top of page

Our Mission & Our Values 

Silent Hum is dedicated to steadying families facing illness, grief, and neurodiversity in Aotearoa. Every initiative uplifts whānau through transparent support, shared experiences, and practical resources. We foster trust, compassion, and real collaboration—so no one faces hardship alone.

Whanau Centred - Care 

We stand beside families, offering support shaped by real stories of illness, grief, and hope. Our work is guided by listening, respect, and aroha—so every whānau feels seen and strengthened in their unique journey.

Honest Connections

We build trust through open conversations, sharing not only successes but also the hard moments. Silent Hum welcomes feedback and embraces learning, so growth is always rooted in honesty and shared purpose

z77Ja-SwqCTsbsLxiJG_u_3801186d1d314c9191d38fb2738ad46a.jpg

Charity and Non-For Profit

Discover stories, strategies, and advocacy that uplift families and communities facing illness and loss. Silent Hum shares lived experience, practical support, and hope for a more compassionate Aotearoa.

Everyday Leadership

Service is woven into daily life at Silent Hum. We nurture confident leaders by providing practical tools and heart-led mentorship, helping volunteers and community members turn empathy into lasting action for generations

What We Do

Speaking and Workshops

Silent Hum offers speaking engagements and workshops that bring lived experience, grief literacy, and practical whānau-centred tools into hospitals, schools, community organisations, and conferences.

Image by Bogomil Mihaylov

Whānau Support and Navigation

Silent Hum walks alongside whānau living with serious illness, disability, or grief, offering practical guidance, signposting, and calm, plain-language information tailored to the Aotearoa context

Image by name_ gravity

Resources and Grief Literacy Programs

Silent Hum creates and curates accessible resources and grief literacy programs for families, professionals, and communities who want to better understand and respond to illness and loss

Image by Sandy Millar

Explore Our Latest Articles

bottom of page