In the journey of life, each station is accompanied by changes, decisions, successes, and failures. These changes bring two forces: the force of commitment-integration into the new and the force of separation from the finite. Focusing on separations, there are many types of separations that we experience in our lives. The Permanent Separation is the one we will deal with. These separations occur in space and, over time, humans have created rituals to smooth out negative emotions, alleviate the turbulence of social and individual life, and show respect and significance towards their fellow human beings. We examine how, along with the change in people's attitudes towards death, the rituals changed in conjunction with their spatial identities, based on Arnold Van Gennep's methodology for rites of passage. As a condition not yet established in the Greek area, with the practice of cremation applied in a small percentage, it introduces new spatial dimensions, which people shape and will continue to shape over time. Through field research, observation, and interviews at the locations where these procedures are completed, the depiction of separation rituals is realized, starting from the announcement of death by the doctor and medical staff, in the space where the moment of death has shifted today, to the preservation or scattering of ashes, which constitute conditions for creating rituals in space.