

8 Strange Victorian Mourning Traditions You’re Glad We Dropped
Mourning in the 1800s wasn’t just a feeling. It was a lifestyle. An entire etiquette system existed around death: how long you should grieve, what you should wear, where you could go, and even how to behave on your front porch. Here are 8 mourning customs from the Victorian era that we’re (mostly) glad have faded with time — and a few that still hold a kernel of meaning in how we grieve today.
3 min read


10 Animals That Mourn Their Dead: (Yes, Even Elephants Cry)
Grief isn’t just a human experience. In the wild, across species and continents, animals pause, linger, weep, and return to the places where their companions once lived.
At Wildflower, we talk about grief as something deeply human — but also something deeply natural. These moments remind us that loss is part of life’s design… and mourning is one of its most sacred expressions.
Here are 10 remarkable animals that seem to grieve their dead — each in their own quiet, powerful w
3 min read


5 Things People Regret Not Saying Before Someone Dies
We never think the last conversation will be the last. And then suddenly, it is.
At Wildflower Funeral Concepts, we’ve had the sacred privilege of holding space for people in their deepest moments of grief and reflection. Again and again, we’ve heard the same few regrets whispered through tears — the things people wished they had said when they still had the chance.
3 min read


The Hard Week
On the anniversary of my friend's death, I'm once again reminded that we are not supposed to get over grief. Being an active participant in the rituals of saying goodbye with grace allows us to metabolize grief into something sacred and meaningful.
2 min read