souls between stars services
Keshia offers specialized support as a death doula, walking alongside individuals and families through the complexities of illness, grief, and the end-of-life journey. With a spirit of curiosity and deep gratitude, she brings presence and light to even the most difficult moments.
These services offer guidance through three essential pillars. These categories reflect the heart of her work — each one designed to meet your unique needs, offering comfort, clarity, and a sense of peace during life’s most profound transitions. Each service is deeply personal, rooted in empathy, spiritual connection, and a reverence for life’s journey.
Compassionate companionship
In the face of illness, grief, or the transition toward death, Keshia offers the gift of presence — a steady, calming hand during life’s most vulnerable moments. Whether navigating a terminal diagnosis, moving through an unexpected hospital stay, or transitioning to hospice care, Keshia is there to guide you with deep understanding, offering clarity, insight, and unwavering support. She acts as an advocate and a steady anchor, providing comfort during these uncertain and challenging times.
Keshia’s compassionate approach is especially valuable when walking through dementia or Alzheimer’s. Her patience, awareness, and curiosity allow her to live fully in the moment with those affected. She communicates within the language of the disease, offering ease during the day-to-day challenges and supporting a dignified experience.
Keshia also offers sitting vigil—providing a calm, aware, and peaceful experience during the final hours of life, the most special care and attention where and when it’s needed most.
Spiritual Support
As we approach the end of life, the spirit often seeks deeper meaning, connection, and peace. Keshia is familiar and deeply respectful of many different religions and cultures and can help you create a spiritual atmosphere that lights up your heart. This can be done personally and privately or it can become a practice that friends and family also participate in, to create healing and sacred space for all involved.
Keshia can also help you confront and overcome fears surrounding death, guiding you toward courage and acceptance with insightful, philosophical support. She integrates a variety of spiritual practices to foster a deeper spiritual connection, whether through prayer, meditation, reading and exploring special, preferred texts, breathwork, or basking in the beauty of nature. Keshia also offers personal rituals that speak to your soul — whether through music, poetry, dream work, astrology, or tarot — each practice serving to ground you and help you integrate, explore and navigate the mysteries of life and death.
Transformative Transitions
The final stages of life often lead toward deep introspection and a powerful desire to share shifting perspectives about the meaning of our lives. For those seeking to reflect on their journey, Keshia guides you through the process of sharing your story — your thoughts, hopes, fears, and life’s wisdom — through the written word. As a lifelong storyteller and weaver of words, she finds joy in helping you explore your life’s narrative and the sense of deep connection that grows as a result.
For those hoping for an at-home or natural death, she offers hands-on and holistic approaches that are often very specifically tailored to the individual requiring assistance. Keshia aspires to play a significant role in helping this wish to come true for more people (and eventually, herself) and is passionate about finding all sorts of ways to make this positively possible.
For those contemplating medically assisted death (MAiD), Keshia offers compassionate and knowledgeable guidance, supporting informed decisions with dignity and respect.
rates
Rates vary depending on many factors, including time, distance, hours, the nature of the situation, and the type of support requested. Please don’t hesitate to reach out — together, ideas, possibilities, and options can be explored to find what best suits your needs.
references
Here are a few special reviews, shared to help showcase the type of care that Keshia strives to offer and expand upon.

Keshia Shared My Burdens.
Keshia supported my father, Stan, beautifully and at length. She came on board in September 2022 when my mom passed away and Stan broke his hip. For two years, she relieved a great deal of the pressure on me and was a dream of a helper. This makes me sound much smarter than I was. My vision for the help I needed started more narrow than I came to discover was possible.
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Keshia supported my father, Stan, beautifully and at length. She came on board in September 2022 when my mom passed away and Stan broke his hip. For two years, she relieved a great deal of the pressure on me and was a dream of a helper. This makes me sound much smarter than I was. My vision for the help I needed started more narrow than I came to discover was possible.
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Advocate and Diplomat
Here is some context. I was staying with my dad 24/7 in order to keep him safe through the hip recovery process while planning a funeral for my mother. I needed help from a person who is utterly competent in the hospital/hospice/nursing home setting but also not addled by blind faith and medical hero worship. I needed someone, like me, who could stand up to the situation without making anyone personally upset. I needed the energy of an advocate and a diplomat. I needed someone who could understand my dad’s priorities did not always align with the hospital priorities and I wanted his priorities to be manifest as much as possible.
Upholding All Sides, Especially Mine
My dad did not understand why anyone thought he needed four point restraints and he was deeply traumatized by them. Being tied up eroded his faith in the goodness of humans. The hospital personnel had objections to the risk that he might get out of bed, pull out his tubes or respond to them with the rage that he, a citizen, was being assaulted by people paid with his tax dollars. Have YOU ever thought what it would be like to be locked up because someone decided you are nuts and you have to convince them otherwise?!?! Neither my dad nor the hospital staff could grasp each other’s points of view. But Keshia could understand all the sides AND me. At 96, he was surprisingly strong but not particularly dangerous. Keshia was like an extension of myself who could let me rest and regroup. She had the compassion and skills for letting my dad’s version of reality live in their interactions while keeping him safe and the drug-pushing, restraint-happy hospital people sufficiently mollified. She showed good judgement about when to dial 911-daughter so I could show up with a nice clean velvet glove on my iron hand.
Existential Literacy
I thought I only needed a few weeks of assistance but it turned out Keshia was on call and by his side day-in-and-out for two years sharing his feelings, his ups and his downs. Keshia was fearless about fears and never shied away from the reality of life and the various forms of suffering he endured as he made his way back to the nursing home and slowly lost the abilities he had left. Obviously he thought about death and couldn’t necessarily share as freely with me so, because of Keshia, he was not alone with these big and important questions and aspects of existence.
Keshia’s Unique Quality Among Doulas
Other end of life doula’s are more for intense, short-term emergencies and bless their wonderful hearts for that capacity. Keshia certainly possesses the ability to be present day and night when required. And yet she has something more. She has unbelievable endurance. Quite unexpectedly, she was willing to and continued to work with me for two more YEARS. That’s why you should choose Keshia if you don’t know how long you will need help or if, like me, you don’t know what you’ll really need. I gave myself the accidental gift of achieving a new level of greatness in daughterly support because she became the right to my left, the up to my down, the one who could be there in ways that I suck at but that my dad benefited from. I don’t have the patience by myself that we had together.
Reasonable Boundaries
When the nursing home offered behaviour drugs, I offered more Keshia instead. I could only do that because, when Keshia commits, she commits. She has work-life balance as well. The limitations that she needed me to honour were reasonable and easy enough to work with. Those were the boundaries that let her bring her A game most of the time and to have awareness and strategies for when she, too, might have been a bit overstretched.
How a Death Doula is not a Nurse nor a Companion
My dad never got her name right but his face lit up like high noon whenever he saw her. Not to mention, the staff at the nursing home delighted (eventually) in her presence. The only element that was a challenge at first is that they didn’t understand why, from their point of view in which the work of care is personal care like bathing, feeding and dressing, that Keshia gets a much higher hourly rate than they do or than a traditional companion would. She seems (at first) to be a companion. I must say that I also had a world class companion for my dad and I value that role as well.
Lifeguard for Body and Soul
It took a few weeks or months for each of the unit staff one by one to understand two things. First, although they, too, might love to have the time to sit and chat with or do art with my dad, they did not in fact have that time and leeway. Second, many more people can hang out successfully with you when all is basically well and something nice is happening than can be with you when everything is wrong and bad and you want to die right now. Keshia doesn’t do personal care. She’s capable but it’s not her jam. Keshia is well equal to being your companion on a good day. But what Keshia has all over any other type of helper that I could have hired is GRAVITAS. It wasn’t until the staff witnessed Keshia kindly and respectfully engage my dad through a storm and walk beside him through a long, dark tunnel of despair that the staff started to understand why she gets paid the (actually not particularly) big bucks. She certainly saved my dad’s life several times by bringing urgent, overlooked needs to the attention of the staff and me. She helped us all do our jobs.
Keshia Added and Kept Open More Options
During a scheduled session if my dad was asleep or not receptive, Keshia was receptive to cutting the session short which helped her to be more available as needed. Eventually the staff were even willing to signal WHEN she was needed. That made her support more efficient and less expensive at the same time. But there is naturally a significant portion of time when a doula seems to be impersonating an ordinary companion. I suppose it’s like the way a life guard seems to sitting around beside the pool some of the time. The fact that she was available gave me a counter argument when the well-intentioned white coats inevitably brought up behaviour drugs. Not to mention, she valiantly worked all the technology and kept my dad in touch with far flung people in ways that I had far less patience for. His friends and family told me so at the funeral. And actually, the nursing home “white coats” were also very good, kind and receptive. They were just recommending the tools they had at their disposal. But I had a Keshia-shaped ace in the hole to keep my dad as lucid as possible and in touch with his people. I defined my job as to push back the forces that were causing my dad’s world to shrink. Keshia was magnificent at pushing back those forces.
What I Will Do Now I Have Learned about Death Doulas
If I had my parents’ deaths to manage over again, if I couldn’t have been there for them or as I get ready to plan for myself, here is what I will do. Now that I know what I know, I will set aside as much money as I can in a separate fund for end-of-life or dementia doulas. It could even be a trust fund if I have no one to manage my money. Whatever is left can still go to my heirs. But, if there was ever anything worthwhile to spend my money on, it’s end-of-life and dementia doula care. I will make a reasonable arrangement with my chosen few doulas or I will direct whomever holds my power of attorney to engage this kind of help for me lavishly as needed. I will write or communicate at length about my priorities. I will give myself the opportunity to discuss my fears and concerns with either my support team or even the local doulas themselves. I will certainly choose Keshia if she is available but also others because I might need more than one or they might not all be available when the time comes.
What to Get The Person Who is Dying
For myself, I can almost promise I will not choose MAID although I wouldn’t remove that choice from another person. But I will choose top-notch, invaluable end-of-life support. If I am fortunate enough to be able to afford it, I cannot think of anything more valuable to spend my money on for my own sake. If I had it to do again, I would spend next to nothing on the funerals (which were ungodly expensive). I would spend it on my parents’ end-of-life care instead. Doulas, doulas, doulas.
The Value of a Better Ending
I personally do not believe that MAID is always chosen because the choosers are intolerably suffering at the moment. I think many people choose MAID because we fear suffering and a loss of control and we are trying to get ahead of the expected problem. (And we are necessarily trusting the expert opinions of people who never lose points for things not being as bad as they predicted.) I believe that suffering and a loss of control occur for most people as we approach death. Some kind of suffering and some kind of loss of control are part of the price of admission to life in the first place. But suffering alone and losing control among people without the gravitas and leeway to show me deep respect and compassion is an entirely different experience than the very same suffering and loss of control surrounded by people with wisdom, a greater perspective, who show me love, demonstrate that the world and its people are good and that I matter. In my opinion, my dad did some of his more important work as a soul after and perhaps because he started suffering a loss of control. An end-of-life doula of Keshia’s quality makes palliative care a completely different and better experience. My dad and I would have missed so many good moments without his dying a natural death in his own time.
My father died in Keshia’s arms.
Katherine W.

I am pleased to comment on my experience in consulting with Ms. Coursaux to provide end- of-life care for my late very elderly and frail mother, a resident in a continuing care facility. Keshia came highly recommended to me by a family member of another resident in the same building. When I called to arrange a meeting, she responded immediately and we arranged to connect the following day. After the initial meeting, we agreed that Keshia would come for orientation sessions with me and with another of Mom’s privately paid caregivers. Those both went very well, and the other long-time caregiver commented that Keshia was “a breath of fresh air!”
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Prior to Mom’s death, Keshia worked part-time with us for around two months. I really appreciated the open and regular communication we had, and I found Keshia to be very respectful and caring towards Mom. She provided me with regular written reports on Mom’s behaviors and concerns on a shift-by-shift basis.
In addition to the spiritual care that we originally asked Keshia to do, she was also very attentive in providing physical care for Mom – including basics like feeding meals and snacks and mixing up the thickened fluids that Mom required. Keshia also liked to “pamper” Mom by washing and putting special cream on her face, scratching/massaging her back, and putting anti-inflammatory cream on her painful hands.
For Christmas, I received a treasure trove of 6 little slips of paper, each containing something about me that Mom had shared with Keshia. I so appreciate the kindness and creativity that went into getting Mom to express her ideas, then writing them down and putting them in a pretty little music box! I will always treasure them.
Keshia was excellent in communicating with the facility’s nursing staff. She specialized in helping Mom to “let out” her feelings through talking and crying. They also sang together, and sometimes Keshia sang solos just for Mom, a life-long music lover. Their common faith was an important part of their bonding. They enjoyed hugs and sometimes went to activities in the building. I particularly appreciated it when Keshia shared her end-of-life resources – like the link to the article on “terminal agitation” – with the rest of Mom’s care team.
A few days before Mom’s death, Keshia participated in a Zoom call with all the other members of Mom’s private (non-facility) care team. As a direct result of the information we shared there, Keshia set up a calming bedtime routine for Mom that included lots of hugs and emotional expression on Mom’s part. By this time, Mom had basically stopped eating and was having increased trouble breathing.
A couple of nights later, Keshia volunteered to stay overnight in Mom’s room so that I and my brother (who is also a senior) could go home to sleep. A couple of hours later, Keshia called me to say that Mom was close to death, and gave me the opportunity to speak to her on the phone one last time. I really appreciated that, and Keshia later told me how honoured and privileged she felt to be the one to share Mom’s “liberation” from her frail and failing body. Keshia’s involvement was instrumental in giving Mom a good death.
I highly recommend Keshia Coursaux as a provider of end-of-life care/death doula.
Lea N.

I met Keshia via a mutual friend at the point where I was diagnosed with Stage 3 Kidney Disease. There I was, in my 60’s, living alone in a new city and province and I felt completely alone. Keshia was amazing to me right from the start and made me feel comfortable. She understood that my diagnosis was very serious and that as my numbers (lab work) dropped so did my spirit and I knew my time was limited.
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The process of dying is a complicated thing. Keshia and I spoke often and explored everything from fundamental beliefs and values to the experiences I was going through with each month of my journey. At the point where my illness plateaued I felt solidly supported by Keshia and I know that, as I need her, she’s there to help me with whatever I require. Keshia takes great time and care to get to know her clients and I’m very grateful to have found her just at the point when I needed her and yet still had time to build a supportive relationship.
I also know that she’s there to support my closest family as well when the need for that arises. I am confident in referring people to Keshia, those who need support in the darkest times of life. Although death is a natural part of life it’s still mysterious and frightening in many ways and having support outside of family and friends is such a great adjunct and fulfills many needs as one faces those inevitable times.
I immediately responded to Keshia’s warmth and compassion and I could tell she was sincere in her approach. She doesn’t push but she encourages. She’s reliable and impeccable with her word and that showed me that I could trust her. We explored many avenues that arose during our discussions and nothing was left off the table if I wanted to pursue a line of questioning, whether it be life after death or MAID (medical assistance in dying), which I did investigate as a possibility for me. These topics can be fearful and uncertain to people but nothing was off the table with Keshia and I sure appreciated that.
Keshia approaches life with positivity and she is completely dedicated to her clients as they approach a life journey fraught with trepidation. She also welcomes the opportunity to work with a client’s family when that is comfortable and seems appropriate and when the time feels right. I know my family will benefit from working with Keshia too. She sources out services that complement what she offers and that is extremely helpful as then one can easily get referred to those services that one wants or desires.
Lastly, Keshia possesses a calm demeanor, a lightheartedness and a much welcomed sense of humor too.
Heather W.

Having Keshia provide support for my mom who has dementia has been an incredible godsend to me. I felt alone in providing care for her and longed for assistance from a family member to help me deal with this difficult passage of her life. Keshia became that person for me. Seeing her connect with my mom from a pure place of love provided solace and comfort to my heart that had been missing for a very long time.
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She was able to see my mom’s soul beyond the disease and its outward expressions without judgement or criticism. Throughout the emotional and personality changes that dementia brings, Keshia has been steadfast in continuing to support and love her and will find many ways to occupy and care for her. Keshia provides clear communication in her activities, and she will inform you if she sees something of concern that needs to be addressed. She is a kind, compassionate person who can provide companionship where others may find it difficult. I strongly recommend her to anyone who is encountering the same situation with their family members.
Maryse. M