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What To Do When Someone Dies: Tips On Organising A Funeral by
Sharon
Hurley Hall
When loved ones pass away, you'll want to make sure that they have the funeral
they deserve. Here are the main aspects you need to consider when planning
a funeral.
1. Viewing
When someone dies, family members and friend may wish to view the body of
their loved one. Viewing can assist with the resolution of grief. It can
help people accept that death has occurred. Each family member's viewpoint
on visitation or viewing may be different, and this is a very personal decision.
The best option in most cases is to leave the option of visitation open to
an individual's own emotional needs. Before or shortly after death some people
may be adamant that they do not wish to view the deceased, then change their
mind a short time later. By presenting the option of visitation, all family
members' individual emotional needs can be met.
2. Flowers, notices and memorials
In many communities it is traditional that friends and family pay their respects
by sending flowers or making a donation to charity. Your local funeral director
can organise flowers for you. They can also collect, record and distribute
donations to charity on your behalf.
The obituary notice in a local, national or other publication announces the
death and funeral details and can also become a tribute to the person who
has died, by perhaps containing a verse. Some people like to place
acknowledgement notices in the newspaper after the funeral, thanking people
who have supported them. Some people also like to compile a book of compliments,
reflections and memories about the person who has died, written by family
and friends attending the service or afterwards.
You don't have to decide whether to put a memorial on the grave or on the
site of the burial of ashes until after the funeral. The regulations about
what kind of memorial can be put up, and when, vary considerably from place
to place. Your funeral director can advise you on this and make any arrangements
on your behalf.
3. Transport
You'll need to decide on the size and makeup of the cortege (the hearse and
the cars following it). Other questions to consider include:
Will it be a standard, motorbike or horse-drawn hearse?
How many cars will be needed?
Where will the cortege leave from?
Will it take a special route?
Will you require wheelchairs for elderly or disabled mourners?
Where will you return to afterwards?
4. Bearing the coffin
Some families decide that they would like to bear the coffin themselves at
the ceremony, instead of the funeral director's staff. Bearers may be friends,
family members or colleagues of the person who has died.
5. Music
Many people now ask for specific pieces of music to be played at the service.
Your Funeral Director will be able to advise you on this and make the appropriate
arrangements for you.
6. Eulogies
A eulogy is when someone pays tribute to a person's life by saying a few
words that will help remember that person at the service. You can prepare
a speech yourself for this, or you may prefer to read a favourite poem or
passage.
7. Catering
You may wish to offer guests refreshments after the funeral. You will need
to decide who will provide the catering and where it will be provided. You
may prefer to offer refreshments at your home or at a location close to where
the service has been held.
8. Burial or cremation?
If there is no grave in existence and a new grave is required, this can be
arranged directly with the cemetery or through the funeral director. New
graves are expensive and the costs can increase significantly in some areas
if the deceased lived outside the cemetery authority's boundary. The family
organising the purchase of a new grave should know what costs are before
finalising the funeral arrangements. Burials in churchyards are subject to
rules and regulations of the church authority concerned. These rules are
often very strict in relation to the type of headstone or memorial that can
be placed on the grave following the funeral. The restrictions can also extend
to what is written on the headstone. Those responsible for the funeral
arrangements should be aware of what memorial restrictions are enforced before
the interment takes place to avoid any unnecessary distress later on.
If you opt for cremation, this will take place shortly after the funeral
committal service is over in the crematorium chapel. Each coffin is cremated
individually and after each cremation the ashes are removed and kept separately
so that each family receives the remains of their relative. If required these
are usually available for collection the next working day and can be placed
in the Garden of Remembrance at the crematorium. The ashes can also be kept
by the relatives, interred in a new or existing family grave, or scattered
in a place deemed as appropriate by the family or as requested by the deceased
prior to death.
This is an option that will have been specified in someone's Will or prepaid
funeral plan.
So these are the usual options to consider. Other possibilities can be discussed
with your funeral director or funeral plan provider.
Sharon Hurley Hall is a freelance writer, ghostwriter and editor. For more
information on prepaid funeral plans, visit http://www.silverbirchsolutions.co.uk
or contact Sharon at http://www.doublehdesign.com/
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