Anonymous wrote:I can maybe understand you, the OP, are irritated that your cousin is reaching out and posting on your parents birthdays.
But, I have no problem with my friend who lost her husband to cancer when he was 46 posting on his birthday. It's 3 years ago and I still think about him as well.
Heck, I was talking to may Dad the other day and we were both remarked that today is grandma's (his Mom's) 120th birthday! How about that!
Anonymous wrote:I can maybe understand you, the OP, are irritated that your cousin is reaching out and posting on your parents birthdays.
But, I have no problem with my friend who lost her husband to cancer when he was 46 posting on his birthday. It's 3 years ago and I still think about him as well.
Heck, I was talking to may Dad the other day and we were both remarked that today is grandma's (his Mom's) 120th birthday! How about that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's weird for people to send any birthday wishes on Facebook for close relatives. Like why do you need the validation of social media to tell your wife, whom you live with, Happy Birthday?
Even dumber to say it about dead people who won't see it at all.
Why have funerals or obituaries?
For The Living.
OK: Today would have been Bill's 75th. I miss him. Hey Carl, remember that time Bill fell off the roof? What a guy? Judy, I'm thinking about you today. I know you miss Bill terribly since you were married for 50 wonderful years.
Cringe: Happy Birthday Bill. I miss you.
This is another point. When it comes to death, people project their feelings onto others. Nothing says that Judy misses Bill or that she wasn't coping with his death while he was alive, particularly if he was sick. Others making public statements forces Judy to agree even if she might have already moved on. Sometimes others trap you into grieving longer than you may need.
Anonymous wrote:It's meant in a kind spirit, and I would receive it as such.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's weird for people to send any birthday wishes on Facebook for close relatives. Like why do you need the validation of social media to tell your wife, whom you live with, Happy Birthday?
Even dumber to say it about dead people who won't see it at all.
Why have funerals or obituaries?
For The Living.
OK: Today would have been Bill's 75th. I miss him. Hey Carl, remember that time Bill fell off the roof? What a guy? Judy, I'm thinking about you today. I know you miss Bill terribly since you were married for 50 wonderful years.
Cringe: Happy Birthday Bill. I miss you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's weird for people to send any birthday wishes on Facebook for close relatives. Like why do you need the validation of social media to tell your wife, whom you live with, Happy Birthday?
Even dumber to say it about dead people who won't see it at all.
Why have funerals or obituaries?
Anonymous wrote:Yep, it’s annoying. Someone who is dead has stopped having birthdays.
Anonymous wrote:I give them major side eye on FB and would be quite irritated by them if they were texts. I don't mind it if it's like, someone saying their mom who's been dead for 15 years would be 100 today, she was such a cool lady! But when it's my sister posting sappy crap each year about my dad who died 5 years ago in his 60s, yeah, that's annoying AF.