Anonymous wrote:There are different parts of a funeral. In my religion (Irish Catholic), we have a wake or viewing, church service and then, the burial. For a friend, I would goto the viewing and/or the church service. I wouldn’t sit in the front pew at the church service which I think is for close family. I probably wouldn’t attend the actual burial site or the luncheon following. Tell us about YOUR funeral.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of the funerals that I’ve been to have been open to anyone who wants to attend. That’s why announcements are made in churches that I’ve attended, and obituaries with details about the service are published publicly. As someone who has had to arrange a funeral service, I find these traditions very helpful. They leave space for receiving support of different kinds. The last thing that I would have wanted, while dealing with my own grief, would have been to be personally responsible for reaching out to dozens if not hundreds of people, during a very short, very stressful period of time, to extend personal invitations. It’s time consuming, and emotionally a painful burden to be tasked with informing others of a death and to handle their shock and loss while dealing with my own.
The traditions I’m used to reflect my experience growing up in relatively cohesive communities, though, and I recognize that this isn’t everyone’s experience.
People who are not part of a religious community, and are the normal run-of-the-mill type (not well-known local leader, etc) usually do not have that many people attend their funerals.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, the whole point of putting it in the paper is so anyone can come without the grieving family having to invite anyone.
I also grew up with a social family in a tight community. I think there are a good number of loners on DCUM. It's kind of the DC way (i.e. needing friends is almost seen as a sign of weakness).
Anonymous wrote:Most of the funerals that I’ve been to have been open to anyone who wants to attend. That’s why announcements are made in churches that I’ve attended, and obituaries with details about the service are published publicly. As someone who has had to arrange a funeral service, I find these traditions very helpful. They leave space for receiving support of different kinds. The last thing that I would have wanted, while dealing with my own grief, would have been to be personally responsible for reaching out to dozens if not hundreds of people, during a very short, very stressful period of time, to extend personal invitations. It’s time consuming, and emotionally a painful burden to be tasked with informing others of a death and to handle their shock and loss while dealing with my own.
The traditions I’m used to reflect my experience growing up in relatively cohesive communities, though, and I recognize that this isn’t everyone’s experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not think your friend would even expect to see you there.
I would only go if she invited me personally.
I would likely only attend a funeral for a parent of either my spouse or a best friend.
Maybe also my children’s other parent if they are still young too.
I think you're very unique in this. I've been to 5 funerals in the past 3 months. All elderly people. All attended by 500-800 people, primarily friends of the elderly person's children.
I have a hard time believing this. No funeral I've ever attended has ever had that many attendees. Perhaps we're not from the same culture, but I think your experience is definitely not the norm.
I'm not making stuff up.
3 were in DC, one was in the deep South, one near Philly. the churches were packed.
When my own MIL (age 80) died 2 yrs ago there were easily 500 people at the funeral in Philly. My husband had 30+ friends and coworkers drive up from DC, none had told us in advance. They just showed up.