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DiscussionThoughts and Opinions as a Funeral Director
Thread starterInterestedParty
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To be honest I am more intrigued by your strangely flippant attitude towards suicide than the details of your job. If this comment wasn't tongue-in-cheek, do you really think that anyone who commits suicide is motivated by how creative their method is? If it was tongue-in-cheek, have you just become so desensitized by the number of your encounters with death that you joke about suicide in these terms? Even though this is a pro-choice forum, I'm not sure this type of facetiousness is appreciated by most people here, especially from someone positioning themselves as a spectator of sorts.
Most people who deal with death regularly develop a dark sense of humor/sarcasm as part of their defense. Unless you're a sociopath you need defenses to do their job. It's not personal towards anyone and they try not to let it get personal for them as well.
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desertplant, merryberry, lifeisbutadream and 5 others
Most people who deal with death regularly develop a dark sense of humor/sarcasm as part of their defense. Unless you're a sociopath you need defenses to do their job. It's not personal towards anyone and they try not to let it get personal for them as well.
Oh wow. That's longer than I expected. Most funerals I see happen here are within 5-7 days but I guess if the coroner has to have extra time with a suicide, that would explain it too.
Interesting you haven't seen a sodium nitrite, not one. It's being banned from being sold to individuals in the US because of the number of teens who have died using it.
You have to remember they said they were from a major city in Cali. That's a lot of deaths natural and unnatural. I've seen remains returned within 2 or 3 days as long as foul play was not a consideration. (No investigation)
I think the face holds the majority of human emotion.
Any death where the face is mutilated is disturbing in my opinion.
When you have an arm laying around, its easy to chalk it up in your mind as like just looking like a halloween prop, but properly disfigured faces are definitely the most disturbing for me.
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We Are Angels, lifeisbutadream, divinemistress87 and 2 others
My comment was most definitely tongue-in-cheek rather than to be taken seriously.
Most people in my field spend our days joking like this. If everyday you clocked in to work and had to spend 8 hours recognizing just how serious each death was then staff would not last long at all.
I recognize suicide is a very serious matter, but when I mentioned the creativity, I phrased it in a way I would have said it talking to a coworker. Not often that I am discussing death with those that want to be dead.
I think the face holds the majority of human emotion.
Any death where the face is mutilated is disturbing in my opinion.
When you have an arm laying around, its easy to chalk it up in your mind as like just looking like a halloween prop, but properly disfigured faces are definitely the most disturbing for me.
You weren't being overly sensitive. Bringing suicide jokes in here as an outsider wasn't any more appropriate than making death jokes at a funeral. It was just an oversight on the part of the OP who, I'm guessing, understands that now.
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consider, Whale_bones, WhatPowerIs and 9 others
You weren't being overly sensitive. Bringing suicide jokes in here as an outsider wasn't any more appropriate than making death jokes at a funeral. It was just an oversight on the part of the OP who, I'm guessing, understands that now.
Oh please people joke in here all the time. There are people in the world whose job is death. They look at it differently. They're actually interested in the hows and whys. They tend to think about it differently.
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an alien, itsnigh, We Are Angels and 9 others
Oh please people joke in here all the time. There are people in the world whose job is death. They look at it differently. They're actually interested in the hows and whys. They tend to think about it differently.
Outsiders don't get to come in here and make suicide jokes to us. Life just doesn't work like that. I don't care if they work as a funeral director. Or a police officer. Or a journalist. Or a janitor. Or if they're an astronaut on their way to Mars. If they're an outsider, then jokes are not OK.
You want to joke about it? No one's going to tell you not to because you are down here in the darkness with the rest of us.
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Tombs_in_your_eyes, consider, Daos365 and 11 others
nihilistic_dragon
Dead already. Just need to dispose of my body now.
Well this is my first post on this website, as I very recently found it while prowling through the CoE website.
I am a funeral director in a major Californian city, so naturally, I see my fair share of suicides a month.
This website strikes me as interesting though in that many people on here seem so motivated to learn and try out these elaborate suicides methods.
I think most people lack creativity in that in the past 30 days I had 2 by train, 1 by gunshot, and 3 by hanging. But other than that I did not see any other method this month.
But what I was trying to get at is that is from my personal experience, hanging is by far the most popular method at least in this part of California...
Also, yes, I can confirm that many families look ruined after one of their loved ones decides to go through with it, so keep that in mind I suppose.
If anyone has any questions though would be more than happy to answer them :)
Thanks for answering our questions. Have you ever had someone preplan their funeral with you and then kill themselves afterwards? Obviously while omitting their suicidal intent.
Have you ever been left a note in your official duties? In your experience have you ever seen anything that the deceased did in preparation that provided even a modicum of comfort or understanding for the surviving family members? I appreciate your time
Thanks for answering our questions. Have you ever had someone preplan their funeral with you and then kill themselves afterwards? Obviously while omitting their suicidal intent.
Have you ever been left a note in your official duties? In your experience have you ever seen anything that the deceased did in preparation that provided even a modicum of comfort or understanding for the surviving family members? I appreciate your time
1.Haha no but I would definitely not see that coming. It is 80% older or sick folks.
2.Left a note whileeeee like picking up a body? At a funeral? Where?
3.No, I don't really think there is much of anything that could comfort someone immediately after a suicide. Also generally from what the families have told me, it was quite sudden with not even a note left behind.
I think the face holds the majority of human emotion.
Any death where the face is mutilated is disturbing in my opinion.
When you have an arm laying around, its easy to chalk it up in your mind as like just looking like a halloween prop, but properly disfigured faces are definitely the most disturbing for me.
Thanks for being prepared to be questioned. I know most people on here are suffering beyond imagination, but equally care what happens for those that will be affected. Hence you can see concerns about what happens next and how things look that are somewhat about others not themselves. I'm sure everyone is grateful therefore.
My question continues the theme of what looks worst, but for first responders. I understand the facial reference. So what about discolouration (assumed for SN) or eyes (maybe with FS v PS). Is there anything you see that would make you go "that would have been awful for first responders"?
I mean I guess these people also see RTA's etc. Death is not always age or terminal illness (hospice).
I guess also wrt shock for family comments, RTA and many other situations create immense shock too. Ctb is not alone in that. Life is harsh and no one is exempt.
Reactions:
2messdup, Forever Sleep, Plato'sCaveDweller and 1 other person
Well this is my first post on this website, as I very recently found it while prowling through the CoE website.
I am a funeral director in a major Californian city, so naturally, I see my fair share of suicides a month.
This website strikes me as interesting though in that many people on here seem so motivated to learn and try out these elaborate suicides methods.
I think most people lack creativity in that in the past 30 days I had 2 by train, 1 by gunshot, and 3 by hanging. But other than that I did not see any other method this month.
But what I was trying to get at is that is from my personal experience, hanging is by far the most popular method at least in this part of California...
Also, yes, I can confirm that many families look ruined after one of their loved ones decides to go through with it, so keep that in mind I suppose.
If anyone has any questions though would be more than happy to answer them :)
Hi, I have a doubt regarding discard of funerary urns. Like, let's say someone wanted their ashes (they were cremated) to be thrown at multiple places (the sea, a forest and list goes on), what to do with the empty urn after all ashes were scattered? Putting in the trash seems disrespectful and I don't think the deceased would like for it to be stored in a church/temple/cemetery or even the home of family/relatives. The best I could think was buy a biodegradable urn, scatter the ashes in the requested sites and then throw it at the sea/river. There are better options?
Oh, another question: does funerary makeup can make a corpse killed by SN (Sodium Nitrite) look "normal" for the funeral/wake?
I took part in anatomy dissection and dead bodies are very detached from the real thing, in my experience. Funeral director business is definitely not for the faint of hearted though, I was glad when anatomy class was over!
Reactions:
ladylazarus4, wren-briar and InterestedParty
Thanks for being prepared to be questioned. I know most people on here are suffering beyond imagination, but equally care what happens for those that will be affected. Hence you can see concerns about what happens next and how things look that are somewhat about others not themselves. I'm sure everyone is grateful therefore.
My question continues the theme of what looks worst, but for first responders. I understand the facial reference. So what about discolouration (assumed for SN) or eyes (maybe with FS v PS). Is there anything you see that would make you go "that would have been awful for first responders"?
I mean I guess these people also see RTA's etc. Death is not always age or terminal illness (hospice).
I guess also wrt shock for family comments, RTA and many other situations create immense shock too. Ctb is not alone in that. Life is harsh and no one is exempt.
Hi, I have a doubt regarding discard of funerary urns. Like, let's say someone wanted their ashes (they were cremated) to be thrown at multiple places (the sea, a forest and list goes on), what to do with the empty urn after all ashes were scattered? Putting in the trash seems disrespectful and I don't think the deceased would like for it to be stored in a church/temple/cemetery or even the home of family/relatives. The best I could think was buy a biodegradable urn, scatter the ashes in the requested sites and then throw it at the sea/river. There are better options?
Oh, another question: does funerary makeup can make a corpse killed by SN (Sodium Nitrite) look "normal" for the funeral/wake?
Only difference I can think of is that if they surpass our crematoriums weight limit, they get sent to a neighboring city that has one with a higher weight limit
5.Able to grieve faster than my peers, but still even with all the deaths at work, its still a very distinct feeling when someone you actually know or care about has passed.
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MeaCulpa, LifeQuitter, Username1359751 and 1 other person
With gun suicides, do you see a majority of these going through the mouth (aimed towards back of head), at the temple, under the chin, at forehead? I'm sure it's all different types but wondering what you see the most and what is the most disfiguring...
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