Showing posts with label grief counselor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grief counselor. Show all posts

Friday, November 22, 2013

The Death of Death and Of The Funeral Business/Philadelphia Magazine

Preplan AND Prepay your final arrangements, so that your survivors don't have to !!!!!!!!!!!!

Philadelphia Magazine, December, 2013  Pages 92 ff.:



The Death of the Funeral Business

Illustration by Scotty Reifsnyder.
Illustration by Scotty Reifsnyder.
Over the summer, my 98-year-old Aunt Elizabeth passed away, after a long, full life.
In the wake (heh) of her memorial service, I got a letter from her daughter, my cousin Stephanie. It had a chart of our family’s two burial plots at Hillside Cemetery in Roslyn, showing who’s interred in which graves, and … well, let me just quote:
The original cemetery contract entitles one burial to be made in each grave without additional charge. … This is called the “first right.” But if someone decides to be buried in one of the seven graves that have never yet been opened, and wants to be sure that the burial will be deep enough to allow for a second later burial in the same grave, he/she must pay a fee (currently just under $2,500) to reserve the “second right” to that grave. If the second right is not paid for at the time of the first burial, there will not be room for a second burial in the grave. It follows that if everyone who eventually uses those graves pays up front for the “second right,” the two lots can accommodate 16 more burials. On the other hand, if no one who eventually uses those graves pays for the second right, the two lots will accommodate only nine more burials.
It went on from there.
Mine is a family that takes six months to decide who’ll host the annual Christmas Eve party. The prospect of the dozens of us cousins jockeying for eternal occupancy of those remaining grave sites (“There are also guidelines about burials of spouses of family members”) is dizzying. And frankly, the chances of any of us ponying up $2,500 at our time of death to altruistically save the space atop us are dim. When it comes to that, I love my relatives, but I’d have a hard time opting for the open slot above Aunt Phyllis, who was a wonderful woman but worried ceaselessly about my weight.
Luckily, I don’t envision any grand family smackdowns over the vacant graves. I plan to be cremated. So do my siblings and husband. Forty-three percent of Americans who died last year were burned instead of buried—up from 24 percent in 1998. That’s a staggering rise in the course of just 15 years. (The figure was under five percent as recently as 1972.) By 2017, the Cremation Association of North America predicts, half of us will be consumed by flames. In Britain, three-quarters of the dead already are.
Much of the impetus for this is economic: A traditional American funeral costs $8,300 (not counting plot), vs. $1,400 for cremation (with urn and no service). But what we do with ourselves when we die isn’t just a matter of money, and funerals aren’t just about disposal of the dead. They’re rituals we perform in order to adjust to the loss of a loved one, and to place that loss within a larger framework that gives meaning to the life that’s gone.
For Americans, religion once provided that framework. The rise in cremation dovetails neatly with the increase in those of us who have no religious affiliation—now one-fifth, the highest percentage ever, according to a recent Pew Research poll. We’re not nearly as concerned with the hereafter as we used to be. The number of Americans who don’t believe Christ rose from the dead jumped by 13 percent in a single year from 2012 to 2013.
A societal changeover from burial to cremation is momentous for our culture. It signals a cataclysmic shift in how we think about our bodies and ourselves. If we’re no longer preserving our remains for the glorious moment when the trumpet blares the Resurrection, does it matter what we do with them? What is the meaning of life, and death, once religion goes?
For more on the death of the funeral industry, pick up a copy of the December issue ofPhiladelphia magazine, on newsstands now.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Widowed: No Husband=No Friends, Family !!

New York Times, Sunday, October 27, 2013, Sunday Review section, Page SR 8:




No Husband, No Friends

Private Lives
Private Lives:Personal essays on the news of the world and the news of our lives.
Thanks to Noah, the world is made up of people in twosomes. I never thought much about the ark until my husband died one bright, sunny November morning almost one year ago.
My friends headed for the hills. In the last years of my husband’s life, we had come to rely on two or three couples for entertainment, but they disappeared after he died. Were they afraid to face their own mortality, or was it that the dynamics we presented as a duo were lost with me as a widow? Widow. The word means empty. Another charming word I have come to embrace: bereave — to deprive or rob. Here I find myself a bereaved widow, relegated by my erstwhile friends to the occasional lunch or shopping spree. I didn’t have any single friends. (And if I had, I probably would have treated them the same.) I was struggling with the No.1 stressor on the Holmes-Rahe Life Stress Inventory — death of a spouse — sans friends.
Everywhere I go, everywhere I look, couples surround me in the supermarket, at the mall and in their S.U.V.’s awaiting a green light. I never noticed the twosomes before. Now they make me feel obsolete. Whether he knew it or not, Noah set the course for bias against singles. Singles can’t dine in the finest restaurants. Singles disrupt the seating in theater rows. And singles can’t be seen cavorting with couples. I understand Noah’s plan — the world needed two to tango in the face of an annihilating flood. But he should have designated a section on the ark for us.
Jillian Tamaki
I spend most of my days alone in the bereavement bunker. That’s what I call the place I rented. After my husband died, I navigated through the many stages of grief. The first one is the merciful one — numbness — the stage at which one makes idiotic decisions, like selling the place you live in without a well-thought-out plan of where you might go. I did a lot of wacky things during that stage, but moving eight months after my husband died to take up residence in a tiny rental a few miles away tops the list. I sent most of my furnishings to auction and discarded the majority of the rest. Two days after moving into the bunker, I was reading with a borrowed flashlight because I couldn’t count a lamp among my possessions. Everything I saved I didn’t need, and everything I threw away, I had to replace.
Some time later I briefly touched on the anger stage of grief. I held the doctors, the nurses, the drug companies and the old slash, burn and poison protocol of cancer treatment in this country responsible for my husband’s death. Now I just blame Noah.
Frankly, I’m sick and tired of the stages. I went from depression to panic attacks back to depression to migraines, to abdominal migraines, to not sleeping, to sleeping too much, to never leaving the bunker, to not wanting to go back to the bunker. To deal with my mood swings, I have seen a grief counselor and a psychiatrist and attend a support group. My counselor advised me I wasn’t acting irrationally — it was all just coping mechanisms. She suggested I make friends. My psychiatrist prescribed anti-depressants so I would stop acting irrationally. How can I go wrong?
Someone once said that being a widow is like living in a country where nobody speaks your language. In my case, it’s only my friends, family and acquaintances who all now speak Urdu — it’s not the whole country. I discovered strangers possess more compassion than my own friends and family. My kids make me feel like I lost my mind, and not their dad. Bereavement isn’t a lobotomy, children. It’s a loss.
Speaking of loss, I not only lost my husband and my life, I also lost my hair. My crowning glory plus my eyebrows — would you believe it — fell out in clumps a few months after my husband’s death. My doctor assured me that the hair loss was because of shock and that it would grow back in a couple of years. And I thought the universe was through with me.
Recently, a policeman pulled me over for failure to move. The traffic was being redirected, but I had frozen and held up a long line. I put out my hands, waiting to be cuffed, saying there’s nothing more you can do to me that’s worse than what’s already been done.
He said, “What’s that, ma’am?”
I said, “I have no husband, no friends and no hair.”
He let me go with a warning.

Charlotte Brozek lives in New Jersey and is working on a series of essays about the grieving process.