Jill's funeral

Jill's funeral

A daughter's perspective

Maxine lost her Mum, Jill, a week ago when Jill had a massive heart attack. It was a big shock, but Maxine knew that Jill had made things easier for her by arranging all her affairs after a cancer scare a few years back.

Jill had told Maxine where her important documents were and had been very clear that she wanted her funeral to be a direct cremation. They had talked about it after Jill saw an ad in the paper. “Direct cremation please, Maxine. No fuss, and none of my money wasted on a fancy coffin or a horse and carriage. I'd far rather you had a bit more”. Maxine reflected that that was so typical of her Mum: not looking to have frills, always thinking of others. Maxine's working hours had been cut recently, and she had started to worry about her bill payments, so having Mum's blessing to go with a less expensive funeral option was no bad thing.

The person Maxine spoke to at the Funeral Director's had said that they could include an option for the family to go and say goodbye to Jill in their chapel before the direct cremation. It wasn't something Maxine would have thought of doing, but she was reassured that if the company staff were inviting the family to go and see Jill, they were going to take care with her.

Maxine thought she could host a small gathering and quietly scatter Jill's ashes in the park where both parents had taken her as a child, and where Mum had enjoyed walking her old dog even up to the day before she died. Maxine liked the idea that Jill would get to rest somewhere she had loved, and that Maxine would be able to visit and think of her from time to time.

A brother's perspective

Dave wished Maxine had listened to him, rather than putting her foot down and saying that Jill had wanted a direct cremation, so it was going to be a direct cremation. Dave understood that his sister Jill never wanted a fuss and was very careful with her money. But doesn't everyone deserve at least a little bit of ceremony when they pass? And he had read horror stories about what happens with these direct cremations. They had a reputation for being soulless affairs, with people dumped in coffins and then bumped along to a crematorium in a transit van without so much as a thought.

Dave couldn't help feeling that it wasn't right to send someone into a crematorium alone. He had never thought about visiting a dead relative in their coffin before the funeral ceremony, though, and when Maxine mentioned that the Funeral Director had offered that, he realised people were often left alone in their coffins before the day of their burial or cremation.

Dave wasn't only bothered about Jill. Although he wouldn't say he liked funerals, he had always found that they gave him a good feeling of ending relationships well. He had told Maxine he wasn't asking for a big service for Jill, but as her brother he wanted to gather with what small family he had left to send her off, and to share a drink and a bit of food afterwards.

Maxine said they could get together to scatter Jill's ashes - maybe on what would have been Jill's 70th birthday - and have a meal at the local pub-restaurant afterwards. But that would be a couple of months away, and Dave thought that surely the moment would have passed then? It was now that he wanted to be among other people who knew his sister.

Some questions for reflection and discussion

  • When and why can it be important for the family and friends of someone who died to be together - with or without the body of the person who died?
  • Which of the activities and rituals that Maxine and David planned or thought about do you think are important, and for whom? Why? Do you have any questions or concerns about them?
  • Who should have a say about someone's funeral arrangements?
  • Is the promotion of direct cremation an appropriate response to people being short of money? Why, or why not?
  • Should we be concerned if some people opt for a direct cremation because they cannot afford a more social funeral?

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