Death Virgin

Ellie Media

Hi, I'm Kristen. I've never lost a close loved one, and that terrifies me. Join me as I tackle the universal experience of death with humor, honesty, and sincere introspection. Through personal stories, interviews, and my journey to becoming a death doula, I'll explore how we mourn and how to prepare for life's final chapter. This podcast is for anyone curious about life, loss, and finding laughter along the way.

Episodes

  1. 4D AGO

    Becky with the New Hip

    In this episode of Death Virgin, Kristen gets a new hip — and loses a bone. What begins as a routine surgery (everyone says it’s routine) becomes something stranger: a meditation on ownership, body parts, family legacy, and what it means when a piece of you that grew with you is suddenly removed. Before going under anesthesia, Kristen asks the question most surgeons are not prepared for: Can I keep the bone? From there, she wanders — lovingly and irreverently — through medical authority, arrogant surgeons, grandmother pranks, Harvard Medical School cadavers, the mysterious Jewish “Luz bone” of resurrection, and the strange grief of losing a tooth in your twenties. This episode explores: Why “common” surgery doesn’t mean minorWhat belongs to us once it’s cut out of usThe power dynamics between doctors and patientsWhy second opinions should be normalizedThe family story of Grandma Mary, told she would never walk again — and walking anywayDonating bodies to science (and what happens after)The religious argument against cremation and the almond-shaped “Luz bone”Why birth and death are both messier than we like to admitMourning body parts — teeth, breasts, bones — as small rehearsals for larger lossWhether cremation tidies death… or just disguises it Kristen also confronts the hypocrisy of creating end-of-life workbooks for others while having no will herself — realizing, the night before surgery, that she has not practiced what she preaches. Because maybe death practice doesn’t only happen at funerals. Maybe it happens in operating rooms. Maybe it happens when your body changes. Maybe it happens when you realize you are not, in fact, twenty anymore. There is pumpkin pie. There is Beyoncé. There is The Big Lebowski. There are bones — some kept, some donated, some pulverized. And there is humor. Always humor. Because sometimes the only way to talk about taboo things is to talk about them sideways. Referenced & Recommended: Harvard Medical School Body Donation Program Rabbinic literature on the “Luz” bone Ecclesiastes (interpretations of resurrection texts) The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris The Big Lebowski (the Folgers canister scene) Pretty Woman (big mistake. Big. Huge.) The Little Engine That Could Beyoncé — “Sorry” (Becky with the good hair)

    1h 1m
  2. JAN 15

    I Sat Down to Write an Obituary and Made Pumpkin Pie Instead

    In this episode of Death Virgin, Kristen starts the year by reading a full, unruly, prickly, and deeply human obituary—one that refuses to smooth the edges of a life well lived. The obituary of Doris McClintock (1939–2025) is funny, specific, political, tender, stubborn, and alive with detail: pine boxes, black bears, arthritis, grudges, gardens, community, and the refusal to romanticize old age or death. From there, Kristen wanders—lovingly—through pumpkin pie, Yankees, Thanksgiving rules, avoidance strategies, and the long, strange history of obituaries themselves. This episode explores: How obituaries evolved from elite death notices to public mourning textsWho gets remembered in the historical record—and who gets erasedWhy euphemisms for death may soften truth rather than honor itSusan Sontag, silence, moral control, and why smoothing edges can do harmObituaries as political documents, especially for marginalized livesThe ethics of writing your own obituary (and whether anyone has to tell the truth for you)Humor as a survival tool when talking about deathWhy writing your own obituary might not be about closure—but permission Kristen also introduces a new Death Virgin obituary-writing exercise, including a Mad Lib–style worksheet designed not as a “final draft,” but as a playful, revealing warm-up—something to do alone, or better yet, with others. Because maybe an obituary isn’t meant to close the book. Maybe it’s meant to leave it cracked open. Referenced & Recommended: OBIT (dir. Vanessa Gould)The Deadbeat by Marilyn JohnsonSusan Sontag on language, illness, and moral controlMerle Haggard, E.B. White, Monty Python, Eminem (yes, really) Content note: This episode references death, illness, murder, and contemporary violence. Rest in peace, Doris McClintock.

    56 min
4.9
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

Hi, I'm Kristen. I've never lost a close loved one, and that terrifies me. Join me as I tackle the universal experience of death with humor, honesty, and sincere introspection. Through personal stories, interviews, and my journey to becoming a death doula, I'll explore how we mourn and how to prepare for life's final chapter. This podcast is for anyone curious about life, loss, and finding laughter along the way.