Why Do We Have Funerals and/or Life
Celebrations
" Every culture known to man has devised rituals
and ceremonies to deal with the troubling facts of mortality: that
love hurts; that a death in the family, like a birth, must be
observed; and that grief is the price paid on that love."
We have some type of ritual because someone
lived and their life was worth remembering. A ritual provides the
following benefits for everyone:
- Helps confirm the reality and finality of
death
- Provides a supportive environment for mourning and
the expression of grief
- Allows the sorrow of one to be shared by many
- Is one of the few times love is given and not
expected in return
- Is an opportunity for the community of friends and
family to pay its respects
- Encourages the affirmation of religious or
spiritual faith
- Is a declaration that a life of value has
been lived and insures that the memory will live on through some
type of permanent memorialization.
Please Remember: " A funeral is not just for you.....its for those that
loved you."
A service can be arranged to provide these benefits in any number
of ways. Although different religious communities have created set
formats or rituals that they follow in conducting funeral services,
there really is not a right or wrong way to do a service or a life
celebration. A well designed service should try to accomplish four
things:
- To Remember - Through stories,
photo collages, music, eulogies, and video tributes, family and
friends have an opportunity to reflect on the loved one's impact on
others. Most people influence others more profoundly than they
realize, and services of some type can give us an opportunity to
reflect on those contributions. Our funeral directors can help you
select and display memorabilia to help you remember life's special
moments.
- To Reaffirm - A
personally-meaningful ceremony helps us identify the spiritual
principles that anchor us in the midst of loss, allowing us to
reaffirm some basic beliefs and values. For families who are
connected to a faith community, the clergyperson and familiar
customs of your faith will help shepherd you through this
experience. Families who don't consider themselves religious often
ask for a member of the clergy to lead the service. And if you
don't have someone, one of our directors can help you find just the
right person to lead the service - someone experienced in working
with bereaved families.
- To Realize - We live in a world
that frequently denies death's reality and thinks that the sooner
we get it over with, the better things will be. Unfortunately,
that's not really how our emotions work; feelings denied don't go
away....but rather manifest themselves later in negative,
unconstructive ways. Selecting a casket and/or urn, seeing the body
after proper preparation, attending the service, and going to the
cemetery or other final resting place all help us realize that
death has occurred, and that the world has now changed for us.
Whether choosing burial or cremation, you can have a formal
visitation for the family and friends, an intimate family-only
viewing, or something in between. Even if choosing cremation, you
can have the body present for the service. The cremation can be
performed at any time during the service period.
- To Release - The final need we
all experience in grief is the need to say goodbye to our loved
one. Of course, we never completely "recover" from the loss, nor do
we ever finish saying goodbye. In many ways, our loved ones
continue to have an impact on us for the rest of our lives via the
memories we shared together.
"As unlikely as it seems right now, there will come a time when
the pain of grieving will be less than the joy of remembering. It
will come."
A Service or a Gathering of some type helps us
begin the healing and renewal process. Our funeral director's job
is to work with your family, faith community and friends to craft a
personally-meaningful funeral or memorial gathering, a gathering
that can help your family and friends with the long, often painful
journey we call grief.