Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As usual, the rich aholes turn out in force, insulting people for potentially not being born to rich parents.
Because it’s just not done in civilized society. Sorry you’re a heathen.
You seem confused (and rude)
A heathen is a person who does not belong to a widely held religion (especially one who is not a Christian, Jew, or Muslim) as regarded by those who do.
The practice of including cash or checks is very common in many subcultures. It can be to help with final expenses and/or to help surviving family members who will be economically burdened along with their loss.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on the circumstances. If it's an unexpected death of a young person and I know paying for the funeral will be a hardship, I include money. My best friend's husband died suddenly in his 30s. She was a stay at home mom with 2 young children. She was incredibly grateful for the people who gave money with their cards.
Anonymous wrote:Clearly this is polarizing. I would about the recipient (not only their wealth but the culture they were raised in and age) and decide from there.
Raised upper middle class Midwestern but by parents who grew up with working class, first gen European parents. When my grandparents died, random family friends etc. would drop in small amounts like $20s. To me — and my parents — those $20 bills are almost insignificant (funeral probably $25k which parents could easily pay for). But what I remember is my mom being touched - oh, that was so nice of (random friend) to send something. To them it was the thought and connection to how her parents would do it.
Anonymous wrote:This is cultural as well as socio-economic. I wouldn’t send money unless you knew for sure that you should. I have sent $ before.
Anonymous wrote:This is cultural as well as socio-economic. I wouldn’t send money unless you knew for sure that you should. I have sent $ before.