Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband’s aunt didn’t have one for her husband when he passed, and honestly it felt like something was missing.
I personally think that they are important. Cultures all over the world and throughout history have had rituals around death and grieving. I think it’s an important thing for humans to experience to help move through the grieving process.
It’s harder now that so many people live far away from their loved ones though. And in general, I think Americans handle death and grieving poorly. So people skipping funerals is definitely something that happens. I don’t like it though.
Agreed. I think the move away from having funerals goes hand in hand with the American tendency to try to deny death. I think it'll be really interesting to see how this plays out as more Baby Boomers pass away.
Anonymous wrote:As a person who's always felt tolerated rather than accepted, I don't want a funeral. Either no one besides my husband and kids would be there or people who never really cared about me when I was alive (including my own parents if they outlive me) would come and be hypocrites.
Anonymous wrote:I don't want a funeral and neither does DH.
Anonymous wrote:As a person who's always felt tolerated rather than accepted, I don't want a funeral. Either no one besides my husband and kids would be there or people who never really cared about me when I was alive (including my own parents if they outlive me) would come and be hypocrites.
Anonymous wrote:+1 as someone who doesn't want a funeral. If it were legal, I'd be ok with dumping my body in the river. Funerals and graves are such an absurd waste of money.
Anonymous wrote:My husband’s aunt didn’t have one for her husband when he passed, and honestly it felt like something was missing.
I personally think that they are important. Cultures all over the world and throughout history have had rituals around death and grieving. I think it’s an important thing for humans to experience to help move through the grieving process.
It’s harder now that so many people live far away from their loved ones though. And in general, I think Americans handle death and grieving poorly. So people skipping funerals is definitely something that happens. I don’t like it though.
Anonymous wrote:What does it mean when someone dies young (50s) and the wife doesn't want a funeral?
The person served in the military for 25+ years and died suddenly on vacation. I suspected suic*de but my husband doesn't think it's likely.
Is it common when someone doesn't want to talk about how or why someone died that they avoid a funeral?
Anonymous wrote:What does it mean when someone dies young (50s) and the wife doesn't want a funeral?
The person served in the military for 25+ years and died suddenly on vacation. I suspected suic*de but my husband doesn't think it's likely.
Is it common when someone doesn't want to talk about how or why someone died that they avoid a funeral?