A Death Café is an informal gathering that encourages open conversations about death, dying, and related topics. It provides a safe and supportive environment for individuals to share their thoughts, fears, and experiences while embracing diverse perspectives and exploring various cultural, spiritual, and practical aspects of mortality.
The purpose is to promote death literacy, increase awareness of end-of-life choices, and ultimately enhance our understanding and acceptance of death as a natural part of life.
At a Death Cafe, people drink tea, eat cake and discuss death.
Resources
- Website: Death Cafe
- The Guardian: What on earth is a death cafe?
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In-person, 7–11 September 2026, Warbrook House, Hampshire, UK
We are living and working in conditions of uncertainty, complexity, and rapid change. Many leadership approaches still rely on control, expertise, and tools that no longer fit the realities people face.
This week-long immersive workshop brings people together to practise Conversational Leadership as a shared, lived experience. It is not a training course but a space to slow down, think together, and explore how leadership emerges through dialogue, responsibility, and real engagement.