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#death – @unexpectedyarns on Tumblr
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Wildly wooly and off the wall, totally unexpected

@unexpectedyarns / unexpectedyarns.tumblr.com

Come by for something interesting, stay because, like a train wreck, you just can't look away. Ecstatically married to my lover slashingdashingwolf!
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reillymouse

fun funeral facts

  • embalming, the process of chemically preserving a corpse, is typically not required by law. unless you need to transport the body long-distance or postpone the burial, it’s 100% a vanity thing.
  • a body still rots in air-tight conditions. so “protective” or “sealed” caskets are basically a scam, and anything fancy like metal is a waste of money.
  • want a beautiful casket for a viewing, but think burning or burying an expensive piece of hardwood is a waste of money and trees? rentals exist.
  • you don’t need a coffin for cremation. the minimum requirement is that the body be in a “cremation container,” which is a simple cardboard box.
  • home funerals are an option. you don’t need to hand the body over to a funeral home, and you can keep their involvement to a minimum.
  • natural burial sites exist. you can have your unembalmed body straight up thrown in the dirt to be tree food, if you want.
  • there are a lot of funeral homes that will prey on your ignorance and vulnerability in order to get as much money out of you as possible. they may imply optional certain services are legally mandatory, steer you away from cheaper options, charge additional costs for what’s supposed to be all-inclusive services, etc.
  • one person’s death is another person’s profit. know your rights, do your research, and apply the same scrutiny you would to any other business.

For those of you interested, the youtube channel Ask A Mortician does a lot of videos on taboo death subjects, answers questions and is a huge advocate for natural burials and being present during the actual funeral process so you don’t get taken advantage of by the funeral industry. She’s one of my favourite youtubers and I highly recommend her videos.

I’m not OP, but as a fellow Ask a Mortician fan (I’m even on the Patreon, Caitlyn is out here doing G-d’s work), HERE IS AN UPDATE:

—cremation and burial are not your only options. Some states now offer aquamation (basically your body is put in a special brine that breaks it down into nothing in a few hours) and terramation (aka human composting; your body is put into a dedicated pod with plant matter that accelerates the decay process and turns you into nutrient-rich soil in about six weeks). You also have the option to donate your body to a body farm or medical school. Check your state’s or country’s laws, and if you don’t see the option you want, contact the Order of the Good Death to find out who’s advocating in your area. If the answer is nobody, YOU can always be the person who starts the ball rolling.

—“bury your cremains in this fancy urn and you’ll become a tree!” is a scam. Cremains contain no organic matter. If you want to be a tree, go for terramation or natural burial.

—“turn your loved one’s cremains into a diamond!” is a scam. While you can technically turn cremains into a zircon (artificial diamond), the result is likely to be EXTREMELY ugly due to the amount of inclusions. If you want to wear a loved one’s cremains as a memento mori, you’re far better off speaking to an artisan jeweler about getting a modern version of one of the glass rings or pendants that were popular in the Victorian era. There are likeminded people out there who will absolutely do this for you in a beautiful and compassionate way, but the “it’s diamonds!” techbro startup thing is not the way to go.

—what is and is not respectful to the dead will vary based on culture, but the one constant should be consent of the deceased. What do THEY want to happen to their body? Have this conversation with your loved ones while they’re alive, and make sure the answers are written down. I know my sister wants a traditional Jewish burial—“just put me in the dirt and forget about it,” in her words—and she knows I want to be terramated. I know my dad wants to be buried next to my mom, although I need to check in with him if he wants his body buried or if he wants to be cremated first. Destigmatize this talk. It doesn’t have to be uncomfortable—making sure your loved ones know exactly what you want takes a burden off them in the future, and making sure YOU know what THEY want will both help you when the time comes and provide the comfort of knowing you’ve fulfilled their wishes.

And finally:

The reason I’m such a staunch Caitlyn evangelist is because there is a nonzero chance one of her videos saved my life. My mom died sometime in the night between the first and second of January, 2021. Because travel for large amounts of people was off the table, my dad opted for two small funerals—one here with a funeral home that refused to handle her body without a showing (unfortunately this was part of Covid price gouging—there was literally nowhere else capable of taking her), and one with our proper family funeral home in our hometown. Because of Covid, this meant it took A FUCKING MONTH for my mother to be buried, and that shit is absolutely scarring. I’d recently watched Caitlyn’s “what does a full embalming look like” video, and her partner for that video said she likes to bring the family in to assist in helping with the deceased person’s hair, makeup, clothing, any part of the process they’re willing to do, because she feels it helps with the grieving process. I was ready to grasp at anything that would let me feel like my mother wasn’t stuck in an episode of American Horror Story, especially after the shitshow that was the funeral home here in Arizona. With this in mind I called the family funeral home and asked to do my mom’s makeup; while I personally shudder at the thought of a traditional American burial, it’s what she wanted. Nancy—our family’s mortician for the last 40 years—readily agreed.

And so I went in, put on some of my mom’s favorite old country singers, and did her makeup exactly the way she taught me when I was sixteen, with her own cosmetics instead of what the funeral home had on hand. Her hair was thin and fragile from her last illness and I couldn’t curl it, but I fixed it up as well as I could, and painted her nails.

And let me tell you something.

The other mortician lady was right.

It was a massive comfort to me when Nancy took one look at my mom and said “oh, when you said she did her makeup differently you were right. I never would have guessed to do this.” (I don’t know where my mom learned to put on blusher, but she did basically the exact opposite of every makeup tutorial I’ve ever seen, and her method of doing eyeshadow was extremely 1940s.) Every single person at the service kept saying she looked exactly like they remembered from so-and-so’s wedding, such-and-such’s graduation, this-and-that’s honorary party. It wasn’t a vague “oh she looks so good”—she looked LIKE HER to those who remembered her. People who knew I’d done her makeup said they could tell it had to be someone who’d known her well. I remembered her horror at seeing unfamiliar makeup on her own mother’s face, and it was a massive comfort to me to know she was turned out exactly as she would have liked. And my dad? My dad hadn’t even cried yet. But he cried when he saw her in the same makeup style she’d worn at their wedding. He was finally able to cry and connect to my mom, his wife and beloved, and begin to find closure, seeing the woman he knew instead of a tired, worn body that bore little resemblance to her. It mattered. To him, to me, to my mom’s friends. It mattered a lot.

I don’t know that I would have ended up suicidal if not for that hour alone with my mom and Charley Pride and a stack of Bare Minerals compacts. But her death hit me hard and the month that followed was a special circle of hell, and I think I might have. Every time I think of her death and her burial, I think of that video and I’m insanely grateful it exists. (Incidentally, Nancy agreed. She said she thought she might make it an option for other families, after seeing both my response and the response of others in our family circle.)

Caitlyn knows her stuff. Watch, learn your rights, teach others to be death-positive. Life is the only occupation with a 100% mortality rate, so we might as well do it the way we want.

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My aunt Bev died this morning.

The one my youngest child, Betsy (Beverly Jeane) is actually named after. The kids will be sad. Betsy will be devastated. I am sad. My sister says most of Aunt Bev's friends are in FL & too old to travel so they're just having her cremated. I know the being cremated & no fuss would have made her happy. She led a very simple, practical life. I remember her once talking about how funerals were silly, all that expense over a husk of humanity. When I got pregnant the first time, from being raped, & I was scared to tell my family, she was the first one I told. She said to not be afraid to tell my folks. But then I did & they never did believe how it happened. Always thought I'd just been whoring around. But she had believed me. She was a beautiful, strong, no-nonsense woman. Left her husband after 30 years when she found out he'd been running around on her for most of their marriage. She lived another 20 years, very happily alone. I loved her.

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Friday Five

  1. I've done one navel piercing today. Woohoo
  2. A woman I was year-long swap partners with on a quilting email list I owned, made contact with me today through Facebook.  She said she heard of a woman on one of the quilt lists named Niki who went through a terminal illness and died.  She thought it was me & has been mourning the loss.  She saw (rare) posts to my facebook and thought it was my kids posting in memorial of me.  Well when I asked for a divorce, going to work full time and other adjustments, I did drop off the earth somewhat.  Just couldn't keep up with everything.  But oops, she thought I died.  I guess I kind of did.
  3. I almost never get time to quilt anymore.  I don't even take enough time to knit like I should.  Sometimes in the evenings I'm just too tired to be interested.
  4. At this rate, it's gonna be a slim Christmas this year.  And a lot of ppl are going to have cold hands, heads, and feet.
  5. I'm in a really lousy mood.  I feel pissed off at the world and at the same time, on the verge of tears, for no reason.

Bonus:  They're playing metal music in the shop and that doesn't help me NOT want to kill something.

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I did one tattoo

then I came home.  I wouldn't even have done the one, but I didn't want to put the lady off.  When I didn't have anyone to witness my divorce papers, she did it on the spur of the moment (in the Walmart parking lot) & even rounded up a friend for the 2nd witness.  Gotta appreciate a person like that.

The girls are doing homeschool and looking through the family picture box in my room, which isn't helping me rest very much but it's nice family time.

I'm lying in bed trying not to die.

My x's brother John did die this morning.  I had to tell him I was so sorry, but didn't know if the girls and I will make the trip.  It's 13.5 hours one way, and I don't have another driver.  The boys are already there with him.  

I should go though.  Even though Richard is my x, John was my brother too for 27 years.  The family already probably thinks I hate them because of the divorce.  I should go as an act of respect and goodwill.  No funeral details yet.

I hate being the grown-up, the responsible one, the one who has to do the right thing, even when I don't want to.

Right now though, I'm in enough pain that I don't want to think about it.

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I didn't reblog the Amy Winehouse graphic because I'm all mourning her.

I did it because of the irony. She made the choices she did. But a person can't expect to live like that, and live. That's not really living anyway. Why do we glamorize & idolize it? So long, farewell.

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