It's important to recognize that funerals and memorial
ceremonies are for the living ... for those who are affected
by the loss of a loved one. It is through the funeral process
that a number of emotional needs are met for those who grieve.
A funeral is similar to other ceremonies in our lives. Like
a graduation ceremony, a wedding, a baptism, and a bar mitzvah,
a funeral is a rite of passage by which we recognize an important
event that distinguishes our lives.
The funeral declares that a death has occurred. It celebrates
the life that has been lived, and offers family and friends
the opportunity to pay tribute to their loved one.
The gathering of family and friends for a time of sharing
and funeral service helps to provide emotional support so
needed at this time. This will help those who grieve to face
the reality of death and consequently, to take the first step
toward a healthy emotional adjustment.
The funeral can and does take on many varied forms. Funerals
can last from minutes to months and are usually influenced
by the lifestyle and values of the bereaved family and friends.
"What Options Are Available in Services
and Disposition?"
A valuable aspect of contemporary funerals is their individuality.
Whether a ceremony is elaborate or simple, funerals are often
individualized to reflect the life of the deceased and to
hold special meaning for family and other survivors. A service
may reflect one's religious beliefs as a reaffirmation of
faith in a greater life beyond this world. Some families choose
to reflect upon the occupation or hobbies of the deceased,
and some choose to center the service around an ethnic background
or social affiliation.
In our society, three basic forms of final disposition are
practiced. The first is earth burial, which continues to be
the form of disposition chosen most often.
Cremation is also a choice. This is a process of preparing
the body for final disposition whereby the body is reduced
by intense heat over several hours to a few pounds of small
fragments. These cremated remains are usually placed in an
urn, which may be buried, placed in a memorial niche, or kept
in some other location. Cremated remains may also be scattered
where permitted by law.
Finally, entombment in a crypt is also a choice and is one
of the oldest forms of disposition. Today many cemeteries
maintain crypts for entombment, which may be in a mausoleum
or in an outdoor garden.
"What Does a Funeral Director Do?"
It has been estimated that over 136 individual activities
must take place in order for one funeral to be conducted.
The funeral director is actually an organizational specialist.
Here is a condensed list of some of the more visible activities
of a typical funeral director.
- Removal and transferring the deceased from place of death
to the Funeral Home.
- Professional care of the deceased, which may include sanitary
washing, embalming preparation, restorative art, dressing,
hairdressing, casketing and cosmetology.
- Conduct a complete consultation with family members to
gather necessary information and to discuss specific arrangements
for a funeral.
- File all certificates, permits, affidavits, and authorizations,
as may be required.
- Acquire a requested amount of certified copies of the
death certificate needed to settle the estate of the deceased.
- Compile information and create an obituary for placement
in the newspaper and/or website of the family's choice.
- Make arrangements with a family's choice of clergy person,
church, music, etc.
- Make arrangements with cemetery, crematory, or other place
of disposition.
- The providing of a register book, prayer cards, funeral
folders, and acknowledgements, as requested by a family.
- Offer the assistance of notifying relatives and friends.
- Arrange for clergy honorariums, music, flowers, death
certificates, obituaries, additional transportation, etc.
- Care and arrangement of floral pieces and the post funeral
distribution as directed by a family.
- Arrange for pallbearers, automobiles, and special services
(fraternal or military) as requested by a family
- Care and preservation of all floral cards, mass cards,
or other memorial contributions presented to the funeral
home.
- Your funeral director, with his/her staff personnel, will
direct the funeral in a most professional manner, and be
in complete charge of the funeral procession to the cemetery
or other place of disposition.
- Assist a family with social security, veterans insurance,
grief counseling, and other death-related claims.
- A post funeral meeting, by the funeral director, with
a family, to deliver such things as the register book, floral
and mass cards, and to ascertain whether or not he/she can
be of further assistance.
|