What one town learned

There's a town in Wisconsin where almost everyone dies with their wishes known.

Not because the people there are different from you. Because someone decided that talking about death, calmly and early, was worth building a whole community around. It worked. And it can be built again — one conversation at a time, wherever you are.

96%

In La Crosse, Wisconsin, roughly 96% of people who die have their end-of-life wishes documented — and, just as importantly, followed. Nationally, only 30–50% of adults have done the same.

Gundersen Health System · the Respecting Choices program, begun 1993

It was never the form.

Everyone has access to the same legal documents. What La Crosse did differently wasn't paperwork — it was the conversation, and who was trusted to hold it.

A trained person guided it

Not a rushed doctor with a clipboard. A trained facilitator with time and warmth, whose only job was to help you think it through — the single change that mattered most.

It happened in stages

No one was handed the whole weight at once. The conversation met people where they were — healthy, newly ill, or near the end — and asked only what fit that moment.

The wishes were actually findable

Documents didn't vanish into a drawer. They lived where the care team could find them at 2am — so the plan was there when it was needed, not after.

It was revisited, not filed and forgotten

People change. The plan was returned to as life changed — a living conversation, not a one-time signature.

Put together, these turned a dreaded task into something ordinary and even loving — a normal part of caring for the people you'll leave behind. CareGoals is built to carry that same way of doing it to anyone, anywhere — not just one lucky town.

The conversation comes in stages

You don't have to face all of it today. Find the stage you're standing in — that's the only one that's yours right now.

First
Healthy, or steady

Name your voice

You feel well. The work here is small and freeing: choose who would speak for you, and say what matters to you while nothing is urgent. Twenty unhurried minutes.

Take the first step →
Next
Living with a progressing illness

Get specific

Something has changed — more appointments, harder days. Now the choices get more real: what treatments are worth it to you, and where your lines are.

Take the next step →
Last
Seriously ill, or frail

Make it actionable

When time is short, wishes become instructions the care team can act on — comfort, place, presence, and who is beside you. Best done with a doctor, and a doula.

Facing the end →

La Crosse's facilitator, carried into the home

The single thing that made La Crosse work was a trained, unhurried human guiding the conversation — someone with time, warmth, and no agenda but yours. That role has a modern name.

A death doula is that facilitator — carried out of the clinic and into the living room, the kitchen table, the last weeks. And CareGoals is the instrument in their hands.

The doula guides. CareGoals keeps.

A doula facilitates the conversation the way La Crosse's facilitators did — with presence and patience. CareGoals captures it as they go, in your own words, into a record your family and care team can actually use.

About the doula network →

Or begin on your own, right now.

You don't have to wait for anyone. Sage — a gentle AI companion — can guide the same conversation tonight, and Reed, a virtual doula at Quality Death, is there for the harder questions any hour.

Meet Reed →

Your boundaries — where the line is

The hardest, most important part of planning isn't what you want. It's what you don't — the lines you won't cross, the things that would be worse to you than dying. La Crosse's facilitators knew to ask. CareGoals does too.

“Is there a state of being that would be worse, for you, than dying?”

“What would have to be true for you to say — that's enough now?”

“If you could no longer recognize the people you love, what would you want then?”

“What is the one thing you'd want us to make sure never happens?”

These are not questions to answer alone, in a hurry, on a form. They're what a good conversation — with a companion who isn't afraid of them — is for. Naming your boundaries is the truest gift you leave: it means no one who loves you ever has to guess where your line was.

Four movements, again and again

La Crosse framed advance care planning as four simple actions — not a form to finish, but a rhythm to return to. It's exactly what happens when you talk with CareGoals.

First

Think it through

What matters to you, what a good day is, where your lines are. Reflection before decisions.

Then

Talk it out

Say it in your own voice — to a companion, a doula, or the people who will one day speak for you.

Then

Write it down

Turn it into a clear, physician-attestable record your family and care team can actually find and use.

Always

Return to it

Come back as life changes. A plan is a living thing, not a signature. CareGoals remembers, so you can pick up where you left off.

You don't need a whole town. You need one conversation.

La Crosse started with a single conversation, held well, and repeated until it was normal. Yours can start tonight.

Where this comes from

CareGoals provides advance care planning tools, not medical or legal advice. A death doula provides non-medical companionship and does not replace hospice, palliative, or medical care. For clinical and legal decisions, consult your healthcare provider and attorney. If you are in crisis, call or text 988 in the U.S.