Caleb Wilde

Caleb Wilde

(218 comments, 980 posts)

I'm a sixth generation funeral director. I have a grad degree in Missional Theology and a Certification in Thanatology.

And I like to read and write.

Connect with my writing and book plans by "liking" me on facebook. And keep tabs with my blog via subscription or twitter.

Posts by Caleb Wilde

Ten Tips to Help Children Grieve

In the Western world, death is one of the last taboos.  Death has become so sterile … so unspeakable … so frightful … so improper … that we assume we MUST protect the innocent souls from it’s darkness.  In many parental minds, those “innocent souls” who need the most protection are our children.  So we shield them from death, and keep them away from funerals, viewings and the dead.

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Death, though, isn’t something that we CAN protect our children from.  As much as we want to give our children security and answers to their questions, death, by it’s very nature, takes away security and only provides questions.  The desire to protect our children from death is understandable, but it is a part of life that — if ignored — only becomes more difficult, more frightening and more harmful.  It’s a part of life that may provide some of the best teaching moments for your children.  Teaching moments where you can share that:

Life has an end.

Love continues on.

We have to live and love as much as we can because we don’t know how long we have.

All of us will die, so we must pursue our dreams and enjoy the life we’ve been given.

Not only should we recognize that death confrontation provides our children with incredible teaching moments, we should also realize that children do indeed grieve.  They are connected.  They love.  They feel.  And so when death comes, they grieve.  Depending on their developmental stage, they will grieve differently than adults.  But as long as they are apart of our family, of the community of the deceased, they have the right to grieve with us.

Here are a few helpful tips that I’ve gathered from three separate Counseling journals about how to help your children grieve:

  • When death happens, have a close relative, preferable a parent, tell the child about it immediately.
  • Stay close to the child, giving them physical affection.  Instead of pushing them farther away from the community during death, draw them closer into it.  
  • Children grieve in cycles. For example, they may be more inclined to play and divert their focus from the death when the death is recent and parents are grieving intensely. More than adults, children need time to take a break from grief. It is important to know that it’s okay to take a break. Having fun or laughing is not disrespectful to the person who died; this is a vital part of grieving, too.
  • Avoid euphemisms such as, “passed on,” “gone away,” “departed”.  In and of itself, the concept of death is difficult enough for a child to understand; using euphemisms will only add to the difficulty.
  • Advise the child to attend the funeral, but do not force him or her to go.  The funeral and viewing is the community expression of grief.  As a part of the community, it’s valuable for the child to take part in that expression.  Questions will arise.  But, those questions are necessarily.  And it’s okay if you don’t have the answers.  Part of the reason why many of us DON’T take children to viewings and funerals is because we’re afraid of our children seeing us grieve … we’re afraid of our children seeing us in a state of weakness.  
  • Let the child see you grieve; it gives them permission to grieve on their own.  “It will help the child to see the remaining parent, friends and relatives grieve.  Grief shared is grief diminished…if everyone acts stoically around the child, he or she will be confused by the incongruity. If children get verbal or nonverbal cues that mourning is unacceptable, they cannot address the mourning task.”
  • Gently help the child grasp the concept of death.  Avoid vague explanations to the child’s questions, but answer each question as honestly as possible.
  • Keep other stressing situations, such as moving or changing schools to a minimum; after the ceremonies, continue child’s regular routines.
  • Be honest with the child about the depth of the pain he or she will feel.  “You may say, ‘this is the most awful thing could happen to you.’ Contrary to popular belief, minimizing the grief does not help.
  • Feed your child copious amounts of bacon and pizza.  Because kummerspeck isn’t always a bad thing.

 

23 Amusing Funeral Home Names

One.
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Two.7c925d293bc64f00340124cfd31f7712

Three.93b473cb3c3c49e3b104da1178e2b4c6_L

Four.  amigone funeral home

Five.  assman funeral home

Six.  aycock funeral home

Seven.  bad funeral home names

Eight.  baloney funeral home

Nine.  bizzarro funeral home

Ten.  download

Eleven.dye funeral home

Twelve.  enhanced-buzz-13776-1280868420-15

Thirteen.  enhanced-buzz-13781-1280868401-15

Fourteen.  funeral home fails

Fifteen.  funeral name fail

Sixteen.  funeral-home

Seventeen.  gross funeral home

Eighteen.  Photo by caleb_wilde

Nineteen.  ronald mcdonald funeral home

Twenty.  s-BEST-FUNERAL-HOME-SLOGANS-large

Twenty-One. unfortunate funeral home names

Twenty-Two.worst funeral home name ever

Twenty-Three.worst funeral home names all time

Tibetan Sky Burial: 36 Photos

What you are about to see is disturbing.  If you are sensitive to violent images, please do not view these photos.

“The idea of your body being taken apart and flown into the air in a million different directions is really, really powerful ….” — Caitlin Doughty

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Via the always authoritative Wikipedia:

Sky burial (Tibetanབྱ་གཏོར་w bya gtor), lit. “alms for the birds”[1]) is a funerary practice in the Chinese provinces of TibetQinghaiSichuan andInner Mongolia and in Mongolia proper wherein a human corpse is incised in certain locations and placed on a mountaintop, exposing it to the elements (mahabhuta) and animals – especially predatory birds. The locations of preparation and sky burial are understood in the Vajrayanatraditions as charnel grounds.

The majority of Tibetans and many Mongolians adhere to Vajrayana Buddhism, which teaches the transmigration of spirits. There is no need to preserve the body, as it is now an empty vessel. Birds may eat it or nature may cause it to decompose. The function of the sky burial is simply to dispose of the remains in as generous a way as possible (the source of the practice’s Tibetan name). In much of Tibet and Qinghai, the ground is too hard and rocky to dig a grave, and, due to the scarcity of fuel and timber, sky burials were typically more practical than the traditional Buddhist practice of cremation. In the past, cremation was limited to high lamas and some other dignitaries,[2] but modern technology and difficulties with sky burial have led to its increasing use by commoners.[3]

Grumpy Cat Meets the Funeral Industry

I was channeling my inner grumpy cat and this is what I came up with.  Yes, some are extremely cheesy, others in bad taste, others are for those inside the industry, but maybe there’s one that makes you laugh.

Do you have any Grumpy Cat lines?

Eight (Kinda Weird) Things People Do In Cemeteries

Some like to model in cemeteries.  1825_583335668357465_146223514_n

Other’s prefer to play in bounce houses.  73334_635811996443165_1637666633_n

 

Apparently some even hunt in cemeteries.  971584_649631581727873_38751223_n

Grill.  And throw down some beer.  1003137_629142783776753_1090668843_n

Play.  734483_771109099580120_212054006_n

Exercise in the peace and quiet.  1470251_713071312050566_1244216504_n

 

Some people build Zombie snowmen in cemeteries.

Presentation1

This guys has lived in a cemetery for 15 years.  Here’s his STORY.

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