Liminal Time Workshop August

Book on to workshop (£130pp)

A practical guide to prepare for the death of a loved one. Hosted by Liminal Time in collaboration with Dorothy House.

Friday 7 August – 10am – 6pm

These full day workshops are designed to address the ‘liminal time’ or ‘time in between’ the death of someone you love, and their funeral. The session offers practical and emotional tools, providing the confidence to successfully navigate an overwhelming time.

This day is ideal for anyone anticipating loss, for those who work in end of life care, or for those just wishing to gain a better understanding of life and our approach to death.

“Deaths are as important as births, and we should be prepared: fore thought can ease grief and regrets. Everyone should have a ‘Liminal Time’ day. It was nothing short of brilliant.”

 

What the day includes

  • Structured, guided work with the full 13-step Liminal Time model
  • Practical and emotional insight from decades of lived experience
  • Time to reflect on your hopes, fears, values and role
  • Honest conversation, clear planning tools, and empowering examples
  • Drinks and snacks provided throughout the day

You’ll learn how to

  • Navigate the timeline between death and the funeral – practically and emotionally
  • Have essential conversations and make good decisions
  • Create a meaningful funeral ceremony, even under pressure
  • Make informed choices – about care of the body, venue, funeral type, tone and timing
  • Stay grounded when others may be overwhelmed or in shock

Why it matters

The time between death and the funeral can be overwhelming – yet it holds enormous potential. How we show up in that liminal time can influence our relationships, grief, healing, memory and the legacy of our person, for years to come.

This day gives you the chance to prepare in advance.
To see what’s coming.
To find steady ground.
And to meet it with integrity.

You’ll leave with

  • A practical framework to return to when the time comes
  • Greater clarity about your choices, what you want, need, and can offer
  • Language to use in real conversations about death and decisions
  • Confidence to support others, or to lead when it matters most
  • A deeper understanding of death – and so a deeper capacity for life