Hospice Wellington Offered Her The Opportunity To Die With Dignity And Peace

My Mother spent a very short period of time at Hospice Wellington in Guelph at the end of her battle with lung cancer and vascular dementia. My wife and I had followed her from hospital to hospital, and into a long-term care facility for a time as well. There are a lot of people who are working in the healthcare system who are trying to do a lot of good on very limited resources. When the time came to place my Mother into palliative care, I learned firsthand just what a hospice facility does that the other facilities do not: They accept death as an inevitable part of life and they make the transition from the life we knew to its absence as painless as possible both for the person departing and those they leave behind. I cannot imagine a more supportive, caring, and peaceful place for my Mother to have spent her last days. She was given care around the clock in the privacy of her own room. My wife and I were able to spend her last night with her, and to be by her side as she slipped from us. The staff joined us to say goodbye, even after only two days. Hospice understands that those last days become all the more precious when there are no more to come. Hospitals and long-term care facilities are simply not designed to accept death this way, but hospice is. I cannot imagine how much more difficult it would have been to watch my mother leave from a noisy and public place. Hospice Wellington offered her the opportunity to die with dignity and peace, free from pain, in the company of her family, and I cannot say enough how truly valuable that is to one’s peace of mind in the years that follow, nor of how grateful my wife and I are for such a wonderful facility.

Rob G., Guelph Ontario

1st Annual Townsend Smith Foundation Hike for Hospice

1st Annual Townsend Smith Foundation Hike for Hospice

Hike for Hospice Palliative Care is a unique national fundraising event held across Canada that brings together organizations working collectively in hospice palliative care to raise funds and awareness in their community! Saturday May 26, 2018 Townsend Smith Foundation held their first annual Hike and it was a great success!

hikeThank you to everyone who participated in the Hike!

Our Sponsors

  • Champs Family Entertainment Centre
  • Chudleighs Apple Farm
  • Fitness Etc Milton
  • Lonestar Milton
  • Longos
  • Mckersie-Kocher Funeral Home
  • Melissa Coulson CPA, CA, LPA
  • One Hour Signs Burlington
  • Tim Hortons Steeles & Thompson
  • Springridge Farms
  • The Christensen Family (donated photo booth)

A special thanks to the Milton Winter Hawks Minor Peewee Blue A Hockey Team, who joined the Hike and raised money & the Knights of Columbus for cooking the lunch for all volunteers & participants! We could not have done this event without all of you!

There is still time to make a donation directly to the hospice and help us towards funding a much needed facility.

Phenomenal Fund-Raising by Bishop Reding Student Association

Phenomenal Fund-Raising by Bishop Reding Student Association

The Bishop Reding Student Association has done some phenomenal fund-raising this year, and they have shared $30,000 they raised with 10 community charities. Townsend Smith Foundation members Jamie Harrison, Crystal Kelly, and Holly Lillico were delighted to accept a donation of $3,000 from members of the Student Association. Wonderful to meet these impressive folks, to share their energy and to see the leadership they’re taking!

A gratitude for Hospice

A gratitude for Hospice

I cannot put into words the extreme gratitude I feel for Hospice. I did not even know what Hospice was. At the final stages of cancer, my very proud and strong mother was bedridden. She did not want to go to a hospital but even she knew she needed constant care. One of the day nurses mentioned Hospice to us and we immediately looked into it. My mother was able to move to the Dorothy Ley Hospice in Mississauga. It was the best decision we could have made. She felt more comfortable and safe knowing there was a nurse available if she needed one. I felt so relieved that she had the constant care.
 

The hardest thing for a daughter to go through is watching her parent slowly pass away. I couldn’t help her the way an experienced trained nurse could and I was so thankful that I could turn to those wonderful people to help my mother. The 24 hour care she received, the support, the friendliness were just exceptional. The whole atmosphere of the place was very peaceful and therapeutic. I was able to be with my mother 24/7 and even I felt comfortable there using the facilities available to family members.
 

I am so grateful that Hospice is out there and available for families. – Vesna D.