Sarah | End with Ease

Sarah is a registered nurse with ten years of experience in home care, palliative, and hospice nursing — though she'll tell you she's really a death guide wearing a nurse's badge.

Her work is spirit-led, held gently within the framework of the medical model. Over the years, Sarah noticed something profound: the most peaceful deaths came to those who were curious and open. To those who had been given honest information, real choices, and the freedom to meet the end on their own terms.

She also noticed something harder — that most people hadn't been given any of that.

Through End with Ease, Sarah bridges that gap. With honesty, compassion, and deep respect for both the biological and spiritual dimensions of dying, she helps people understand what the dying process actually looks like, what options are available to them, and how to move through it — or alongside a loved one moving through it — with agency and peace.

Sarah has led community workshops, spoken at Nipissing University, and has been invited to present at the 2026 CT Death and Dying Symposium. One of her proudest achievements is co-creating a palliative-to-hospice bridge program within her local community — an initiative that identifies high-risk patients who may qualify for palliative or hospice services and connects them with the guidance, support, and informed choices they deserve. Because of this program, many people have been able to die safely at home, surrounded by what matters most.

Sarah believes that a stronger relationship with death makes for a richer, more present life. Her deepest wish is simple: that every person might meet their end without resistance — with comfort, compassion, and peace.

When she's not doing this sacred work, you'll find her solo camping out of the back of her car (lovingly known as the Suba Womb), summiting new mountains, squishing her toes in the mud, hiking with her three dogs, enjoying hot tub happy hour with her Love, dancing with her granddaughter, throwing weights around in her garage, or adding another page to her daily gratitude journal.

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