Good Mourning

facilitated by

Eva Orbuch & Alison Ramer

Weekly on Fridays

8:00 am PST / 11:00 am EST

REGISTER

The Social Change Sanctuary invites you to join us for a weekly space of collective mourning, facilitated by Eva Orbuch and Alison Ramer.

Every Friday Morning — Free & Open to All

Come be part of a nurturing space where we face the world together.

In a time of constant crisis and information overload, it’s easy to feel numb, hopeless, or alone. Good Mourning is a weekly ritual for collective resilience. We gather to:

Hear a snippet of news — with care, not overwhelm
🎶 Drop into music and let it move us
🎨 Make art that expresses our grief, our love, our rage, our hope
💞 Be with others who care
🔥 Take a small, meaningful actions for the world and for our own healing

This is a space for ordinary folks, leaders, artists, activists, and feelers of all kinds.
No art experience needed — just a willing heart.

🕘 Fridays | 8-8:30 am PST 📍 (Zoom)
💸 Free (donations welcome to support the work of the facilitators and their mutual aid work)

Let’s mourn, make, and move forward — together.

Eva Orbach

Eva is an organizational consultant, leadership and life coach, community organizer, fierce advocate, ritualist, and effective facilitator, supporting people and organizations of all backgrounds to move through inertia towards the meaningful results that they desire. Her work spans a diverse array of clients, from school leaders to government to engineering companies to small businesses, creatives, educators, and activists.

Read more about her work here.

Alison Avigayil is an artist, activist, and coach committed to helping individuals, communities, and organizations come into right relationship—with themselves, each other, and the Earth.

For over two decades, she has worked in solidarity with Indigenous and Palestinian communities through movement-building, strategic fundraising, and cross-cultural organizing. A published writer and multimedia creator, Alison uses storytelling as a tool for spiritual reckoning and collective liberation. Her work integrates grief, ritual, and resilience to support those navigating transformation—whether personal or political.

Her personal writing can be found at Hodaya: A Companion in Chaos & Creativity where she shares ways in which we can hold it all—the sorrow and the beauty, the devastation and the love—so that we can move forward, together, toward justice.

Read more about her work here.