Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For instance, a person writes in their will that they want to be buried in a certain cemetery, pays the cemetery in advance for the spot and for employees to handle the body after death. Yet after the person dies their family try to override their wishes and bury the person in a different cemetery against their wishes.
Another example would be a family having a religious funeral for a staunch atheist.
It doesn't matter to dead person where they are stuck after death or how it was performed. God isn't going to judge them for other people's actions nor inform them how their last rituals were conducted. I would rather alive people be comfortable and have peace instead of following my dictation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My FIL did not want a Catholic funeral, he predeceased my MIL and she was suffering from moderate dementia at the time. She insisted on a full Catholic Mass. Their children really didn’t care. So, they had it. A funeral is for the living.
When she died, they did a full Catholic Mass for her too. The priest was visibly disappointed when none of the immediate family nor their children took communion as none are Catholic anymore.
As a former Catholic I find this terrible. People who don’t respect the last wishes of a person are awful people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My grandfather buried my grandmother even though she asked to be cremated. He was upset at the thought and “couldn’t” do it. My mom always felt bad that she didn’t push harder.
OMG this is so awful! I would come back to haunt him, if he stuck me in a box in the ground.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s perfectly fine. Once you are dead nothing matters to you and it’s up to the living to deal with your passing however is best for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s perfectly fine. Once you are dead nothing matters to you and it’s up to the living to deal with your passing however is best for them.
I think you are selfish. If someone took the time to plan a will and a burial, those desires should be honored.
Anonymous wrote:To those who don't like cremation because there's no place to lay flowers, several in my in-laws family have had their cremains buried in a small plot with a flat headstone. It's nice because they still get a final resting place you can visit but the cost is less and you can put more family members together in a smaller space.
Anonymous wrote:If it's too complicated, I'm not doing it. I will let you die thinking I'm doing it, if that gives you comfort, but I'm not doing it.
Anonymous wrote:My FIL did not want a Catholic funeral, he predeceased my MIL and she was suffering from moderate dementia at the time. She insisted on a full Catholic Mass. Their children really didn’t care. So, they had it. A funeral is for the living.
When she died, they did a full Catholic Mass for her too. The priest was visibly disappointed when none of the immediate family nor their children took communion as none are Catholic anymore.
Anonymous wrote:My grandfather buried my grandmother even though she asked to be cremated. He was upset at the thought and “couldn’t” do it. My mom always felt bad that she didn’t push harder.
Anonymous wrote:I thought the executor of a person's last will and testament had to do as the will statedl. When my FIL died he also put in his will that he wanted to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery but as only one of his children lived in this area the executor of his will had to go to court to get permission to bury him in a family cemetery.
Anonymous wrote:For instance, a person writes in their will that they want to be buried in a certain cemetery, pays the cemetery in advance for the spot and for employees to handle the body after death. Yet after the person dies their family try to override their wishes and bury the person in a different cemetery against their wishes.
Another example would be a family having a religious funeral for a staunch atheist.