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how do you convey to your loved ones that you want a godless sending-out? Not that it'll matter to me if I were gone, I guess. The folks could could send me up in a burning barge across the Delaware River with prayers to Odin for all I'd know.
Actually, in my family, there is no strong tradition of church-going. Arrangements for burials and sermons are kind of hurried affairs with a Rent-A-Rev. My grandmother's funeral a few years back kind of irritated me because the young Lutheran priest--our people being tentatively Lutheran, my father's dog tags stating "No Preference" and my grandfather's having been baptized something like a couple dozen times in different denominations during the Depression for the free suppers afterwards notwithstanding--kept referring to Grandmom as God's servant. I was taken aback by a mental image of her with a bucket and mop at a church--"Anything else you want tidying up, your Omnipotence? Because I'd like to get home for Jeopardy & Wheel of Fortune." My own folks have picked out their burial plots, but I'm at odds to figure how they want to go out at all. My father is cynical and probably anti-religion (he's never said a good thing about it.) He kind of reminds me of an old quote whose originator I can't place--"It is my intention my children should be brought up in their father's religion, if they can figure out what it is." My mum fits the profile of "not religious but spiritual." She's a terrifically ethical person. I can't imagine church would do anything but take away from her. Yet both might ask for the traditional pattern of "let's haul some poor collared fellow into a funeral home, give him the factual once-over, and get some kind of churchly sanction over this shoveling-in ceremony."
Knowing me, they'd be fine with a classic rock themed musical score and personal reminiscence in lieu of a so-called "proper burial", and would probably be cool with my desire to be cremated (of what's left--my organs having been somewhat more than "gently used") should I predecease them.
My husband is a stickier matter. His family is church-going old-school Catholic. I would try to carry out a ceremony in keeping with his desires, but the catch is, it would probably completely alienate and maybe even upset his people, if he were to go in an untimely way. The funerals "are" for the living, after all--and most of his living family believes. I actually wonder if there's a way to side-step a Mass, if there's a good way to do a cremation (we're neither of us from cremation-traditions) in a way where I'm not suddenly the bad person for carrying out what he and I already had talked about. What is the way to negotiate between what he and I consider truth, versus the wishes of the rest of his family?
It's a melancholy thought, but I guess it's one we all face eventually. Anyone ever plan a nontheist funeral? How did the believing grievers react?
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