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Founder, Board Member, Executive Producer | Cathy Wurzer is a broadcast journalist with MPR News and Twin Cities PBS, author, documentary filmmaker, artist, horsewoman and wanna-be dancer. What does it mean for you to live with the End in Mind? Living with the End in Mind means making friends with my impending death so I can be free to live fearlessly, with purpose and authenticity, until I die. Deathbed Playlist Song Choice: What? Only one?!? OK. “Keep Me in Your Heart” by Warren Zevon. Everyone wants to be remembered when they are gone. Favorite Bucket List Item: Watching the beautiful, white Lippizan stallions perform their graceful equine ballet in Vienna. What three words would you want people to remember you by? Inspired. Dogged. Kind. If you had one quote on your headstone, what would it be? Actually, it is a quote from my beloved friend Bruce Kramer, the man who modeled much of what pushes me forward with End in Mind. Bruce wrote, shortly after he was diagnosed with ALS, that he had a choice. He could either shut down and wait to die or continue to live until he couldn’t. He asked himself, “What will you be from here into eternity?” I’d love people, who see my gravestone, ask themselves that same question. |
Board Member | Mary Messina is the Vice President for Operations and Strategic Partnerships with Yousurance. She was in a similar role for Thrivent Financial. She’s a volunteer with her local Chamber of Commerce and a celebrant at a local funeral home for families who don’t have a religious affiliation. What does it mean for you to live with the End in Mind? It is an examined life while not being terribly significant. It is to be love as best as I can in the moment. It is to just pause and be present. It is to courageously stand for who I am and to share my gifts. Deathbed Playlist Song Choice: “Your Life is Now” “Remember When” “Better Together” Favorite Bucket List item: Not sure that I have a bucket list item per se. . . my desires are more audacious like, being a part of a world that is unified and fearless of differences. What habit makes your life worth living? I am a better human being when I spend time in the morning in prayer or mediation. The quiet and stillness helps me. My prayer conversations have gotten me through some very difficult times and has never let me down. If you had one quote on your headstone, what would it be? What if? What excites you about being on the End in Mind board? I am very excited and honored to be a part of the conversation. Encouraging us to dare ourselves to live the greatest version of the grandest vision of ourselves. |
Ember Reichgott Junge Board Member |
Board Member | Rev. Amanda Lunemann is Lead pastor at Silver Lake United Methodist Church in Oakdale, MN. She has also been a volunteer chaplain with the Minnesota Legislature and is a certified Zumba and TRX instructor. What does it mean for you to live with the End in Mind? Because I was diagnosed with a chronic illness and bumped against The End at one point in time, it has invariably shaped the value to which I see and know Life. Life is brief. It’s meant to be embraced, and it’s a choice. What a gift and responsibility we have to live this Life in all its iterations of beauty and challenges. For me, to live with the End in Mind is to live courageously each day at a time, here and now, to the best of my ability. Deathbed Playlist Song Choice: “Free Life” & “All Will Be Well” by Dan Wilson “Into the Mystic” by Van Morrison “May It Be” – Celtic Folk Song “Sounds of the Eternal” by J. Phillip Newell Favorite Bucket List item: To star in a Broadway Musical (or at least have one solo number) What habit/practice makes your life worth living? Practicing Human Connection If you had one quote on your headstone, what would it be? “We are not human beings having a spiritual experience, we are spiritual beings having a human experience” – Pierre Teilhard de Chardin 20th century mystic, scientist, priest. What excites you about being on the End in Mind board? Working with equally passionate people to help cultivate healing spaces in our communities and in individuals excites me. It affords me the platform to contribute to their exploration of the tender yet unitive experience of “living while dying.” Additionally, I am grateful for the opportunity to learn and grow, stretch and be stretched by the experiences I have and the relationships I will make while serving on the board. |
Board Member | What does it mean for you to live with the End in Mind? It helps me to focus my life to make it as purposeful as possible. Also, I want to be prepared and prepare my loved ones by getting my affairs in order and making certain that those who survive me understand my intentions and are able to carry on my legacy. Deathbed Playlist Song Choice: Amazing Grace, How Great Thou Art, and I Love to Tell the Story Favorite Bucket List item: Spend as much time and share as many experiences with my family as I can. Travel to places that I haven’t been but am very interested in seeing. What habit/practice makes your life worth living? Practicing my faith, spending time with family (especially grandchildren) and friends, enjoying the beauty of nature, and making a difference in the world and people’s lives. What excites you about being on the End in Mind board? Having the opportunity to be with like-minded people who are trying to live purposefully and assist others in doing so and learning from them how to improve my own life and the lives of others. |
Board Chair | Corey Martin is a Yale-trained family physician, founder of the Bounce Back Project, practicing private group physician, Bush Fellow, and national speaker on clinician burnout. Driven to do this work by the loss of two colleagues and friends, Corey strives to create an environment of opportunity in which all of us can do the deep, heartfelt work of changing the way we show up and interact in each other’s lives. What does it mean for you to live with the End in Mind? It means not be afraid to share your feelings, express your love to others and living a life that is true to yourself. One without regrets. It means that at my funeral my kids will be able to say, the one thing that dad taught us was how to be truly happy. Deathbed Playlist Song Choice: Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah.” Favorite Bucket List Item: Walking the Camino de Santiago. Write your own epitaph in five words or less. Dad. Son. Friend. Mentor. Leader. What habit makes your life worth living? Traveling with my family and facilitating retreats across the world to help people reawaken their inner teacher and to have the courage to live a life without regrets. |
Board Member | What does it mean for you to live with the End in Mind? It means slowing down to appreciate what the day brings. It means taking time to reach out the people in my life that are important to me, so that they know they are loved and seen. It means not being afraid to move forward with things that are important to me, even if doing so seems daunting or scary. Deathbed Playlist Song Choice: “You Can’t Rush Your Healing” by Trevor Hall Favorite Bucket List item: Staying at the Lake O’Hara Lodge in British Colombia’s Yoho National Park and hiking with my husband Scott. It is a small, old lodge in an area of the Canadian Rockies that doesn’t allow vehicles and limits the number of people that can day hike and stay overnight. Getting a room is like winning the lottery (and you practically need to win the lottery to afford it!). The hiking and views are spectacular! What habit makes your life worth living? Movement. I start every day with some sort of movement – usually running or yoga. Movement focuses my mind and brings me a deep sense of appreciation for the day that I’ve been given. If you had one quote on your headstone, what would it be? “Life isn’t measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.” What excites you about being on the End in Mind board? Having the opportunity to help others become more comfortable with talking about, and preparing for, death. I truly think that if people talked more about death, they would live a more fulfilling life. Talking about death is the quickest way to provide perspective and figure out not only the things that are most important to you, but the things that you are doing in your life right now that you really don’t want to be doing (or want to be doing differently). |
Contact Us Email: info@endinmindproject.org Phone: 612-440-6715 Mail: End in Mind Project 5865 Neal Avenue North #343 Stillwater, MN 55082 | Support provided by
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