Embrace Empowered End-of-Life Support with Kimberly Rich, founder of Tomorrow Mourning
Because care at the end of life isn’t a luxury. It’s a necessity.
Navigating the End-of-Life with Kimberly Rich
My name is Kimberly Rich. I have been an educator for the past 24 years, and earned my doctoral degree from Creighton University in 2024, with a research focus on organizational support of the bereaved.
My journey with grief started following the sudden loss of my mother in 2021. It was then that I first recognized the power of relationship in grief, and also realized the ways that we can fail to support one another in times of grief. It was in the coming months that I accepted that my mission would be to improve how we approach death, dying and supporting those who are grieving.
I am a trained death doula, trained by Deathwives in the winter of 2024. I volunteer with a local nonprofit organization dedicated to providing expert support for those grieving, working with small groups and co-facilitating a book club focused on processing grief through fiction and non-fiction text. I believe in supporting anyone in need and openly partner with people of all backgrounds. We are all going to die, we are all likely to grieve…ALL are welcome here!
I am the mother of four, three sons and one daughter, and married to Ben, a man whose generosity can not be measured. We currently live in a suburb of Chicago, IL but jump on every opportunity we have to travel.
It brings me great joy to take care of my people, to laugh with my people, and to hear their most cherished life stories. If you are not already one of my people I hope for the opportunity to welcome you into the tribe.
As Seen in “Get Griefy” Magazine (Nov. 2024 and February 2025)
The Tomorrow Mourning Vision
Through my company, Tomorrow Mourning, I work to offer graceful and compassionate end-of-life and grief support. I am a keynote speaker, I write about grief and end-of-life care (several magazine articles and twice published), I have a podcast (The Only Guarantee), I provide grief literacy training to organizations and schools, I work with individual clients doing legacy work, end-of-life planning, and grief support.
I envision a world where end-of-life care is more accessible, and where talking about death is not seen as morbid, but as a fundamental component to a mortality-literate society.
End-of-Life Care Values
Knowledgeable, gentle care, grounded in expertise and experience.
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Being fully and authentically with the dying person (griever) and their loved ones. This means slowing down, listening deeply, and honoring silence as much as speech.
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Helping individuals and families reclaim agency and choice in death, dying, and grief, whether through advance planning, memorial design, or legacy work.
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Upholding the inherent worth of every person in life and in death - affirming their choices, identity, culture, and story.
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Recognizing death and grief as a natural part of life that we have the ability to be prepared for. Helping others to face this impermanence with courage and peace.