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Bereavement

Simple funeral and people kept away

(38 Posts)
Bunny1 Thu 21-Jan-21 18:03:19

Would really like GN’s thoughts on this, I cannot figure this out. I had lived next door to my neighbour for 30 years. She was elderly, about 75 and died late last year, and her husband of 34 years died in late 2019 of a heart attack. She has one son by her first husband and the husband has a son by his first wife. She had always been prickly although I got on well with the husband and was on friendly terms with her son.
The couple both had a good relationship with her own son, but she had deliberately ostracised her step-son and they had had no contact with him for years. Anyway, I am really puzzled by the nature of the husband’s funeral. She did not let the neighbours know that he had died, he was suddenly absent.
Recently I have got to know further details of the funeral. Her own son was deliberately not told about the death, nor invited to the funeral. She told her husband’s family about his death but only 3 days before the funeral was to take place, in an attempt to keep them away. It was a very modest funeral, only the wife there, and the husband’s family had managed to get there, so about 8 people in total. Neighbours were not invited and no friends were present even though he was very sociable. The short ‘service’ was led by a crem staff member, there was a reading and a piece of music, with no hymns/eulogy/order of service booklet/flowers or charity donations. The wife was driven to the crem by the husband’s relative, so no limousine, and she wore inappropriate clothing, something casual. Afterwards the wife was driven home again and she just bid goodbye to the relative, no wake or refreshments provided for anyone. There was no memorial in garden of remembrance or anything similar.
They certainly had the money to afford a grander ceremony and I do believe they loved each other. She had not fallen out with her son so he could have been invited. Apparently the husband had not requested a minimal funeral without guests, it was her decision. Why would anyone organise that kind of funeral? Shock? Depression?

BBbevan Sat 12-Jun-21 09:28:35

There is also a Direct’ funeral. The deceased is taken to the crematorium. ( sorry but I really dislike ‘the crem ’) . The ashes are offered to the family sometime later. Apparently Anita Brookner chose this type of departure. No people, no coffin, no flowers, nothing. Just celebrate their life in the way you may want. The choice these days is yours.

Shelflife Sat 12-Jun-21 09:29:11

Shocking indeed! However to his really is nothing to do with you !

Shelflife Sat 12-Jun-21 09:29:47

Is nothing!

NotSpaghetti Sat 12-Jun-21 09:38:22

Bunny1

Thanks for all your comments. There have been investigations by the son because of problems with the estate, and he has uncovered evidence which shows that she caused her husband's death! Shocking!

That she caused her husband's death is more extraordinary than the funeral arrangements!!

Elegran Sat 12-Jun-21 09:41:56

Did you know about the investigation when you posted your original message, Bunny1? If you did, I suspect that your motives for asking for our thoughts were not puzzlement, but more a plan to spread the gossip.

Witzend Sat 12-Jun-21 09:49:46

A funeral we attended a few months ago consisted of just 5 of us having a glass of wine and nibbles and reminiscing about the departed (an atheist who’d not wanted any fuss) in the crem chapel, with him in his coffin nearby. I didn’t know him well but apparently he’d have approved thoroughly.

As for ‘suitable’ clothes, my father hated my mother wearing anything black, so for his funeral she wore a brightly patterned, largely red dress, and requested no black on anyone else.

My DF had also said he’d come back and haunt anyone who wasted money on flowers for his funeral. So there was just one very small posy on the coffin, placed by my mother, since she’d have loved him to come back and haunt her!

Toadinthehole Sat 12-Jun-21 17:05:23

I know, when the time comes, I won’t be in a good place if my husband goes before me. The funeral you describe is probably what I’d want. Just children/ grandchildren. Certainly no wake. The others can if they want, but I know I wouldn’t be able to.

Obviously, if she had something to do with his death, that could explain it too. However, I imagine people deal with grief in many different ways.

lemsip Sat 12-Jun-21 17:11:25

Bunny1 I realise you first posted in january so not current...but, it is none of your business and you really should mind your own.....This is what causes neighbours fall outs.

Kim19 Sat 12-Jun-21 17:18:11

I've asked my children to be the only ones at my cremation (if they are willing/able, of course). If any more are there I will come back and haunt them. More fool them if they waste hard earned cash on the current rip-offs. That's not my idea of a measure of love.

Hithere Sat 12-Jun-21 18:41:33

Bbevan
That sounds awesome!

annsixty Sat 12-Jun-21 19:16:06

My H died 2years ago aged 83, he had had dementia for several years but was diagnosed with cancer just weeks before he died.
In that last week everyone he loved and who loved him said their goodbyes and I sat with him most of the day, I was holding his hand when he died.
We had discussed when we were younger our feelings about funerals and neither wanted one.
I used a local funeral director who couldn’t have been more understanding and my H was taken to his Chapel of rest and then to the crematorium early one morning.
Only I knew the day and the time and no one but the funeral and his staff were present.
I was very happy with my decision and I have told my family I want just the same for me.
His ashes are in my wardrobe waiting for mine to join them and we will be scattered together at places my family know about.

annsixty Sat 12-Jun-21 19:17:11

Should read funeral director of course.