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A Chuilse Mo Chroi

In times of profound sadness, it can be difficult to find the words we long to say. This space exists to gently shape those words.

A few words about me

I spent 26 years working in the medical device and pharmaceutical industries, where my professional life was rooted in structure, responsibility, and regulatory discipline. It was meaningful work, but I belonged to a very different sphere of life.

When death entered my own world through personal loss, it shifted something far deeper. What I encountered was not only grief, but a profound awareness of the sacredness and poignancy of this part of the human journey.

Wanting to understand this experience more fully, I completed the International End of Life Doula training and have also completed a number of grief certification courses to deepen my understanding of the grief process.

I was drawn especially to legacy work — supporting those who are leaving, or those who are remembering, to articulate what matters most.

Brown leather notebook, pen, and jar on a wooden desk

Why This Work Exists

In times of profound sadness, it can be difficult to find the words we long to say. Thoughts feel unfinished. Important things remain unspoken.

This space exists to gently shape those words.

At its centre is Where My Words Go Now — a guided digital grief journal woven with original poems and reflective prompts, created as a quiet place for private expression. Alongside the journal, I offer:

Personalised Poems
Anniversary Mass Readings
Structured Legacy Work
Emotion-Organised Memory Jars

Whether you are writing for yourself, preparing something to be shared, preserving a life story, or gathering small everyday memories that still carry weight, this work offers steady, compassionate support when language feels difficult.

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