Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the executor of a person's last will and testament had to do as the will statedl. When my FIL died he also put in his will that he wanted to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery but as only one of his children lived in this area the executor of his will had to go to court to get permission to bury him in a family cemetery.
That's awful. I can't believe the court went along with it -- he earned a spot at Arlington.
Well. He had five children and four of them lived in the same state and they wanted him buried close to them. He still had a full blown military funeral.
Anonymous wrote:My mom is in assisted living near my brother after my dad’s death. Almost everyone they know has already passed. She has dementia. I can’t imagine flying her body in a casket to Maine for a Catholic funeral in a church in a town she hasn’t lived in for five years and where no one would come since all her friends are dead followed by a burial in a town one hundred miles away where my dad grew up. Oh, and in places where the ground freezes all winter you have to come back in spring for a funeral. Not sure what we will do. It will likely be only her children and spouses.
Anonymous wrote:The executor’s role is to follow the deceased instructions. However, where I live, there is really no authority following up to make sure the will is followed. The same ^^ for the distribution of money. This was all surprising to me so choose your executors carefully.
Anonymous wrote:For instance, a person writes in their will that they want to be buried in a certain cemetery, pays the cemetery in advance for the spot and for employees to handle the body after death. Yet after the person dies their family try to override their wishes and bury the person in a different cemetery against their wishes.
Another example would be a family having a religious funeral for a staunch atheist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
In my mind it’s worse to deny someone who wanted (and left sufficient money to pay for) a religious burial.
I agree. Where someone has a religious belief, it’s very important to honor that. In other circumstances there can be very good reasons to make changes. My grandfather had pre-arrangements that he’d made nearly 30 years before he died. At the time he made them, they were for a “normal” funeral, but it would have been extremely formal and over the top by the time he died. He was also one of the last of his friends to go, so there were very few people left to attend. We just had a very small service and my grandmother banked the returned funds.