who loves the dying person is told they should not be present. Hold this with firmness. The dying person's wishes about who is in the room at the end of their life are not negotiable.
Dying at home is logistically complex but entirely possible. Thousands of people do it every year. Here is what your community needs to understand.
Hospice is not about giving up. Hospice is specialized care for people in the final months of life, focused on comfort rather than cure. It is one of the genuinely good things the medical system offers dying people.
What hospice provides:
To qualify for hospice in the US, a physician must certify that a person has a terminal diagnosis with six months or less to live if the illness runs its expected course. This is a bureaucratic threshold, not a moral one. Many people live longer than six months on hospice and are recertified; some people enroll and then improve and are discharged.
The most common mistake: families and communities wait too long to involve hospice. Hospice is not just for the last days. A person can be on hospice for weeks or months and receive far better symptom management, far less suffering, and far more support than they would have otherwise. Involve hospice early.
Comfort care (also called palliative care when provided outside the hospice context) means the medical focus shifts from treating the disease to keeping the person comfortable. This is not abandonment. It is the right care for someone who is dying.
Comfort care includes:
What comfort care does not require:
Be clear-eyed about this. The medical system is designed to treat and cure. When cure is no longer possible, the system often has no framework for what comes next. This is where families and communities get pressured into interventions that the dying person did not want, that won't help, and that will ensure the person dies in an institution rather than at home.
Common situations where community needs to hold the line:
Your community's role is to know what the dying person wanted, to have that documented, and to hold it firmly when the medical system pushes in a different direction.
If the person is dying at home:
When the death happens, your community does not have to immediately call the funeral home and step back. There is time. The hours after death can be a meaningful, unhurried space for the people who loved the dying person.
Death is quiet. There is often a quality of stillness in the room that is quite unlike anything else — not eerie, but settled. Many people who have sat with a body immediately after death describe feeling the difference between a person and a body, and they describe this as informative rather than disturbing.
There is no legal or practical reason to remove the body immediately. In most jurisdictions, the family and community can remain with the body for hours. Take the time you need.
What you might do in the first hours:
The hospice nurse will need to come to pronounce the death. Call when you're ready — not the instant death occurs. You can take an hour first. The nurse is not in a hurry.
In most cultures throughout history, the people who loved the dying person washed and prepared the body. This practice has been largely displaced by the funeral industry in contemporary Western culture, but it remains legally possible in most jurisdictions and is practiced by many communities, religious and secular.
Washing the body is an act of love and closure. Many people who have done it describe it as profoundly meaningful — a final act of care, a way of saying goodbye in a physical way that abstract ceremony cannot replicate. It is not morbid. It is one of the oldest and most human things you can do.
What it involves:
The body changes after death: temperature drops, coloration changes, muscles relax. These are normal. If you are washing the body within a few hours of death, the body will still be warm and relaxed. Rigor mortis typically begins within two to four hours and peaks around twelve. Many communities find washing in the first hours easier.
Hospice nurses can advise on this. Some hospice programs have staff specifically trained to support family-led body care.
Your community may wish to sit with the body for some period before it is moved. This is called a vigil, and it is ancient. It gives people time to arrive, to say goodbye in their own way, to be in the presence of the person who has just died.
There is no required form. You might sit quietly. You might tell stories. You might sing. You might pray, in whatever tradition matters. You might simply be present.
Children who are old enough to understand (and some who are younger) can be part of this. The question is not whether they should be shielded from death but whether they are prepared and have support. A child who says goodbye to a body, with a trusted adult present, may grieve more cleanly than one who is kept away and left with imagination.
Green burial — interment without embalming, in a biodegradable shroud or simple wooden box — is legal in all fifty US states. Home burial is legal in many states (check your state's specific laws). Natural burial grounds exist across the country.
Why this matters: the conventional funeral industry is expensive, involves chemicals your community may not want used, and tends to create an experience designed around industry convenience rather than the family's meaningful participation. Many communities find that a green burial or home funeral is more aligned with their values.
For communities that want to explore this:
You can do more of this than you probably think. You can wash the body. You can keep it at home for 24 to 72 hours (with dry ice if needed for temperature management). You can transport it yourself to a burial site in most states. You can dig the grave.
This is not everyone's path, and it should not be. But communities that choose it often describe it as one of the most profound things they have done together.
This section addresses something your community needs to prepare for explicitly: the possibility that the dying person's expressed wishes will be overridden — by family members, by medical providers, or by the institutional inertia of healthcare systems.
When a person is dying, they become increasingly unable to advocate for themselves. They may be sedated, unconscious, or simply too exhausted to fight. Into this vacuum steps everyone else: adult children with their own grief and fear, medical providers trained to do everything possible, distant family members who arrive with strong feelings about what should happen.
The dying person spent their life making choices. What they want at the end — where they die, who is present, what medical interventions they receive, how their body is treated — is still their choice. Your community's job is to hold that choice even when they can no longer hold it themselves.
An advance directive is a legal document in which a person states their wishes for medical care if they become unable to communicate. These documents go by different names (living will, healthcare directive, POLST, MOLST) and have different legal weight in different jurisdictions.
The key components:
Healthcare proxy / healthcare agent: The person who is legally authorized to make medical decisions when the dying person cannot. This person must understand the dying person's values deeply — not just what treatments they want or don't want, but why. What does quality of life mean to them? What are they afraid of? What do they consider a fate worse than death?
Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) / POLST / MOLST: A DNR is a medical order (not just a directive) telling emergency responders and medical staff not to attempt resuscitation. In many states, a POLST (Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment) or similar document covers a broader set of decisions. These documents must be accessible — posted near the door, in the hospice chart, in the person's wallet.
Specifics about treatment: Ventilators, tube feeding, dialysis, antibiotics in the final stage. The dying person's wishes about each of these should be documented and known.
Spiritual and personal wishes: Who should be present. Where they want to die. Rituals and practices that matter. What happens with their body.
Your community's role in advance directive planning: If the elder-care skill has been in use, this work may already be done. If it hasn't, do it now, while the person can still participate. This is not morbid. It is the most loving thing you can do.
When the dying person is unconscious or unable to communicate, the healthcare proxy's job begins in earnest. That person needs your community's full support.
A specific challenge for intentional communities: the dying person chose this community as their primary relational structure, but biological family of origin may arrive — sometimes after years of estrangement — and contest the community's standing to be present, to make decisions, or to carry out the dying person's wishes.
This is painful and it is legally complex. In most jurisdictions, biological next-of-kin retain certain legal rights even when the person has explicitly designated others as their healthcare proxy and chosen their community as their primary family. The law does not reliably reflect the person's actual relationships.
What helps:
Documentation is everything. A properly executed healthcare proxy designating a community member has legal force. A will and any letter of instruction about who should be present, how the body should be handled, and what rituals matter has moral weight and often legal weight. The more clearly documented the dying person's choices are, the harder it is for biological family to override them.
Hold the presence question separately from the medical decision question. Biological family may insist on being at the bedside in ways the community cannot legally contest, even when the community is the dying person's chosen family. This is not the primary fight. The critical protection is the healthcare proxy's authority over treatment decisions. Let family be present if they insist; protect the documentation of medical decision-making authority.
Anticipate the conflict before active dying begins. If there is known estrangement between the dying person and their biological family, the time to prepare for potential conflict is weeks or months before active dying — not during it. This means having healthcare proxy documents in multiple places, having the hospice team aware of the family situation, and designating a specific community person to manage family communication so that direct caregivers aren't also managing that conflict in real time.
Get the hospice social worker involved early. Hospice social workers are experienced in family conflict around dying. They are advocates for the patient's documented wishes, not neutral parties, and they can be powerful allies when family pressure becomes aggressive.
Holding the dying person's stated wishes against family pressure
Sometimes a family member — often a biological relative with complicated grief or guilt — demands interventions the dying person explicitly refused. "I can't just let him die." "She would want us to try everything." "How can you give up on her?"
This is real and it is hard. What helps:
Holding the dying person's wishes against medical pressure
Medical providers in acute care settings often don't know the person, don't have the advance directive, and are working within a system that defaults to intervention. Know this:
When the dying person's wishes are unclear
Sometimes there is no advance directive, or it doesn't address the specific situation. This is where knowing the person's values matters more than knowing their specific preferences.
Ask: What did they say, over the years, about dying? About hospitals? About being kept alive by machines? What did they fear? What did they consider a good death? What did they believe about what comes after? Use these to reason from values to specific decisions in the moment.
Document these conversations. When the healthcare proxy goes to a hospital meeting, they should be able to say: "She told us, more than once, that she never wanted to die in a hospital. She said she would rather have a shorter, better life than a longer one she couldn't live."
Children in your community may be present for some or all of the dying process. This is, with preparation, a gift rather than a burden.
Children who are present for dying, and who have adult support in understanding what is happening, tend to:
What children need:
Children should not be told that someone is "going to sleep" (they will fear sleep), "passing away" (abstract and confusing), or "going to a better place" (what about this place?). Tell them the word. Grandma is dying. When you use the right words, you tell children that death is something we can talk about, and that they are not alone with it.
There is no culturally neutral death. Every community has — or is building — practices around what dying means, what follows it, and how we mark the passage. These practices matter enormously, and they are vastly diverse.
Ritual does something that words alone cannot: it gives form to what is formless, marking the boundary between one state and another. The rituals around dying and death are some of the most ancient human practices in existence precisely because this is the most significant passage there is.
Ritual in the context of dying serves multiple functions:
Your community almost certainly contains people across a wide spectrum of spiritual and religious beliefs. Someone is deeply Catholic. Someone is secular and finds religious language alienating. Someone practices Buddhism. Someone is spiritual but not religious and has eclectic practices. Some have been hurt by religious institutions and bristle at their presence.
This means the rituals around dying will not be one-size-fits-all. The dying person's own tradition and preferences take absolute priority. But your community will also need practices that can hold people across worldviews.
Principles:
The spiritual-worldview-diversity skill has deeper guidance on how to navigate this across the full arc of community life. In the specific context of dying, the essential practice is: follow the dying person's lead, and hold that space for everyone else.
The dying process — especially when it extends over weeks or months — is hard on the whole community. Name this. Don't treat it as secondary to the direct care.
Anticipatory grief is the grief that begins before the death — sometimes long before. It is the process of beginning to mourn someone who is still present.
This is normal, healthy, and often misunderstood. People sometimes feel guilty for anticipatory grief ("She's not even gone yet and I'm already crying about it"). They worry it means they're giving up or willing the person to die faster. Neither is true.
Anticipatory grief is the psyche and the body beginning to do the work of loss before the loss is complete. It runs in parallel with care, with love, with presence. The two are not contradictory.
In your community, anticipatory grief looks like:
How to support it:
When someone is dying at home over days or weeks, the people providing care face real physical and emotional exhaustion. This is particularly true for whoever is bearing the greatest share of direct physical care.
What exhaustion looks like in caregivers:
What your community needs to do:
When the person dying is a founder or someone who has been the structural and relational center of the community, the community grief is compound — and this requires specific acknowledgment.
The community is not only losing a beloved person. It may be losing the person who holds the origin story, the institutional memory, the informal authority that has organized community life, the relationships that the community was built on. These are distinct losses, and they may arrive simultaneously with the direct grief of losing someone you love.
This compound grief can produce:
The community's obligation to a dying founder is to let them die as a person, not as an institution. Keep community governance and succession questions out of their sickroom unless they initiate it. Name explicitly to the community: "This is not the time to work out what comes next. That conversation will happen, but not now."
For stewards and the broader community, the advance conversation about structure and continuity can happen — should happen — but it should be held separately from the care process. Acknowledge openly that the community will face real questions about identity and continuity after this death. Create space to begin to name those questions, in the community, without the dying person having to hold them.
The person who is holding the community through a member's dying — managing the rotation, communicating updates, supporting caregivers, navigating family dynamics, holding the space for anticipatory grief — is also, usually, grieving. And they are doing it while performing the function that everyone else needs.
This is a particular kind of isolation. The steward is not supposed to fall apart. They may be the person others come to when they need to cry. They may be the one who is called at 3am when breathing changes. They may be the one mediating between family of origin and the community. They are not exempt from the loss; they are often more deeply embedded in it than anyone, because they hold the most relationships and the most context.
What the steward needs that they are often not given:
The community should name this explicitly and create it structurally. Don't wait for the steward to ask. Assign someone to check on the steward specifically. Make it clear that the steward is also a caregiver who needs rotation and rest, not just the person who organizes it for everyone else.
After the death happens, your community will enter grief. The grief-transition skill covers this comprehensively. But there are specific community practices that belong to the days immediately after, while the body is still present or has just been moved:
The elder-care skill covers the long arc of aging in community — supporting declining capacities, having conversations about advance directives before crisis, navigating the social and logistical dimensions of aging in place. If your community hasn't done that work and someone is now actively dying, you may need to do some of it in compressed form. But elder-care is the upstream skill; this skill begins at the threshold.
The grief-transition skill begins when the death has occurred and the community enters bereavement. It covers the full landscape of communal and individual grief: how grief actually works, the long tail of support, ritual, and how to sustain attention over months and years. This skill hands off to grief-transition.
The spiritual-worldview-diversity skill provides deeper guidance on holding a community across religious and secular worldviews in all contexts, including dying. If there is significant tension in your community around whose spiritual practices are honored in the dying process, that skill has frameworks for navigating it.
The caregiver-support skill is specifically for people doing sustained caregiving work: the exhaustion, the identity implications, the relational dynamics of long-term care. In a home dying situation that extends over weeks, the people closest to the dying person may need this skill running in parallel with this one.
Death and dying are held in the body. Grief before and after death is physical. Community members sitting vigil for hours or days are experiencing this in their nervous systems, their muscles, their sleep. The somatic-approaches skill provides frameworks for recognizing and supporting the body's processing — for caregivers, for those in vigil, and for the community in anticipatory grief.
Death is not a medical failure, an emergency to be managed, or an event to be sanitized. It is a passage, and it belongs to the dying person and to the people who love them.
Be present. Your community has the capacity to sit with someone who is dying — not to fix, manage, or make it okay, but to witness. This is one of the most significant things one person can do for another.
Know what's coming. Fear of the physical realities of dying produces absence. Knowledge produces presence. The sounds, the colors, the irregular breathing — when you know what these are, you can stay.
Use the medical system for what it's good for. Hospice is real and valuable. Pain management matters. But the medical system's defaults are not your community member's defaults, and you should hold the line for what they actually wanted.
Document the wishes and hold them. Advance directives, healthcare proxies, and documented conversations about values are how you protect a dying person's agency when they can no longer protect it themselves.
After-death care is yours to reclaim. Washing the body, sitting vigil, green burial — these are not exotic practices. They are ancient and human and still possible. Your community can participate in them at whatever level feels right.
Anticipatory grief and caregiver exhaustion are real. Don't wait for the death to support the people bearing the weight of the dying process. Support them now.
Children can be present. With preparation, support, and honest language, children in your community can witness dying and be better for it — less afraid, more present to mortality, more connected to the person who died.
Ritual matters. Center the dying person's spiritual and personal tradition. Create community practices that hold people across worldviews. Let the passage be marked.
A death witnessed well — with presence, preparation, and love — changes everyone present. It is one of the most real things a community can do together. You can do this.
For the long arc of aging toward death — declining capacity, cognitive changes, advance directive planning, and the social dimensions of aging in community — use the elder-care skill. This skill begins where elder-care ends.
For grief after the death has occurred — the acute period, the long tail, rituals, communal mourning, anniversary grief, and children in grief — use the grief-transition skill. This skill hands off to grief-transition.
For navigating the religious and secular spectrum of your community's spiritual practices around dying — whose practices take priority, how to hold ritual across worldviews — use the spiritual-worldview-diversity skill.
For the people doing sustained direct caregiving — the exhaustion, boundary collapse, compassion fatigue, and sustainable practices for long-term care — use the caregiver-support skill.
For the body in grief, trauma, and sustained stress — how caregivers and community members in vigil can be supported through the somatic experience of accompanying a death — use the somatic-approaches skill.