Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as an open casket funeral. The wake has the open casket.
Skip the wake and just go to funeral or burial at cemetery.
Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as an open casket funeral. The wake has the open casket.
Skip the wake and just go to funeral or burial at cemetery.
Anonymous wrote:I think my atheist grandfather was the only open casket funeral I’ve been to that I can recall. I was 10 and didn’t find it distressing. Most of the funerals I’ve been to the person had been cremated ahead of the funeral.
Just before I turned 8, my older sister, who was 22, was murdered by her estranged husband. My mom took my brother and I to the funeral home to see her one last time. When we got there, she decided to make my brother and I wait by ourselves in the lobby while she and my step father went to view her body. That made me soooo angry and I felt angry for years, decades maybe. I had nightmares regularly for years about her not really being dead, or being buried alive etc. I think it would have helped if I had seen her that last time. Much later older brothers told me she didn’t look like herself because they had to use lots of makeup to cover her injuries, so maybe it would have given me a different set of nightmares, who knows?
All that is to say it can provide a sense of closure to see the body at rest, but it should always be the choice of the viewer whether or not to look.
Anonymous wrote:I can do you one better, op-- I don't get funerals. I have buried enough loved ones to know that they don't provide closure.
I've made it clear that I don't want a funeral/obituary under any circumstance. Donate my body to science, enjoy the insurance money, and move on with life.
I am Italian American.
We have wakes at one of two funeral parlors, which means every wake brings back generations and decades of memories from previous wakes.
The doors close for the Rosary, and once you're stuck in there, you have to stay through the entire Rosary. LoL.
For elderly people who die of natural causes, wakes can be rather high spirited occasions with people laughing in the halls. Coffee and donuts always served in the basement.
Try paying respects to a deceased relative by kissing a cheek goodbye. As a child, I was never afraid of that. Maybe it helps to have closure.
Anonymous wrote:Im Hindu. The first funeral. Went to was my moms. It was her wish to follow the tradition. I had to dress her body with help from the funeral home staff. My brother and I had to throw flowers on her body, sprinkle holy water, etc. then push her casket into the fire… it was surreal. She had actually wanted my young kids to come, but i kept them home. It wasnt easy by any means, but the ritual did give me a clear sense that my mom was not her body— her soul was free. It was a sense of closure.
Anonymous wrote:I kind of think the Muslim and Jewish bury them right away is traumatic. Like they were alive this morning and by sundown they are in the ground.
Anonymous wrote:The wake is open casket the funeral is always closed casket