Resources All From Our Blog Practical Resources Recordings Family Caregiving is a Rite of Passage What unites most people who join our courses is the struggle caregiving presents in their already busy lives. Read more A Good Death Memorialized: Mom had a beautiful death. Now what? A story of grieving and memorializing during the pandemic Read more A List to Reduce Work for Your Next-of-Kin Donna Woodward, a hospice and dementia-care volunteer, shares some useful information and templates to help your next-of-kin. Read more How Zen Caregiving Project sessions have helped me in my work Joan shares her story as to how ZCP sessions have helped her in her work as a licensed professional counselor. Read more How we’re reaching Chinese-speaking family caregivers We partnered with CACCC to translate our Mindful Family Caregiving course into Chinese and trained Chinese-speaking volunteers to deliver the course. Read more Staying close from afar: Palliative care volunteering during the pandemic Bethany Becker speaks about her experience volunteering during the pandemic. Read more Partnering with Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital to support to family caregivers Read about our work designing a train-the-trainer program Read more Building Resilience: My Experience of ZCP’s Sessions Noriko Smith speaks to how our free sessions have helped reduce her anxiety and build her emotional resilience as COVID-19 spread globally. Read more How my volunteer experience helps me during the pandemic Carly Loveman reflects on what she has learned through her volunteer experience and how it has supported her through the pandemic. Read more Why I support Zen Caregiving Project Nancy Wakeman speaks of her relationship with our organization, why she continues to support us, and her thoughts on the organization’s impact. Read more How can mindfulness help me now? How mindfulness can help in daily life and when things get tough. Read more A Line of Disappearances: Grief and Helplessness During Shelter in Place We all need self-care in times like this. Read more Previous 1 2 3 4 Next
Family Caregiving is a Rite of Passage What unites most people who join our courses is the struggle caregiving presents in their already busy lives. Read more
A Good Death Memorialized: Mom had a beautiful death. Now what? A story of grieving and memorializing during the pandemic Read more
A List to Reduce Work for Your Next-of-Kin Donna Woodward, a hospice and dementia-care volunteer, shares some useful information and templates to help your next-of-kin. Read more
How Zen Caregiving Project sessions have helped me in my work Joan shares her story as to how ZCP sessions have helped her in her work as a licensed professional counselor. Read more
How we’re reaching Chinese-speaking family caregivers We partnered with CACCC to translate our Mindful Family Caregiving course into Chinese and trained Chinese-speaking volunteers to deliver the course. Read more
Staying close from afar: Palliative care volunteering during the pandemic Bethany Becker speaks about her experience volunteering during the pandemic. Read more
Partnering with Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital to support to family caregivers Read about our work designing a train-the-trainer program Read more
Building Resilience: My Experience of ZCP’s Sessions Noriko Smith speaks to how our free sessions have helped reduce her anxiety and build her emotional resilience as COVID-19 spread globally. Read more
How my volunteer experience helps me during the pandemic Carly Loveman reflects on what she has learned through her volunteer experience and how it has supported her through the pandemic. Read more
Why I support Zen Caregiving Project Nancy Wakeman speaks of her relationship with our organization, why she continues to support us, and her thoughts on the organization’s impact. Read more
How can mindfulness help me now? How mindfulness can help in daily life and when things get tough. Read more
A Line of Disappearances: Grief and Helplessness During Shelter in Place We all need self-care in times like this. Read more