sailorstitch
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2010
- Messages
- 2,350
To add to the zombie thread, because... tis the season. 
When I was 17 on of my best friends was killed in a car crash.
Her dad was driving drunk
, ran a red light and turned in front of a semi truck! The truck hit the passenger side where my friend was sitting. She had an open casket funeral. She looked fine. I believe all her injuries were internal. I certainly didn't see any signs of trauma.
My dad passed away last Nov from Parkinson's. When the nursing home called us to let us know that he had passed, they asked if mom and I wanted to come see him. Mom went, I declined. I didn't want to see him again until the funeral home had made him presentable. It just wasn't a memory that I wanted to have. It was hard enough seeing him the day before. And not just because he was suffering. He just wasn't pleasant to look at. Sorry, dad, I'll wait until you're all prettied up.
Open casket funerals have never bothered me. We had a lot of elderly family members and friends die when I was young. They all died of natural causes/old age. They all had open casket funerals. My parents always took me along with them. Seeing a body in the casket was never traumatic for me. It was just normal. I didn't go to my first closed casket funeral until I was in middle school. THEN I started asking questions. "Why's the casket closed?" "Why can't I see the body?"
For me, I want to be cremated and have my ashes spread out in WDW! No joke, that's what I want.
sailorstitch

When I was 17 on of my best friends was killed in a car crash.


My dad passed away last Nov from Parkinson's. When the nursing home called us to let us know that he had passed, they asked if mom and I wanted to come see him. Mom went, I declined. I didn't want to see him again until the funeral home had made him presentable. It just wasn't a memory that I wanted to have. It was hard enough seeing him the day before. And not just because he was suffering. He just wasn't pleasant to look at. Sorry, dad, I'll wait until you're all prettied up.

Open casket funerals have never bothered me. We had a lot of elderly family members and friends die when I was young. They all died of natural causes/old age. They all had open casket funerals. My parents always took me along with them. Seeing a body in the casket was never traumatic for me. It was just normal. I didn't go to my first closed casket funeral until I was in middle school. THEN I started asking questions. "Why's the casket closed?" "Why can't I see the body?"

For me, I want to be cremated and have my ashes spread out in WDW! No joke, that's what I want.

sailorstitch