A free online festival exploring the many faces of grief will take place for the first time this October (30th to November 1st), reaching thousands of people all over the UK. Broadcast from a studio in Bristol, Good Grief will include 70 events exploring the universal human experience of grief through panel discussions, conversations, interactive workshops and webinars.
Over 100 speakers will take part including Robert Webb (Peep Show, That Mitchell + Webb Look), Cariad Lloyd (GriefCast), Julia Samuel (This Too Shall Pass, Grief Works), chef and food writer Valentine Warner (The Consolation of Food), best-selling author Nikesh Shukla (The Good Immigrant, Brown Baby), BBC anthropologist Alice Roberts, illustrator Gary Andrews (Doodle-A-Day) and palliative care doctors Rachel Clarke (Dear Life: A Doctor’s Story of Love and Loss) and Kathryn Mannix (With the End in Mind).
The festival will be hosted by Linda Magistris, a former BBC presenter and founder of The Good Grief Trust, with a diverse line-up of speakers participating in panel discussions on the festival’s main stage, including The Covid Cataclysm: How Do We Grieve for ‘Normal’?; The Dead Parent Club with Cariad Lloyd; The Healing Power of Nature in Grief; Empty Bed Blues: Losing a Life Partner; The Grief Gift: Making Meaning of Loss and Reflections on Death and Dying.
Facilitated by bereavement experts, researchers, and those with personal experience, the festival’s Grief School will take a deep dive into different types of grief, with 15 sessions to choose from. The Grief School will examine grief after suicide, childhood bereavement, stillbirth, life threatening illness, substance misuse, pet loss, traumatic loss, grieving during Covid-19, and much more.
Good Grief’s workshop and webinar programme includes Writing Memoir to Heal; Making Friends with Your Afterlife; Self Counselling Through Art; Poetry for Lost Loved Ones; Virginia Woolf and the Literature of Loss, Yoga to Release Grief and a Grief Café facilitated by The Good Grief Trust.
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Good Grief is a collaborative event led by the University of Bristol, funded by the Wellcome Trust, and supported by charity partner Cruse Bereavement Care.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has brought into sharp focus the ways that grief and loss affect our lives. But although grief is universal, people often don’t know how to react when someone is bereaved, and those grieving feel isolated,” said Dr Lucy Selman, Founding Director of Good Grief, from the Palliative and End of Life Research Group at the University of Bristol.
“We’re thrilled to be holding Good Grief online this autumn, when it is needed more than ever. The festival will shed light on the many dimensions of grief, provide time and space to share experiences, and provide opportunities to come together and remember those who have died.”
Good Grief online events are all free to attend.
Book now at www.goodgrieffest.com.