Read Jessica Mitfords (the american way of death) you will learn alot.
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Read Jessica Mitfords (the american way of death) you will learn alot.
Is cremation the cheapest option?
Could you be simply buried on your property instead of in a cemetery (no coffin would seem even simpler). Burning seems like a waste of perfectly good organic material (the bones are inorganic and they get ground up probably just to make them more compact).
Take me up North to the woods and throw me under a tree....barring that, a Viking Funeral.
I have had many different thoughts over the years on what I would like to have happen depending mainly on my age and circumstances at the time. I have come to the conclusion and what I hope happens is whatever makes my family left alive feel the best. Funerals are for the living not the dead. I will return to nature whether it is more immediate with cremation or if they embalm and stick me in a triple layer cement etc. box and it takes a thousand years.
Whatever makes my kids and wife happy. The cheaper the better.
There's movie about a guy who ended that way (along with his girlfriend) - the bear didn't fare too well ;)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gWycuaWJFCM
It's a really good movie, though (especially if you're partial the euro-sensibilities of the director like I am).
Cremation produces quite a bit of air pollution.
The "greenest" ways I have seen are the new "liquification" process or a cemetery in California that does "natural" burials. No embalming, no caskets, no vault, no headstones. It is on a mountainside and left to nature. If someone wants to visit your grave the admin office loans them a GPS and gives the coordinates for your grave.