In an era dominated by clinical metrics and diagnostic codes, Christine Turo-Shields is making a different case: grief deserves reverence, not resistance.
Her recent essay in the National Catholic Reporter tells the story of Sister Connie Kramer, a Catholic nun and spiritual director who spent decades ministering across Indianapolis before passing away on January 30, 2025.
But this is more than a tribute. It is a study in how leaders preserve legacy.
Capturing Wisdom Before It Fades
On November 27, 2024, as Sr. Connie faced the reality of an inoperable brain tumor, Turo-Shields sat down with her for a StoryCorps interview. The conversation centered on loss, faith and what it means to approach death consciously.
That recording, now publicly available through Kenosis Counseling Center, preserves Sr. Connie’s voice at a moment of rare clarity.
For Turo-Shields, the decision to document those reflections was instinctive and strategic. In a culture uncomfortable with mortality, recorded testimony becomes both archive and antidote.
Building A Practice Around Meaning
As the owner of Kenosis Counseling Center, Turo-Shields has long emphasized whole-person care. The practice, serving the greater Indianapolis area for nearly 25 years, offers in-person and virtual counseling rooted in emotional and spiritual growth.
Her philosophy is simple but countercultural: “Empty Yourself. Change Your Life. Fill Your Future.”
An EMDR-certified therapist and board member for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention in Indiana, she bridges clinical science with spiritual resilience. That integration has earned her speaking engagements nationwide in 2026, including suicide loss summits and faith-based forums.
Why This Moment Matters
With NCRonline.org reaching roughly one million monthly readers, the publication of her essay expands the conversation beyond local grief into national discourse.
The message is neither sentimental nor abstract. It is practical: when individuals make peace with life, they approach death—and loss—with less fear.
In translating a private mentorship into public insight, Turo-Shields demonstrates a leadership model increasingly relevant in modern mental health: one that recognizes data, honors faith and treats grief not as an interruption to life, but as part of its design.
