Anonymous wrote:Will it be open casket at the funeral itself or at a viewing before? I did not like having my last memory of my great-grandmother be her looking hard and fake in the casket. I wanted to remember her alive. It seems most funerals I have been to in recent years, there might just be a large portrait and not even a casket at the service.
Anonymous wrote:My father is on hospice and expected to pass quite shortly. My children did not see him frail and I’m truly unsure of whether it causes distress to see him in this state (they are 15, 11, and 7).
I was taken to funerals as a child, I have an older family and never attended a wedding before my own. I’d been to dozens of funerals though.
Should children attend funerals?
Anonymous wrote:Hard question. I think you have two.
One is about seeing him near death. I don’t think that is mandatory. But if the teen/tween wish to, prepare them.
The other is about going to the funeral. Absent other factors, final exams, for instance, the older two, for sure. The youngest would probably not want to be left out.
But give them choices: such as not viewing an open casket. And let them know what is expected…do they want to speak? Do they want to write something for someone else to read? Do they have stuff to wear?
I did not get to go to any grandparent’s funeral…and I resented being basically prevented from doing so when I was actually an adult…not your question, but may be worth a brief ponder at this difficult time.
Anonymous wrote:My father is on hospice and expected to pass quite shortly. My children did not see him frail and I’m truly unsure of whether it causes distress to see him in this state (they are 15, 11, and 7).
I was taken to funerals as a child, I have an older family and never attended a wedding before my own. I’d been to dozens of funerals though.
Should children attend funerals?
Anonymous wrote:Hard question. I think you have two.
One is about seeing him near death. I don’t think that is mandatory. But if the teen/tween wish to, prepare them.
The other is about going to the funeral. Absent other factors, final exams, for instance, the older two, for sure. The youngest would probably not want to be left out.
But give them choices: such as not viewing an open casket. And let them know what is expected…do they want to speak? Do they want to write something for someone else to read? Do they have stuff to wear?
I did not get to go to any grandparent’s funeral…and I resented being basically prevented from doing so when I was actually an adult…not your question, but may be worth a brief ponder at this difficult time.