This was the first time in my life I’ve gone to a funeral home to make arrangements for someone who has died. Maybe that’s unusual; I don’t know. But I was unprepared for how utterly strange it all seemed.
My brother and I sat across the table from each other in the funeral home meeting room, both struggling to keep our chins off our chests. Outside, a thin rain fell in fits and starts. On the other side of the door, there was what I can only describe as an Irish wake going on, with lots of music and raucous laughter and loud talking. We did our best to focus on the task at hand.
The very nice woman leading us through the process helped us with the paperwork, tweaking the format of the obituary, etc. Then it was on to the choices.
Did we want to spend time with our mother at the funeral home before the cremation? To me, at least, she’s not there anymore. No, thanks.
Did we want to attend the cremation? You mean like a Viking funeral, I thought? No, thanks.
Apparently fingerprint jewelry and other keepsakes are very popular, she said. Did we want the funeral home to take a fingerprint of our mother for this purpose? No, thanks.
At this point, I wondered if they were going to ask us if we wanted a death mask made, or perhaps a full-body 3D scan that could be imported into CAD software? But instead, it was on to the urn display wall.
Every urn had a little “mini-me” urn of the same design, apparently so we could scatter most of the ashes but retain a little keepsake amount. Even the porcelain inlaid urn that looked like a Fabergé egg had a little miniature version, like a tiny colorful perfume bottle, or something that would hold your favorite thimble. Don’t get me started on the ones with the laminated photo on the top – sort of a permanent “Have you seen me?” milk carton.
Just the plain box is fine, thanks.
But wait. They actually have special containers designed to make ash scattering easier. These are basically tall cardboard tubes with cutouts so you can easily pop open the top, like a tissue box. And they can be wrapped in all kinds of different photographic designs – the sample had a golf theme!
As much as I wanted to see the catalog with all the cardboard urn photo designs, it was a polite no to that one, too.
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The one brilliant moment came when we were struggling a bit to fill in the official forms, which absolutely required that something be entered under “Profession.” My mother had various jobs throughout her life, but she didn’t need to work to earn a living. She worked in a flower shop for years, she worked in several insurance offices, she ushered at American Players Theater and the Overture Center, among other things. Something like “homemaker” was reductive and would have made her unhappy.
“I’ve got it,” my brother said. “Florist!”
“Perfect,” I said.