A Peaceful Transition Through Song

The Threshold Choir’s special service brings comfort to people who are dying

Share
A Peaceful Transition Through Song
Copy

Death comes to us all. It has been said that Father Time is undefeated, and yet Western cultures overlook it. Groups like the Threshold Choir are helping people transition with songs of comfort.

There are more than 175 chapters of the Threshold Choir nationwide since Kate Munger founded the organization in 2000, according to its website. Rhode Island is represented by chapters in Providence and Westerly.

Munger’s idea for the choir came in June 1990 when she sang for a friend who was in a coma.

“It comforted me, which comforted him,” she said.

Munger’s vision is vibrant in Westerly, where choir members have found that not only have their songs comforted those who are transitioning, but also provided peace and healing to the singers.

Here is a conversation with some members of the Threshold Choir. The complete interview can be found here.

The Threshold Choir is a secular organization that helps people who are transitioning at the end of their life.

“There must be some way to support people before you get to say a celebration of life or a funeral,” Kathryn Aaron says. “A threshold choir is a group of volunteers who learn a very specific kind of repertoire to sing at (the) bedside for those who have entered palliative care or perhaps hospice care.”

‘It’s such a gift’

The calming, dignified voices of choir members support not only the patient, but also the people who are supporting that patient.

“I’ve been a singer in choirs all my life at church and in the course of Westerly, I have done it naturally,” choir member Kristy Armstrong says. “When someone’s been on the threshold, I just go to their bedside and sing on my own, I didn’t know there was an organized way of doing it.

“It’s such a gift, and it’s a gift for the singer and for the recipient.”

The singers say they feel uplifted every time they sing for a transitioning patient. They offer themselves up in a vulnerable way that comforts and soothes the person who is transitioning.

“There’s one song we sing, I always think of the people in Ukraine when we sing it, it’s called “Weight of the World,’” Aaron says. “And we all take a corporate breath and we sing the same notes and the same words and can reach a common understanding.”

Aaron says the Threshold Choir “distills” that understanding.

“It gives you the space to just be together and go, ‘Yeah, that’s really tough, but it’s worthwhile,’” she says. “And the grief that you feel, even when it’s painful, can be a very beautiful thing.”

It is a peaceful, easy feeling.

The University of Rhode Island will relocate home games to the new 10,500-seat stadium while Meade Stadium undergoes an 18-month overhaul, aiming to boost the fan experience and expand its audience
As student numbers decline and co-op teams expand, RI Interscholastic League director Mike Lunney urges schools to refocus on why sports were created — to keep kids engaged, build character, and prepare them for life beyond the field
New Census data show 32,549 children lived in poverty in 2024 — a jump of more than 20% from the year before — as advocates urge state action on health care, housing, and food security
In Rhode Island, the suicide and crisis hotline call center received over 1,500 calls in July. That’s a more than 200% increase from when 988 first launched

Caucus analysis claims the state’s housing finance agency devotes outsized resources to administrative costs compared with peers in Massachusetts and other New England states; RIHousing CEO pushes back, calling the criticism political and highlighting billions invested in homes