Ivor, that workshop sounds so poignant and fascinating. As a fellow service designer and UX strategist, I find myself leaning more on community-based participatory research and design methods, though I've a hard time finding case studies of such work in the death and dying space. I hope you'll be able to share more of your process and/or what unfolds from this dialogue in future posts!
Also the last thought from Vivid Void (whose spiritual almanac I appreciate for the daily moment of contemplation) reminds me of Jung writing that the most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely.
Ivor, that workshop sounds so poignant and fascinating. As a fellow service designer and UX strategist, I find myself leaning more on community-based participatory research and design methods, though I've a hard time finding case studies of such work in the death and dying space. I hope you'll be able to share more of your process and/or what unfolds from this dialogue in future posts!
Also the last thought from Vivid Void (whose spiritual almanac I appreciate for the daily moment of contemplation) reminds me of Jung writing that the most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely.