top of page
IMG_5061.png

Meet

Ethan Sisser

Social Media Comment Template 2 Line.png

“He spoke with pure language of the heart.”

Natalie

Social Media Comment Template 2 Line.png

“His determination in self-documentation

  defies the human mind.”

Mark

I am Embodied! I am Empowered! I am Ecstatic!

Ethan Sisser had stage-four brain cancer. One of his last sights was the scenic ridge tops of the Southern Appalachian – Blue Ridge Mountains of Asheville, North Carolina. On April 2, 2021, the 36-year-old breathed his last. Between waves of an unbowed pandemic, Sisser could have died alone, had it not been for his dying wish – he wanted a movie made of his last day, “leaving his body” surrounded by a “community”. - The Indian Express

Ethan Psychedelic Quote.jpg
Aditi 2 Transparent_edited.png

Meet

Aditi Sethi, MD

She inspired an entire community of strangers to care for Ethan Sisser in his final days. From being Ethan’s hospice doctor, she became his death doula. His friend. 

​

Meet Aditi Sethi. Founder of the Center for Conscious Living & Dying and featured in the documentary  “The Last Ecstatic Days,” Dr. Aditi Sethi is a hospice and palliative care physician, end-of-life doula and musician. Aditi is an emerging and important voice for shifting our culture’s understanding and approach to dying, death, and bereavement care, and will be a featured speaker for TEDxAsheville in March 2024.

​

In caring for Ethan, Aditi recognized the need for returning to dying in community. She founded the Center for Conscious Living and Dying (CCLD) in Asheville, North Carolina to promote community supported end-of-life care.

 

Aditi is also a celebrated musician in Asheville. As a child, under the guidance of her parents (Kapil and Ranjit Sethi) and grandparents from India, Aditi studied devotional music from the Sikh and Hindu traditions. An extension of her music pursuits is playing music with her husband, Jay Brown, a musician and hospice music therapist. 

 

Aditi and Jay recently formed a group called The Appalucians, with Angie Heimann and Cas Sochaki. The Appalucians play music from the mountains of Western North Carolina, featuring spirited songwriting, tight harmonies, and a lovely layered interplay between dobro, guitars, harp, bass, and banjo. Aditi and Jay are the parents of three amazing children.

 

In 2023, Aditi & Jay collaborated with other Asheville musicians to perform at The Grief Happening -  a music concert that invited listeners to attend to their loss and grief.

“Death doesn’t need to be lonely.”

bottom of page