Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No flowers. I nannied for a family who owned funeral homes around the country and they said most flowers were left behind (because it is an inconvenience for the family to take them all or come back the next day). The funeral home also supplied flowers to make the space look nice.
My father died 2 years ago and almost every donated. He did a donation to his university's engineering school. It was much easier that way than for me to have to deal with things the day after or try to pawn the responsibility off on my other relatives and friends.
Of course they are left behind. The point is not to take the flowers home. Lol
It's a grandparent. Don't be cheap people. Get flowers.
Right! Cause the grandparent's feelings will be hurt if you don't!![]()
The spouse of the grandparent might be.
Plus, you want to have it look nice. It's the last send off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm Jewish, and we don't do flowers.
More info, please. Is this just a long-held custom? Is there a reason why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No flowers. I nannied for a family who owned funeral homes around the country and they said most flowers were left behind (because it is an inconvenience for the family to take them all or come back the next day). The funeral home also supplied flowers to make the space look nice.
My father died 2 years ago and almost every donated. He did a donation to his university's engineering school. It was much easier that way than for me to have to deal with things the day after or try to pawn the responsibility off on my other relatives and friends.
Of course they are left behind. The point is not to take the flowers home. Lol
It's a grandparent. Don't be cheap people. Get flowers.
Right! Cause the grandparent's feelings will be hurt if you don't!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No flowers. I nannied for a family who owned funeral homes around the country and they said most flowers were left behind (because it is an inconvenience for the family to take them all or come back the next day). The funeral home also supplied flowers to make the space look nice.
My father died 2 years ago and almost every donated. He did a donation to his university's engineering school. It was much easier that way than for me to have to deal with things the day after or try to pawn the responsibility off on my other relatives and friends.
Of course they are left behind. The point is not to take the flowers home. Lol
It's a grandparent. Don't be cheap people. Get flowers.
Anonymous wrote:No flowers. I nannied for a family who owned funeral homes around the country and they said most flowers were left behind (because it is an inconvenience for the family to take them all or come back the next day). The funeral home also supplied flowers to make the space look nice.
My father died 2 years ago and almost every donated. He did a donation to his university's engineering school. It was much easier that way than for me to have to deal with things the day after or try to pawn the responsibility off on my other relatives and friends.
Anonymous wrote:Do the donation. The funeral home will make sure there are enough flowers so that the viewing looks nice. Or have your DH check with his folks to see if flowers are actually needed. I don't think it's customary for everyone to do flowers-- that could be an awful lot of flowers.
Anonymous wrote:I'm Jewish, and we don't do flowers.
Anonymous wrote:When my dad died, the funeral home director said it's standard to have large bouquets honoring the different roles in his life i.e. "Father", "Grandfather". DH should check with whoever is planning the services and offer a contribution if they are doing such displays.