

You deserve to feel calm, clear, and supported through some of life's most significant moments.
VITA Life and Legacy is here to help.
Whether you are planning ahead, supporting someone at the end of their life, or navigating loss, this is a place where you will find compassionate guidance and a steady hand to help you through.
Kerry Tully is an experienced Funeral Celebrant, End-of-Life Doula, and Author with over 18 years in the field. She works with individuals and families across three areas of support, each one designed to bring clarity and calm when it is needed most.
For those who want to plan ahead, Kerry helps you document your wishes, organise your affairs, and put everything in place so the people you love are not left guessing.
When someone is approaching the end of their life, Kerry provides compassionate, practical guidance every step of the way, from emotional support through to bedside vigil care, so no one has to face that season alone.
And when the time comes to farewell someone you love, Kerry creates meaningful, personalised ceremonies that truly honour who they were. From traditional funerals and memorial services through to ashes scattering and pet memorials, every service is crafted with care, dignity, and heart.
Wherever you are in this journey, VITA Life and Legacy walks alongside you.

Planning a farewell for someone you love is one of life's hardest moments. I'm here to guide you through it with care, creating a meaningful ceremony that truly reflects the life and legacy of your loved one.

You don't have to do this alone. As an end-of-life doula, I provide practical, emotional and spiritual support for individuals and families, offering a steady, caring presence when it matters most.

Planning ahead isn't about death - it's about love, legacy and peace of mind. Explore The Complete End-of-Life Planner and other resources to start your journey toward feeling organised, prepared and truly ready.

Explore a range of organisations, support services, and practical resources to help you navigate ageing, illness, end-of-life planning, grief, and loss with confidence.

Most Australians leave their family with no plan. This book changes that. Record your funeral wishes, life story, digital passwords, important documents, and heartfelt letters to loved ones - everything your family needs, all in one place.
Gives your family clarity during an emotional time
Keeps important personal, legal, and practical information in one place.
Allows your wishes to be known and respected
Helps reduce stress and uncertainty for loved ones
Provides peace of mind for you and the people you love

Most of us have sat through a funeral where the eulogy felt a little... thin. A few dates, a job title, maybe a hobby. And you leave thinking:but who were they, really?
Here is the truth: every person who has ever lived has a story worth telling. Your story. The one that shaped who you are, the people you loved, the moments that changed you, the values you lived by. And there is no better time to share that story than at your funeral, when the people who mattered most to you are gathered together.
This post explores why your life story is so important, why it should be told at your funeral, and what you can do right now to make sure it is.
We tend to underestimate our own lives. We think our story is ordinary, unremarkable, not worth the fuss. But the people who love you would disagree.
Your story is the thread that connects generations. It carries the lessons you learned, the hardships you overcame, and the love you gave. When that story goes untold, something irreplaceable is lost, not just for your family, but for the wider world.
Research into grief and bereavement consistently shows that meaningful funerals, ones that truly reflect the person who has died, help the living process loss more deeply and heal more fully. A funeral that tells your real story is not just a gift to yourself. It is a gift to everyone who loves you.
When a funeral is generic, rushed, or disconnected from who the person actually was, families often feel a quiet grief on top of their grief. A sense that something was missed. That the person they knew was not quite captured.
Children grow up not knowing where they came from. Grandchildren never hear the stories that would have shaped their own sense of identity. The wisdom, the humour, the resilience, all of it fades.
And here is the harder truth: once you are gone, no one else can tell your story the way you can. Only you know the full picture.

A funeral is one of the few occasions in modern life when people actually stop. They gather. They listen. They are emotionally open in a way they rarely are at any other time.
That makes it a powerful moment to share a life story, not just a list of facts, but the real story. The one that makes people laugh and cry and nod and say,yes, that was herorthat was exactly him.
A well-told life story at a funeral can:
Help mourners feel connected to the person they have lost
Give children and grandchildren a sense of identity and belonging
Bring comfort and even joy into a difficult day
Create a lasting memory that people carry with them for years
Honour a life in a way that feels true and meaningful
You do not need to write a memoir. You do not need to be a writer. You just need to start. Here are some practical ways to begin.
Think about what your children or grandchildren might want to know about you. Where did you grow up? What was your childhood like? What was the hardest thing you ever went through? What are you most proud of? What do you wish you had known at 20? Start there.
You do not have to write anything down. Use your phone to record yourself answering questions out loud. Voice recordings and videos are often more powerful than written words, and they preserve the sound of your voice, which is something your family will treasure.
Go through your photos and write a sentence or two about each one. Who is in it? Where was it taken? What was happening? These small details are the ones that get lost, and they are the ones that matter most.
A letter to your children, your partner, your grandchildren, or your closest friends is one of the most meaningful things you can leave behind. It does not need to be long. It just needs to be honest.
If you are not sure where to start, or if you want to make sure your story is captured properly, consider working with a life story professional, funeral celebrant or a funeral planner who specialises in personalised services. This is something we can help you with at VITA Life and Legacy.
The best eulogies and life story tributes share a few things in common. They are specific. They are honest. They include the moments that made the person human, not just the highlights.
A memorable life story tribute might include:
A defining moment from childhood that shaped who they became
A story that captures their sense of humour
The values they lived by, shown through actions rather than just stated
A challenge they faced and how they came through it
The way they made other people feel
Their own words, if possible, read aloud or played as a recording
These are the details that make people feel like they truly knew someone, or help them see a side of the person they had never known before.
Most people assume someone else will figure it out when the time comes. But the reality is that families are often overwhelmed with grief and logistics, and the story gets told in a hurry, or not at all.
The kindest thing you can do for the people you love is to plan ahead. Not because death is morbid, but because your story deserves to be told well. And because the people who love you deserve to hear it.
At VITA Life and Legacy, we help people capture their life stories and plan meaningful, personalised end-of-life experiences. Whether you are just starting to think about this or you are ready to take action, we are here to help.

Not at all. Planning ahead is one of the most loving things you can do for your family. It takes the pressure off them during an already difficult time and ensures your story is told the way you would want it to be.
Every life is interesting to the people who lived alongside it. The details that feel ordinary to you, the places you lived, the jobs you worked, the small daily rituals, are exactly what your family will want to remember and hold onto.
There is no set rule, but most meaningful tributes run between five and seven minutes. The key is quality over quantity. A few well-chosen stories told with warmth and honesty will always land better than a long list of facts.
Absolutely, and many people find this deeply meaningful. A video or audio recording of your own voice is something your family will treasure long after the funeral is over.
Start with the questions your family would want to ask you.VITA Life and Legacy can guide you through the process in a warm, supportive environment.


In our time of sadness and sorrow, Kerry was wonderful. From the moment we met her she was compassionate and understanding. She advised and made recommendations that were suitable to our needs and requirements. It was so comforting to have her guide us both in our time of sadness. Kerry’s very down-to-earth approach, put my wife and I at ease, as we both felt more than comfortable with Kerry’s way of explaining things and guiding us. Dave


Kerry, I wanted to thank you for the service on Friday. It was absolutely beautiful. Perfect in every way. Your attention to detail made the day so special and something I will never forget. Thank you for going over and above your role and being so accommodating when changes were through at you. You are an amazing person and we are truly grateful. Michelle


Kerry was a huge help in organising the funeral. She kept a level head when we were consumed with grief.
Kerry delivered a very personal touch, and it was very evident that she takes great joy in being able to do the very vest in presenting a celebration of your loved one’s life.
She organized so much for us, from putting together the order of service and liaising with the Funeral Directors, to making sure everything ran smoothly on the day.
Kerry also made sure that people who worked with and had an association with Dad know of his passing. Such a caring and genuine lady.
Karen


Kerry really excelled herself in assisting with the entire ceremony, not only presenting on the day but in preparation.
From contacting and notifying key invites from various organisations. Providing items for display, organising a bagpiper to play at the service, preparing order the of service and providing the family with a compilation of Dads life in a beautifully presented memorial booklet including the Eulogy and service outline.
Kerry managed to fill so many voids in the preparation and handling making everything less stressful for the family and bringing the whole day together perfectly.
Lindsay
Kerry is the Founder of VITA Life and Legacy, Funeral Celebrant, End-of-Life Doula, End-of-Life Specialist, and author of The Complete End-of-Life Planner.
This work is not just my profession. It is deeply personal.
I have experienced loss in some of its most tender forms, including the grief of losing my son, my father, my grandparents, and dear friends. Each of those losses shaped me in ways I still carry. It was after losing my grandfather that I felt a quiet, certain knowing: when the time came for my grandmother, I wanted to help with her farewell. That moment became the beginning of everything.
Over the past 18 years I have had the honour of supporting countless families through life's most significant moments, creating ceremonies that are deeply personal and meaningful. Every farewell has only deepened my belief that how we mark the end of a life truly matters.
That belief is what inspired me to write this planner. Because everyone deserves clarity, and a calm, structured path through what can otherwise feel like an impossible process.
My hope is simply this: that you feel less alone, more prepared, and quietly confident that the things that matter most are taken care of.

© Copyright 2026. VITA Life and Legacy. All rights reserved.