
Connect with a Losstender
Meet the Losstenders of 2025

Losstenders are everyday Edmontonians with experience of grief and loss who co-create healing moments and rituals.

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Cassandra
(She/Her)
I am a Nakota, Cree, and Métis poet from Paul First Nation. My relationship to writingpoetry developed to empower and reclaim how I tell my stories by changing my relationship to my experiences of loss.
I am student studying Psychology and Secondary Education at the University of Alberta. My personal educational goals are to help support members from my community with their mental health and the development of community care that enables the reclamation of their culture and language.
Approach:
Using poetry and prose to explore feelings of loss, helping support the reclamationof an individual’s empowerment by nurturing their self-expression to tell their stories
Loss experiences:
Death of a parent
Death of cousins
Death of grandparents
Loss of identity -
Christina
(She/They)
I'm often called into people’s lives during times of change, to make space for big, tender emotions, and to find ways for us all to be heard and seen. Guiding people through shadow is one of my greatest gifts, and we can explore many ways of art and placemaking. If you knew all the things I know, what would you create for yourself?
Professionally, I'm an award-winning designer and event planner/producer, and I work with humanitarians, businesses, community groups, and charities. When life gets messy, I circle the wagons, summon reinforcements, curate our playlist, and throw an unforgettable epic party that brings people together and reaffirms our bonds.
Approach:Painting, drawing, collage
Photography
Jewellery
Co-creating space and ritual
Sharing stories and mythsLoss Experiences:
Loss of culture, heritage, and language
Disability, mental illness
Complex PTSD
Miscarriages
Critical Illness
Deaths of family members -
Dana
(She/Her)
"Music is my life and my livelihood and has been one of the most important things to me for as long as I can remember. As a professional, I perform solo and with my band, and I teach piano, vocals, guitar, music theory and songwriting to people of all ages. But as a human, music and music-making is woven into my life as intrinsically as breathing.Approach:
Anything involving sound and music is on the table. I can play and sing with you and/or for you, I can learn your favourite songs and/or we can write new ones together, or we can just make noise. Whatever feels desirable and cathartic to you.
Loss Experiences:
Loss of friendships and partnerships
Loss of mentors
Lack of connection to my roots and ancestry -
Robert
(He/Him)
Boozhoo boozhoo. My name is Makade Makwa. I’m Anishinaabe inini from Couchiching First Nation. I am of the doodem Adik, the caribou clan, and my color is red. I am the black bear. And my other name is Robert Tate.I worked for many years as an oshkaabewis, which is a ceremonial helper. I weave ceremony throughout my life and my writing. I imagine a relationship in which I can learn, heal and allow loss to move through me constant and ever changing much like this river behind me. I hope to support you with your own loss through writing in a reciprocal manner. So loss, I want to walk with you gently upon this earth.
Watch more -
Sam
(They/Them)
I am a second generation Egyptian immigrant, a writer, a breath worker and energy worker and a terrible artist. The best pronouns for me are they/ them. But the good “hey, you” often works.I believe in the importance of honoring grief and loss and honoring our survival. My favorite ways to honor my loved ones and my journey are storytelling and embodiment practices. I’m so interested in the stories that our bodies and histories tell. I love the ways that we can heal when we’re allowed to be honest about our pain. I envision us having a relationship of kindness and hope where we can share that honesty together.
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Tamara
(She/Her)
My practice is rooted in what I call empathetic making; the transformative care of personal histories, inherited archives, their handwritten corresponding records, mental illness, coping mechanisms, grief and healing, and how it is embedded in our material worlds. When I'm not working in the studio, I embed myself in non-profits and artist-run centers, working as an advocate for creating safe and accessible spaces for communities who are looking to find wellness through the act of making. My personal work includes printmaking, drawing, ceramics and installation, with a heavy emphasis in lithographic methods, but am trained in most forms of traditional fine art.
Approach:
To facilitate the manipulation and transformation of everyday objects that hold significance in individuals lives to help them on their individual grief journeys.Connecting grief and materiality through visual language
Loss Experiences:
Death of a parent
Death of close friends
Loss of childhood/innocence
Mental illness/psychosis
CONNECT WITH US
CONNECT WITH US
We normally hang out at Dawson Park bathrooms Thursday at 11am MST
Find us
Call us
Hayley at 780-964-8504
(Feel free to text this number too)