Ellie Ledin (00:00.116)
so feel free to like pretend I just asked like anything else you want to share.
Nicole Riley (00:05.043)
Okay. I would say the only other thing that I would add is just the value and the beauty that groups has to offer, hope at home groups has to offer for families that are in the thick of illness or even in life after loss. That is one thing looking back at our story that I wish we had had available to our family, but then even now something that I had wish I had done sooner with, you know, to be in a group. Like I could see how
groups would have shaped so much for me as a young adult and being able to process with somebody else that was completely removed from my family dynamic. And so I would say that that would be my one last little plug for Hope at Home groups that if you're not connected with a Hope at Home group or if you have a desire to be both in treatment or in illness and even life after loss.
They're a wonderful, loving place to be where you can talk to people who truly understand and truly get it. And it's a real beautiful community of support that I just can't say enough good things about. that would be my last little plug.
Ellie Ledin (01:15.8)
Yeah, it's a great, great plug. It's an amazing opportunity. We have kids groups, teens groups, groups for the diagnosed parent.
Nicole Riley (01:22.857)
Mm-hmm. Yes.
Ellie Ledin (01:27.832)
groups for the spouse slash caregiver. But we also have groups if you like are not part of a family system with someone with terminal illness, but maybe you know someone who does or you just love Inheritance of Hope and you just want to get plugged in and want to learn more and like be in the community. We also have groups for that like a just show up book club and so definitely go to inheritanceofhope.org, check out Hope at Home groups, sign up for one multiple up to you.
Nicole Riley (01:56.329)
Yeah. We have some that are in one and we have some that are in some a couple days a week and they're offered weekly, which is really great. And you can connect from anywhere. know, we say either from home or hospital bed, from the phone on the go. There was someone in our group that we had in life after loss that would, he had a very long commute each day and he would join from his phone and his car ride on the way home or, you know, a mom cooking dinner at night that just
Ellie Ledin (01:57.728)
Thank
Nicole Riley (02:26.082)
needed community and wanted someone to talk with and they're joining from all over anywhere when it's convenient and in whatever fashion you like.
Ellie Ledin (02:35.522)
Yeah.
Yeah, when Nicole and I were both in separate groups, I was in the metastatic breast cancer group as a facilitator there. I know it's so funny. Yeah, you'd get people like, you'd just get a whole tour of their house as they were like folding laundry or they were cooking dinner, picking their kids up from soccer. Like you kind of had a lot of different views, but the biggest thing is like just you tune in, you get the community. It doesn't matter if you're doing something else. It's worth it.
Nicole Riley (02:48.361)
Thank
Nicole Riley (02:53.993)
you
Nicole Riley (02:59.837)
Thank you.
Nicole Riley (03:04.869)
Yes, absolutely. And it just feels like you're part of the day-to-day life with them. Like when you get the tour of the house or like as you're cooking dinner, it's like, what you cooking over there? So and so like it's just, you know, it just, it's another sweet element of community that just, yeah, can't say enough good things about it. So.
Ellie Ledin (03:14.806)
Yeah.