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Transpersonal Grief Workshops for Organizations Helping Organizations Navigate Grief, Loss, and Human Change
Grief is not limited to the death of a loved one. It emerges wherever there is loss, change, uncertainty, or disruption. Employees, leaders, volunteers, caregivers, healthcare professionals, educators, and nonprofit staff often carry unseen grief that impacts well-being, workplace culture, engagement, and resilience.
My Transpersonal Grief Workshops provide organizations with a compassionate and evidence-informed framework for understanding grief as a natural human experience rather than a problem to be fixed. Through education, reflection, experiential practices, and meaningful dialogue, participants develop greater awareness, empathy, and confidence in supporting themselves and others through loss and transition.
What Makes This Approach Different?
Most grief education focuses primarily on pathology, symptoms, or clinical intervention. A transpersonal approach recognizes that grief is also emotional, psychological, social, spiritual, and existential. It acknowledges that loss can challenge our sense of identity, purpose, meaning, and connection while also opening possibilities for growth, transformation, and deeper engagement with life.
Drawing from thanatology, transpersonal psychology, Jungian depth psychology, contemplative traditions, and contemporary grief theory, these workshops help participants develop a more holistic understanding of grief and its many expressions.
Workshop Topics May Include
Understanding the many forms of grief beyond bereavement
Contemporary grief theories and research
Grief as a natural and adaptive response to loss
The emotional, physical, cognitive, social, and spiritual dimensions of grief
Ecological grief and collective grief
Meaning-making and post-traumatic growth
Compassionate communication and grief-informed leadership
Supporting grieving employees, clients, volunteers, and community members
Self-care and resilience without bypassing grief
Mindfulness and contemplative practices for navigating loss
The role of ritual, storytelling, and community in healing
Learning Outcomes
Participants will:
Gain a deeper understanding of grief and loss across the lifespan
Recognize common misconceptions and myths about grief
Develop greater empathy and compassion for those experiencing loss
Learn practical tools for supporting grieving individuals and teams
Increase confidence in having conversations about grief and difficult emotions
Explore the relationship between grief, meaning, purpose, and resilience
Cultivate personal and organizational practices that support well-being and belonging
Workshop Format
Workshops can be customized for nonprofits, corporations, healthcare organizations, educational institutions, faith communities, and leadership teams.
Options include:
Half-Day Workshops (3–4 hours)
Full-Day Retreats (6–8 hours)
Multi-Session Learning Series
Leadership and Management Training
Conference Keynotes and Presentations
Staff Wellness and Professional Development Programs
Each workshop combines presentation, discussion, reflective exercises, contemplative practices, and interactive learning experiences to create an engaging and transformative experience.
Ideal For
Nonprofit Organizations
Corporate Teams and Leadership Groups
Healthcare and Hospice Professionals
Social Service Agencies
Educational Institutions
Faith Communities
Caregiver Support Programs
Human Resources and Employee Wellness Initiatives
Why This Matters
In a culture that often avoids conversations about grief, organizations have a unique opportunity to foster workplaces and communities where people feel seen, supported, and valued during life's most difficult moments.
When people understand grief more deeply, they communicate more compassionately, lead more effectively, and build healthier, more resilient communities.
About the Facilitator
Paul Miner, MS, CT (Thanatology), MA, is a transpersonal coach, grief educator, meditation teacher, and former Jesuit seminarian. He integrates contemporary grief research, transpersonal psychology, contemplative practice, and depth psychology to help individuals and organizations engage loss, meaning, and transformation with greater wisdom and compassion.
Grief is not limited to the death of a loved one. It emerges wherever there is loss, change, uncertainty, or disruption. Employees, leaders, volunteers, caregivers, healthcare professionals, educators, and nonprofit staff often carry unseen grief that impacts well-being, workplace culture, engagement, and resilience.
My Transpersonal Grief Workshops provide organizations with a compassionate and evidence-informed framework for understanding grief as a natural human experience rather than a problem to be fixed. Through education, reflection, experiential practices, and meaningful dialogue, participants develop greater awareness, empathy, and confidence in supporting themselves and others through loss and transition.
What Makes This Approach Different?
Most grief education focuses primarily on pathology, symptoms, or clinical intervention. A transpersonal approach recognizes that grief is also emotional, psychological, social, spiritual, and existential. It acknowledges that loss can challenge our sense of identity, purpose, meaning, and connection while also opening possibilities for growth, transformation, and deeper engagement with life.
Drawing from thanatology, transpersonal psychology, Jungian depth psychology, contemplative traditions, and contemporary grief theory, these workshops help participants develop a more holistic understanding of grief and its many expressions.
Workshop Topics May Include
Understanding the many forms of grief beyond bereavement
Contemporary grief theories and research
Grief as a natural and adaptive response to loss
The emotional, physical, cognitive, social, and spiritual dimensions of grief
Ecological grief and collective grief
Meaning-making and post-traumatic growth
Compassionate communication and grief-informed leadership
Supporting grieving employees, clients, volunteers, and community members
Self-care and resilience without bypassing grief
Mindfulness and contemplative practices for navigating loss
The role of ritual, storytelling, and community in healing
Learning Outcomes
Participants will:
Gain a deeper understanding of grief and loss across the lifespan
Recognize common misconceptions and myths about grief
Develop greater empathy and compassion for those experiencing loss
Learn practical tools for supporting grieving individuals and teams
Increase confidence in having conversations about grief and difficult emotions
Explore the relationship between grief, meaning, purpose, and resilience
Cultivate personal and organizational practices that support well-being and belonging
Workshop Format
Workshops can be customized for nonprofits, corporations, healthcare organizations, educational institutions, faith communities, and leadership teams.
Options include:
Half-Day Workshops (3–4 hours)
Full-Day Retreats (6–8 hours)
Multi-Session Learning Series
Leadership and Management Training
Conference Keynotes and Presentations
Staff Wellness and Professional Development Programs
Each workshop combines presentation, discussion, reflective exercises, contemplative practices, and interactive learning experiences to create an engaging and transformative experience.
Ideal For
Nonprofit Organizations
Corporate Teams and Leadership Groups
Healthcare and Hospice Professionals
Social Service Agencies
Educational Institutions
Faith Communities
Caregiver Support Programs
Human Resources and Employee Wellness Initiatives
Why This Matters
In a culture that often avoids conversations about grief, organizations have a unique opportunity to foster workplaces and communities where people feel seen, supported, and valued during life's most difficult moments.
When people understand grief more deeply, they communicate more compassionately, lead more effectively, and build healthier, more resilient communities.
About the Facilitator
Paul Miner, MS, CT (Thanatology), MA, is a transpersonal coach, grief educator, meditation teacher, and former Jesuit seminarian. He integrates contemporary grief research, transpersonal psychology, contemplative practice, and depth psychology to help individuals and organizations engage loss, meaning, and transformation with greater wisdom and compassion.