The_Brood wrote: » I think Europe/the west has funerals completely wrong. Everyone dies, there is no spoiler alert in that. African dance and song celebration funerals are the way to go. What is the point in mourning the inevitable? Funerals should be a celebration of the life that was lived and, perhaps hopefully, the journey the soul is to continue to take, if one believes as such.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EroOICwfD3g&t=51s&ab_channel=BBCNewsAfrica If this was actually adopted is the majority funeral practice, I think it would greatly improve societal mental health as a whole.
hynesie08 wrote: » Sounds great to me, cremate me in the morning, stick my ashes on a high stool while the celebrant invites people to tell stories and a band plays in the corner. Money I would have spent on a coffin and burial plot goes behind the bar....
There is a common but inaccurate perception in Ireland that a cremation costs considerably less than a burial. In actual fact, the significant cost difference occurs only when a family does not already possess a family grave plot, and thereby have to incur the cost of a new plot, which can indeed be expensive. ...In general, burial costs a little more than cremation. The cost of opening an existing grave in Dublin is between €900-€1120. A Cremation can cost between €590-€670 but extra costs accrue depending on your chosen options like booking a place in the Garden of Remembrance.
Gregor Samsa wrote: » The vast majority of Catholic funerals I’ve been to have been totally by the standard script. Apart from the picture in the coffin, maybe some of the items left on the altar, and the odd eulogy (which aren’t allowed in some parishes), any one funeral is hard to tell from the next.so I’m not sure what “depth” would be missing. The movement you feel at a funeral usually comes from your relationship with the deceased or their family, as opposed to anything specific to do with the ceremony. At least the humanist ones allow for a bit of personalisation.
Gregor Samsa wrote: » Cremation usually happens after a funeral, not before it. You can also be waiting quite a while to get the ashes. I mean, it would be possible to do what you describe, but not on the timescales we’re used to in Irish funerals. My Dad was cremated in May last year - it was July before his ashes were put in his memorial spot in Glasnevin. I had actually assumed that they were put straight in after the cremation, so I hadn’t given it any thought (we already had the place for them there, as my mother died a decade ago), but I got a call one day during the summer telling me they were only putting his ashes in that day.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » The Catholic ones are awful anyway, I'd rather not have to go to a church or expect anyone to have to go to one for mine.
PCeeeee wrote: » It's one of the reasons I'd have a Catholic funeral, it'd make it easier for my family/friends.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » why would it be easier for them?
In January, the musician David Bowie didn't have a funeral either - his body was cremated in New York without any of his friends or family present. This type of ending, where a coffin goes straight from the place of death to the cremator, where it is burned, is known as a "direct cremation".
suicide_circus wrote: » There's something to be said for "by the numbers" institutional choreography when you're too in bits grieving to put much thought into a unique production.