Honoring The Wishes of Those Who Didn’t Want a Funeral

Loved ones who are grieving may ultimately make different decisions

If someone doesn’t want to have a funeral or memorial, they should still take into account the feelings and grief of those left behind

By Marijke Vroomen Durning

Funerals, shivas, memorials and other rites that mark a death are a fact of life. They bring together people to mark the deceased’s life and passing, while providing comfort, support and a sense of community. But more and more, people are opting not to have a traditional service or rite, choosing something different or even nothing at all. Those left behind after a death may have strong feelings about those wishes, especially if the instructions run counter to their own ideas and beliefs.

“I think it’s important to honor the person who has died and their wishes,” said Candi Cann, an associate professor of religion at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. “But I also think it’s important to honor the needs of the person who is left behind, and sometimes those [wishes and needs] don’t always match up.”

“Everybody has different ways they want to remember the people they love.”

The important thing is those who are left behind get the support they need, so there must be a conversation that lays this all out before someone dies, she said.

Talking about death and dying in the past was natural because it was so common, even among children. This changed as medicine began to improve in the 1900s and death became a more sensitive topic as doctors did everything they could to keep their patients alive. Death was considered a failure and it became a subject that wasn’t openly discussed among family and friends. But we need to start talking about it again so everyone is on the same page, without assumptions and, hopefully, without bad feelings, Cann added.

No Funeral Please

Kelly Erb, a lawyer in Pennsylvania, has had this conversation with her husband and children more than once. Being part of a large family exposed Erb to death from a young age.

“I grew up in the rural south and it’s very community-oriented, and also very community-oriented around churches,” she explained. “So if someone in the church were to die, for example, it was expected that you would go to the funeral.”

One of Erb’s first funerals was for a girl who was about 14 years old when she died in a car accident and it left a strong impression because the girl in the open casket didn’t look at all like the girl Erb knew when she was alive.

Later, Erb began her career as an estate attorney, advising clients on end-of-life issues. These personal and professional experiences all had an impact on her. She decided that she would not have a funeral. A party is fine, she said, but not a funeral.

“I’ve joked about that with my kids. I want them to play ‘My Way,’ and it has to be the Elvis version,” she said. “We’re usually talking about death in that way. I feel like so many times, with respect to these services, we have one idea of what should happen. And everybody grieves differently. Everybody has different ways they want to remember the people they love. I wouldn’t want anybody to tell [my kids] how they have to remember me or how they have to mourn me. And if that is them sitting around and watching a movie that I really, really liked, they can do that.”

Honoring a Loved One’s Wishes

Laurie (a pseudonym) lost her husband unexpectedly earlier this year. He didn’t want a funeral either. So when he died, Laurie felt she needed to respect his wishes but she admitted this left her feeling isolated as she mourned. Laurie said that had she done the traditional Jewish funeral and shiva, a period of seven days when people visit, bring food, and provide support, she may not have felt so alone. But she did manage to find support in other ways.

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