Silent
Silent provides the tools for seekers to recognize their path and enables self-reliance for spiritual and magickal growth.
Seekers gain insight from his work and find their inner calm from his ability to listen and help others reflect.

When someone is dying, people often ask me: “What am I supposed to say?”
Usually, less than you think.
You do not need perfect words.
You need presence that doesn’t flinch.
At the bedside, simple truths are enough:
“I’m here.”
“I love you.”
“You don’t have to do this alone.”
Let silence do some of the work. If they want to talk, follow their lead. If they want quiet, protect it. If they’re afraid, don’t try to argue them out of fear. Stay with them inside it.
Spiritual direction near death is not about giving answers about the afterlife. It is about helping someone stay in relationship: with their breath, their people, their meaning, their mystery.
Dying people do not need speeches. They need someone who will not look away.
And practical care is sacred too: water, music, dimmed lights, calling hospice, asking who they want contacted. Love often arrives as competent care.
I think of a granddaughter holding her grandmother’s hand and saying only, “I’m right here.” No theology. Just contact. The room softened. Her breathing settled.
When the room gets simpler—less panic, more honesty—you’re probably doing enough.
And when symptoms escalate or safety is at risk, we bring in hospice or medical support immediately.
What do you avoid saying because you fear emotion?
Need an ear at the bedside?
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Silent
Silent provides the tools for seekers to recognize their path and enables self-reliance for spiritual and magickal growth.
Seekers gain insight from his work and find their inner calm from his ability to listen and help others reflect.


