![]() |
|
|
|
#16
|
||||
|
||||
It makes perfect sense to me. Once I'm done with this husk, might as well feed something else with it. My wife's culture buries without embalming and without any sort of casket. The corpse is tied up into a fetal position at home by female relatives and the men bury the dead in a fairly shallow grave. A reed is inserted into the tomb to allow the dead's spirit to leave after three days. The grave is visited by male relatives on the morning of the third day when the spirit is fed with red corn meal to help speed it on it's way. After that, the grave is abandoned and not visited again. It's irrelevant from that point on and is no more important that the trash in the dump. I've seen quite a few older graves that are eroding out, and nobody cares. Modern approach-avoidance of the reality of dead people is odd. I never go to family funerals for that reason. They are, to me, bizarre beyond understanding. My final instructions are clear to all, either cremate me and dump me in the creek and have a big party and get drunk, or bury me in the pasture with my animals and have a big party and get drunk. No casket, no makeup, no embalming.
__________________
You're a daisy if you do. __________________________________ 84 Euro 240D 4spd. 220.5k sold ![]() 04 Honda Element AWD 1985 F150 XLT 4x4, 351W with 270k miles, hay hauler 1997 Suzuki Sidekick 4x4 1993 Toyota 4wd Pickup 226K and counting |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
I have often thought of simply leaving my body to the local medical college. If we want good medical professionals in the future, we have to train them. I thought maybe I would leave a video message to the students who would be cutting me up. Explain different things they should find and how the injuries happened. Tell them it is ok with me for them to laugh and point and make jokes and that I will be watching and laughing with them. Maybe include some footage of me at different ages so they can better understand the aging process and its effects on a person. Once I am finished with this body, I see no reason why it can't be usefull to other good people.
Then again as Josie Wales says: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ML6oLuLecQ4 |
#18
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Quote:
He opened my eyes to alternative end-of-game rituals. He was the first in the family to forgo the traditional casket and funeral route with burial in our plot on the hill in the village cemetary. I became an organ donor (he was supposed to be but the cancer just ravaged him) and will be sending what's left to UConn Med School thanks to his blazing the trail. I'd like to have what's left blended into a fertilizer and spread on the front lawn or something. ![]()
__________________
![]() 1980 300TD-China Blue/Blue MBTex-2nd Owner, 107K (Alt Blau) OBK #15 '06 Chevy Tahoe Z71 (for the wife & 4 kids, current mule) '03 Honda Odyssey (son #1's ride, reluctantly) '99 GMC Suburban (255K+ miles, semi-retired mule) 21' SeaRay Seville (summer escape pod) |
#19
|
||||
|
||||
We put burred my grandfathers ash's over one of his favorite fishing spots.
I have the GPS coordinates if I ever want to visit.
__________________
2016 Corvette Stingray 2LT 1969 280SE 2023 Ram 1500 2007 Tiara 3200 |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
Certainly beats being embalmed and displayed like a prize in an over-priced casket. The funeral industry preys on the mournful and sad. Although I don't think I'd want to be the "facilitator" I can see where a practice like this makes sense. Our bodies are nothing after we die, and unless we are in a culture where organ donation goes on, worth nothing. At least this way, animals get to eat. Circle of life.
|
#21
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
![]() |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
My brother passed away when he was 37 (Kidney failure), We 'donated' a bench to the local public park system (the remaining 5 sbilings and 2 parents couldnt agree on a final plan
![]()
__________________
2009 Kia Sedona 2009 Honda Odyssey EX-L 12006 Jetta Pumpe Duse (insert Mercedes here) Husband, Father, sometimes friend =) |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
1977 300d 70k--sold 08 1985 300TD 185k+ 1984 307d 126k--sold 8/03 1985 409d 65k--sold 06 1984 300SD 315k--daughter's car 1979 300SD 122k--sold 2/11 1999 Fuso FG Expedition Camper 1993 GMC Sierra 6.5 TD 4x4 1982 Bluebird Wanderlodge CAT 3208--Sold 2/13 |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Not sure if it's common practice.
__________________
1983 M-B 240D-Gone too. 1976 M-B 300D-Departed. "Good" is the worst enemy of "Great". |
#25
|
||||
|
||||
I will donate my body to science fiction.
|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
I figure I have enough bumps, fractures and what-not to be interesting/informative. Providing the back-story might just help some doctor someday know what some injury or illness can do to a patient they are helping. I think the trick any more is making sure your carcus goes where you want instead of being sold by the school to someplace else. My organs are not good material for organ donation for some other reasons, but one I'm toast, no reason they can't disect and learn. Wait until they get to my poor toes, "What the heck was that guy kicking?" (karate). I've taken two really nasty bumps to the back of my head so I'd be curious if there was any skull/brain damage (no, I cannot explain away the way I am THAT easy!) And a bunch of other injuries (all my own fault).
Wife has a brother who was the recipient of donated kidney and pancreas. She has signed up (and told me her wishes) for organ donation. I think she and I both figure "heck if I'm outa here, use what you need". Another interesting way to do it is "The Facility", as it is know at the University of Tennesse. Place where they study bodies decaying in various manners to gain insight for criminal investigations. I suspect more than a few real bad guys are in jail due to the knowledge investigators have gained with that place. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Tennessee_Anthropological_Research_Facility |
#27
|
||||
|
||||
UCLA had a bout of bad publicity when it turned out their cadaver donation program was being misused by some administrator who was selling tissue, mostly bone for fusion surgery, for profit.
The human body, except for the few artifical parts we add to them, is highly biodegradeable, so why not take advantage of that feature? Think of all the real estate that has been pre-empted from productive use due to cadaver disposal. |
#28
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
![]()
__________________
![]() 1980 300TD-China Blue/Blue MBTex-2nd Owner, 107K (Alt Blau) OBK #15 '06 Chevy Tahoe Z71 (for the wife & 4 kids, current mule) '03 Honda Odyssey (son #1's ride, reluctantly) '99 GMC Suburban (255K+ miles, semi-retired mule) 21' SeaRay Seville (summer escape pod) |
#29
|
||||
|
||||
Those wacky Tibetans!
__________________
" We have nothing to fear but the main stream media itself . . . ."- Adapted from Franklin D Roosevelt for the 21st century ![]() OBK #55 1998 Lincoln Continental - Sold Max 1984 300TD 285,000 miles - Sold The Dee8gonator 1987 560SEC 196,000 miles - Sold Orgasmatron - 2006 CLS500 90,000 miles 2002 C320 Wagon 122,000 miles 2016 AMG GTS 12,000 miles |
#30
|
||||
|
||||
I like the Viking Burial myself...due to the economics of being dead I don't want to saddle the living with having to make costly decisions so I am requesting to be dressed in my finest furs and have my Manolo Blahniks on my tootsies as I am rolled into that giant microwave. The ashes are to be put into a Frangelica bottle and or Ben and Jerry's ice cream carton which ever is empty at the time.
My dad, aunt and uncle Zorro all did the Neptune Society thing where they get your body, cremate it and spread the ashes at sea. The state of Virginia frowns on such things....
__________________
"It's normal for these things to empty your wallet and break your heart in the process." 2012 SLK 350 1987 420 SEL |
![]() |
Bookmarks |
|
|