The Surprising Satisfactions of a Home Funeral
When his father and father-in-law died within days of each other, author Max Alexander learned much about the funeral industry
- By Max Alexander
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
We rubbed linseed oil into the wood for a deep burnish, then, as a final touch, made a cross of cherry for the lid. Total cost: $90.98.
Sarah learned that Maine does not require embalming—a recognition that under normal circumstances human remains do not pose a public health risk (nor do they deteriorate visibly) for a few days after death.
When Bob died, on a cold evening in late November, Sarah, her sister Holly and I gently washed his body with warm water and lavender oil as it lay on the portable hospital bed in the living room. (Anointing a body with aromatic oils, which moisten the skin and provide a calming atmosphere for the living, is an ancient tradition.) I had been to plenty of funerals and seen many a body in the casket, but this was the first time I was expected to handle one. I wasn't eager to do so, but after a few minutes it seemed like second nature. His skin remained warm for a long time—maybe an hour—then gradually cooled and turned pale as the blood settled. While Holly and I washed his feet, Sarah trimmed his fingernails. (No, they don't keep growing after death, but they were too long.) We had to tie his jaw shut with a bandanna for several hours until rigor mortis set in, so his mouth would not be frozen open; the bandanna made him look like he had a toothache.
We worked quietly and deliberately, partly because it was all new to us but mainly out of a deep sense of purpose. Our work offered the chance to reflect on the fact that he was really gone. It wasn't Bob, just his body.
Bob's widow, Annabelle, a stoic New Englander, stayed in the kitchen during most of these preparations, but at some point she came in and held his hands. Soon she was comfortable lifting his arms and marveling at the soft stillness of her husband's flesh. "Forty-four years with this man," she said quietly.
Later that night, with the help of a neighbor, we wrestled the coffin into the living room, filled it with cedar chips from the pet store and added several freezer packs to keep things cool. Then we lined it with a blanket and lay Bob inside. Movies always show bodies getting casually lifted like a 50-pound sack of grain; in real life (or death?), it strained four of us to move him.
The next night we held a vigil. Dozens of friends and family trailed through the living room to view Bob, surrounded by candles and flowers. He looked unquestionably dead, but he looked beautiful. Harper and I received many compliments on our coffin. Later, when the wine flowed and the kitchen rang with laughter and Bob was alone again, I went in to see him. I held his cool hands and remembered how, not so long ago, those hands were tying fishing lures, strumming a banjo, splitting wood. Those days were over, and that made me sad, but it also felt OK.
We did have to engage a few experts. Although Maine allows backyard burials (subject to local zoning), Bob had requested cremation. A crematorium two hours away was sympathetic to home after-death care. The director offered to do the job for just $350, provided we delivered the body.
That entailed a daylong paper chase. The state of Maine frowns on citizens driving dead bodies around willy-nilly, so a Permit for Disposition of Human Remains is required. To get that, you need a death certificate signed by the medical examiner or, in Bob's case in a small town, the last doctor to treat him. Death certificates, in theory at least, are issued by the government and available at any town office. But when Sarah called the clerk she was told, "You get that from the funeral home."
"There is no funeral home," she replied.
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Comments (57)
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I've read a lot of articles on home funerals and I've got to say that this is the best I've ever read. Thank you Max.
Posted by Heather on July 2,2012 | 12:58 PM
My beloved spouse is terminally ill and has left his instructions simply....do what ever helps you cope, I will be just an empty shell. I will be having a at home funeral. In Florida there is no laws that I know of, but any informatoion will help. I want to make sure I respect him all the way until he is cremated as he has respected me all these years. Your article makes me pull up my boot straps a little tighter....Thank you,
Posted by Lena on May 3,2012 | 12:26 PM
Thank you for your courtesy. My mother is 90 and one of these days, The inevitable will happen and I dread the day and I heard on radio about info as this which you are recommending; I want to know if they alliw burial in our property in the city of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State. Also, where can one get a simple and nice coffin in advance to have it ready for such a tim when needed? Thank you, and God Bless ys all, in Jesus' Name, amen
Posted by Arlenice Carbajal on January 15,2012 | 01:51 AM
thankyou for your article. my 'Pa' (grandad) died a couple of weeks ago in hospital. I just cried the whole way through your article. The funeral home made the body available for 'viewing', but I didnt go. Even though i was in the room when he died, i still wanted to see him one last time, but the idea of having to go and basically ask permission put me off. The funeral director is a family friend, and did a great job, i think a lot of the behaviours around funerals are just cultural, social and fashionable and eventually, the cycle will come around again.
Posted by Coralie on September 1,2011 | 06:59 AM
This is so tender and beautiful, thank you. I laughed and cried while reading it.
Posted by Lisa Boisvert Mackenzie on July 14,2011 | 08:18 AM
Wow I have allways wounderd if I could have a funeral at home Im so glad for this information thank you for sharing
Posted by Margaret Zavoral Jr on June 15,2011 | 04:15 AM
I love your story. I, too, wanted to do as much as possible for my husband when he died at home (Parkinson's Plus). I did a lot of research ahead of time-found a wonderful funeral home that helped me with the plans. We made our own pine box and had it waiting on the back porch. As we are in Arizona and would have to wait until all family could fly in, I finally relented and agreed to embalming. But the beautiful funeral director made a home visit while he was alive-I wanted her to see him. We have a huge bluegrass band of children and so they were around all the time. The hospital bed in the living room (15 months) and everyone being part of the process of care. He quietly died, I sat with him, children came and sat with him. It was Super Bowl Sunday so finally the two women came and picked him up and we all sang and touched and cried a little.
Then the box was moved inside and everyone wrote messages with large Sharpie markers. How wonderful that was! We took the box to the funeral home. They put him in the box and brought him back. We had a huge party and potluck in our small home-a few words from me, the Lord's prayer. People loved the box, how he looked in his Air Force uniform-still fitting 40 years after retirement.
I wanted to do everything ourselves, but as in the article by Max, the transportation was just too difficult. But we nixed the hearse; the funeral home drove him in a small van. Full military honors at the Arizona National Cemetery. Since we had saved so much money on everything, I had "party favors" made for everyone-Tee shirts with his picture, etc. People-children and adults-love them.
People loved what we did-so relaxed and sweet. One common statement: "Is this legal?" I thought that was funny, except people really have been kept in the dark.
Posted by Anni Beach on May 7,2010 | 01:11 AM
I first read this article when it came out in March, 2009. Here we are a year later already, and I am still thinking about it talking about it to whomever will listen.
I applaud you, and can't thank you enough for sharing such a private and intimate family experience. As I read your essay, I was overwhelmed with emotion and touched by the respect and dignity offered to your father-in-law.
I've always hated the idea of funerals- it's like death, imitating life- all the make-up and fluff is harsh and makes it all seem unreal. I feel as if your experience must have been much more healing and healthy way to grieve.
Again, thank you!
Posted by Julie Evans on February 23,2010 | 10:04 PM
Undertaken With Love, the project aimed at increasing awareness of the family's right to care for its own dead until burial or cremation, has a new website URL and blog.
New URL: www.undertakenwithlove.org
New blog: www.undertakenwithlove.blogspot.com
Holly Stevens, project coordinator
Posted by Holly Stevens on January 31,2010 | 02:58 PM
my three cats are my first animal friends as an adult; i added them to my own household myself. human children are an impossibility for me, and i've always seemed a better momma to four-leggers anyway... so these boys are truly my children. i lost my first to kidney failure a year and a half ago, and decided on my own to take him home with me and bury him myself. he's not human, but he was my family. i simply can not have imagined dealing with his loss any other way. i wrote about it then, how natural and healing it felt when i sat with his body and his two cat-brothers all day, quietly, and felt his body grow cold. myself and a friend buried him ourselves on her land.
i saw this article when it was published a bit after that experience, and cried (happy tears) all over again, as i found myself saying 'huzzah!' to each sentiment. i've shared it with friends since then, and i've looked it up again now because another of my boys has been dying of cancer. it is now his time to move on. friends are helping me take him to the vet hospital tomorrow to let him go. other friends have offered him a place on their land, and we've all planned a "going away party" for when we bury him. a jewelry-maker friend of mine is making a locket necklace, so that i may keep a few of his whiskers.
i suppose i write all of this because i agree so completely with how much sense Max's article makes, but i also feel like the same good things come from personally handling the after-death care of ALL of our loved ones, whatever species they may be. i've spent more time in the past ten years with these small furry men than any one person; they are as much a part of my heart as my human family. if you feel similarly about your non-human family, don't let anyone make you feel like you shouldn't mourn and commemorate them exactly as you wish. they are important, too.
"that would reflect poorly on our carpentry skills" !!! :)
Posted by Domini Dragoone on January 30,2010 | 10:08 PM
Well, now, that was just a darned good article. We are facing my mother's impending passing, and somehow, this article helped. Helped what? I can't really say; it just helped.
Thank you.
Posted by Scott on November 17,2009 | 05:48 PM
The question has always intrigued and haunted me: When was the first funeral service held? At what point in the course of human evolution did our race develop that sense of reverence and awe for "the remains" that turned respectful disposal of the dead a sacred imperative?
Posted by Ray Pinaud on May 3,2009 | 01:43 PM
I'm sorry to hear of your father and father-in-laws deaths. After reading it I had a bad taste in my mouth about funeral homes, as I'm sure many readers had. Again, as they so often are, the funeral home was made out to be an insensitive middle man looking to make money. I'm sorry that you had the experience. There is no doubt that your emotions at this time in your life were running high, as often the case when dealing with death and money. Funeral directors are used to being the target for such critisism, because they represent the loss the family is feeling. It appears in your article you are dealing with your loss like you often deal with things...writing about it. Unfortunatley, your anger towards your father for not incorporating your feelings and what your needs include as a survivor, are directed at the funeral industry. An as you stated that the funeral director was wrong in saying that what you did in Maine would have been illegal in Michigan, was correct on HIS PART. You contradicted in the next yourself by trying to make a back hand comment about his competence. You did not have a funeral director present, thus making it illegal if it were to have taken place in Mich. The health risks involved in home funerals is inexcusibly understated regardless of what people may think.
Posted by Adam Main on April 30,2009 | 02:07 AM
What a beautiful and poignant essay. Thank you.
Posted by Jude B. on April 30,2009 | 03:59 PM
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