The Interviews: Allyse Worland - Death, Dignity and the Last Gift We Leave Behind copertina

The Interviews: Allyse Worland - Death, Dignity and the Last Gift We Leave Behind

The Interviews: Allyse Worland - Death, Dignity and the Last Gift We Leave Behind

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What does it mean to work with death every day and how does that change the way we think about living, grieving and planning our own endings?

In this episode of It’s a Death Sentence, we’re joined by Allyse Worland, a first-generation funeral director and embalmer from the United States, whose career began at just 15 years old after a deeply personal experience of loss.

We talk openly with Allyse about entering a profession many people fear, the emotional and physical toll of death work, and why she has built her career around one core principle - being the person she needed when she was younger. Along the way, we explore embalming as an art, funeral traditions across cultures, and why talking about death early is one of the kindest things we can do for the people we love.

What We Explore

- Finding Purpose in Death Work: We talk about what draws people into the funeral profession, the importance of mentorship - especially women supporting women and why openness and shared knowledge matter in a field that can be emotionally demanding and isolating.

- Embalming, Ritual and Changing Traditions: We explore embalming as both a technical skill and an art form, how funeral practices have shifted over the last 16 years, and why seeing a loved one after death can be an important part of grief for many families.

- Planning Ahead as a Final Act of Care: We reflect on pre-planning funerals, wills and wishes, and Allyse shares a powerful insight - that grief hijacks the brain, and planning ahead is heart work that protects the people we leave behind.

As this conversation unfolds, one truth becomes unmistakable: talking about death does not make it darker - it makes it kinder. Allyse reminds us that dignity, clarity and compassion don’t begin at the funeral - they begin long before, in the conversations we’re willing to have while we’re still alive.

This episode is an invitation to think differently about death, to plan with intention, and to see preparation not as morbid, but as one of the greatest gifts we can leave behind.

If this conversation resonates, we encourage you to start the conversation with someone you love - because silence never protects, but understanding often does.

Connect with Allyse Worland on LinkedIn.

It's A Death Sentence shares real stories of life after loss and is produced by Urban Podcasts. Listener discretion is always advised.

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