Jane Bourne Talks About Death and Dying at Ignite Berry

At the Ignite event on 5 September at the Berry School of Arts, every speaker gave us something to think about. Over the next few weeks, I will be sharing highlights from each presentation. You can find the  presentations as they are published here.

Jane Bourne returned to the stage for her second talk of the night, this time on a subject most of us would rather avoid: death and dying. She began with a smile and a reminder that while death and taxes are guaranteed, most of us would add laundry to that list too. Unlike laundry, though, death is rarely spoken about openly.

As a funeral celebrant, Jane has seen first-hand the heartache families face when they have no idea what their loved one wanted. Did they want to be buried or cremated? Did they want poems, prayers, or pop songs? Did they even want a funeral at all? Without conversations, grief is made heavier by uncertainty.

“Planning a good death leads to a much fuller and better life.”

Jane encouraged us to talk about death, not in whispers but in real conversations with family and friends. Planning ahead, she said, is not about being morbid. It is about giving a gift to those left behind. When people know your wishes, they do not have to carry the burden of doubt.

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Her stories were both moving and funny. She spoke of fishing shirts at funerals, Morris dancers at a celebration of life, and even the time she was asked to say the words “glory hole” at a service. She shared how some families now choose “living funerals,” celebrating a person’s life while they are still here to hear the good things that will be said.

“A funeral should be as unique as the person it honours.”

Jane reminded us that there is no single “right way” to farewell someone. A funeral should be as unique as the person it honours. And she spoke about how planning a good death can actually lead to living a fuller life. Thinking about mortality helps us prioritise what matters, how we want to spend our time, and the stories we want to share.

Her closing thought was simple but profound. On average, we get 4,000 weeks and 77 summers in a lifetime. Some get far fewer. How we use them is what matters. Talking about death is, in the end, a way of talking about life.

“Talking about death is, in the end, a way of talking about life.”

#IgniteBerry #JaneBourne #TalkingAboutDeath #GoodDeath #CelebrationOfLife #LivingFunerals #YouOnlyDieOnce

📸 Images used in this post are for commentary and community storytelling. Credits belong to the original photographers and sources. Please contact me if you would like an image credited differently or removed.

Kiama Unplugged. Jane Bourne how Us and We Can Disconnect to Reconnect

Jane Bourne Unplugged speaking at Ignite Berry 

Getting off our phones and stopping the doom scrolling is something that matters to all of us. We all know we do it. At the Ignite event on 5 September at the Berry School of Arts, Jane Bourne challenged us to think about what it is doing to our children, and to ourselves.

“We want a free roaming childhood back. Children should be out playing with kids of all ages, not glued to a screen.” Jane Bourne

Jane is the founder of Kiama Unplugged, a movement born from her determination to protect her own children from the mental health impacts of smartphones and social media. Instead of giving in to the idea that “everyone else is doing it,” she decided to act.

“Disconnect to reconnect, that is how we will beat the loneliness epidemic.”

The initiative creates phone free spaces for families and communities. The very first events were held at Finding Fillmores, an adult only event when people gathered, without their phones, played cards or chess, built Lego, coloured in, and talked with strangers. The idea quickly grew into monthly family friendly gatherings at Finding Fillmores, and weekly book hours at Cin Cin Wine Bar, offering simple and joyful ways for people to connect.

Jane reminded us that social change can happen. Once upon a time no one wore seatbelts and people smoked on planes, until enough of us decided to do things differently. She believes the same shift is possible with screens, and that children deserve a free roaming, creative childhood.

“On average we spend 10,000 hours online, enough time to complete a medical degree or learn an instrument. What if we invested that time differently?”

Her vision is to see Kiama Unplugged become part of a wider Australia Unplugged movement, encouraging families everywhere to make the pledge not to hand over smartphones just because their children are starting high school.

“They say from small things big things grow. I believe enough people want change, and we can make it happen.”

It was a powerful reminder that when we disconnect, we can reconnect, with our children, our communities, and ourselves.

📸 Images used in this post are for commentary and community storytelling. Credits belong to the original photographers and sources. Please contact me if you would like an image credited differently or removed.

#IgniteBerry #JaneBourne #KiamaUnplugged #FindingFillmores #CinCinWineBar #DisconnectToReconnect #CommunityConnection #ChildhoodWithoutScreens