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You’re Not Alone.

In this section we’ve left at your disposal several articles which may help with grief or questions you may have concerning the funeral service. Should you have questions not addressed in these articles, we invite you to contact us.

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A Tale of Two Funerals

By Dr Bill Webster
Living requires planning, and so does dying. Often, the worst time to resolve all the things that need to be settled after someone dies is after the fact.

 

As difficult as it may be, it is a wise family that ensures everything is in place BEFORE the death occurs, because the emotional upheaval of coping with a death is enough to bear by itself without having to make all the difficult and usually permanent decisions that are required.

 

Standard words to articulate the need for pre-arrangement so far, right? But one family had two opposite experiences which illustrate the point.

 

Doug Jones, a man in his seventies, in spite of knowing he was very ill with cancer, and ignoring encouragement from family members, stubbornly resisted making any final preparations. He refused to make funeral arrangements or talk about a will, and gave no indication of what his wishes would be. His argument was that if he did all these things, it “would be like giving up and he would die.”

 

Guess what! He died anyway, and left his family a mess! No-one could agree on the details of the funeral, whether they should respect Doug’s wishes, which they could only guess at, or which of the numerous varied suggestions from family members would be appropriate. Nothing seemed to satisfy everyone! Feelings were running high and this among a family that had always been very close.

 

The tensions over the funeral were further aggravated by no clear indication of Doug’s wishes regarding the distribution of property and possessions. With no will, there were difficult legal issues to settle. But even deciding on which lawyer should help them through the morass caused great dispute among family members. It wasn’t that people were self-seeking; it was more that they were emotionally drained, and with no guidance, decisions were more difficult. Perhaps it is easier to get upset over a few material assets and possessions than it is to express the grief over losing someone whom you loved. It took many months to settle the estate, and, even worse, several years to restore family feelings.

 

Cathy Jones, the wife and mother in the family, seeing all this, and hurting more over the dissension than the distribution, determined the same thing would not happen when she died. She returned to the same funeral home a few weeks later and made almost identical arrangements to those of her husband. The next call was to her financial planner, who came and helped make good financial suggestions to maintain her lifestyle and protect her estate. She contacted a lawyer and made a will, adding to that document a thorough list of “who gets what” of her possessions. Nothing of any value was omitted. Everything was down in black and white.

 

Seven years later, Cathy died, and even though she did not see it herself, her fondest wish was realized. With all the practical matters settled in advance, the family came together and grieved, and then worked in harmony to effect what their mother had wanted.

 

Was this accomplished just because she had planned ahead? While the family might say that they were grateful for a second chance to “do it right”, it was their mother’s wisdom in clearly making her wishes known that made the difference.

 

From a grief therapist’s point of view, there is no doubt in my mind that grief is reconciled more effectively when the events round the time of a death bring people together rather than driving them apart. The media frenzy surrounding the “end of life” struggles involving the family of Terry Schaivo has given another indication of the difficulties that can arise when wishes are not clearly recorded. One can only imagine the grief, hurt and even animosity that will linger in this situation. There are many reasons why people should pre-arrange, as we all know full well, not least of which because it can assist in the healing process. This should remind us how important it is to create meaningful forums in which families can talk about and clearly articulate their wishes on such important matters.

 

Frequently, after a death, many people struggle with numerous “if only’s.” Having practical arrangements in place enables them to turn those “If only we had” statements into “Thank goodness we did.”

 

Dr Bill Webster is a grief counselor, author and well known speaker. He has a resourceful website at www.griefjourney.com where you can read his articles, watch his TV program or some moving “Moments of Comfort and Hope” or participate in a “let’s talk” forum.

Mom, Dad, We Need to Talk

By Cathy Rondina

 

Talking about death can be difficult but doesn’t have to be something negative.

 

Cynthia Miller had been trying for years to get her 70-year-old mother to talk to her about those difficult “end of life” questions. But even though her mother suffered from a long- term illness, she refused to discuss her financial situation or her preferences regarding long-term care, medical intervention, and funeral arrangements. “When my father found out that he had terminal cancer, he organized everything and paid for it all,” says Miller. She’s thankful for the initiative he took in arranging his personal affairs before he died. So her mother’s determination to avoid the matter was frustrating.

 

Miller worried about upsetting her mother by pursuing things further. “I think my mother felt that if you don’t talk about it, it won’t happen,” she says. But her mother passed away last summer after suffering a stroke then falling and breaking her hip. While she was in the hospital, she did talk to her daughter about her final wishes, but Miller can’t help thinking that it might have been too late.

 

Miller’s anxiety and her mother’s need to distance herself from the topic are both normal reactions, says June Lam, of the Family Services Employee Assistance Program in Toronto. “The idea of talking about death is something people often avoid.” Even in terminal cases, “For most people it’s a case of sill having hope, and we tend to hang on to the hope.”

 

Talking about death can be very difficult, but Lam stresses the need for this type of communication between parents and their adult children: “The topic can be dealt with and it doesn’t have to become something negative. If you talk about things when there aren’t health issues hanging over you, everyone feels more comfortable and clear about what is being decided.” Often, conversations are sparked by the death or hospitalization of a parent’s friend or relative, and this is the perfect time to get the ball rolling. Lam adds that it’s not always the parents who find these talks difficult; adult children can often be the holdouts.

 

Gordon Wusyk of Edmonton, founder of Predictable Futures Inc., assists members of family businesses with estate planning. But his insights can also be helpful to others. He says that baby boomers are now starting to think about how to deal with their own estates, as well as their parents’. He recommends that the inevitability of retirement and death be dealt with long before they occur: “You help expedite the transfer of assets and cut down on the emotional turmoil and confrontation that many families go through. Knowing that things are taken care of means a lot: it gives you control of what will happen, as opposed to the tax department or some third party getting a piece of what you spent a lifetime building.”

 

Let’s talk!
If adult children decide to initiate the conversation: Make sure you feel comfortable talking about it.
If parents plan to start things off: Suggest a family meeting. Let your children know that you want to talk about important family matters.
Use specific language and don’t skirt around the issues. When you dodge the subject, you make everyone feel uncomfortable.
Try to avoid having a meeting during times of crisis. When tensions are high, bad decisions are often made.
Doing the legal stuff first makes people feel more at ease. Then you can lead them into more emotional areas.
Don’t try to tackle everything in one meeting. These things take time.

 

For parents to ponder
Keep your will current. Don’t expect a document that you drew up 20 years ago to be sufficient. Laws change, situations change.
Choose an executor wisely. Many parents choose an adult child. Be sure that your intentions are made clear.
Let everyone in the family or those named in your will know what your objectives are. This way you don’t create any false expectations.
Outline who gets what. With personal items, put all your wishes in writing and let each person know what you’ve chosen to leave them.
Be open about your decisions. If you’re not dividing your estate equally among your children, explain your reasoning and give them time to digest the news.

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Always Go to the Funeral

by DEIRDRE SULLIVAN

 

I believe in always going to the funeral. My father taught me that.

 

The first time he said it directly to me, I was 16 and trying to get out of going to calling hours for Miss Emerson, my old fifth grade math teacher. I did not want to go. My father was unequivocal. “Dee,” he said, “you’re going. Always go to the funeral. Do it for the family.”

 

So my dad waited outside while I went in. It was worse than I thought it would be: I was the only kid there. When the condolence line deposited me in front of Miss Emerson’s shell-shocked parents, I stammered out, “Sorry about all this,” and stalked away. But, for that deeply weird expression of sympathy delivered 20 years ago, Miss Emerson’s mother still remembers my name and always says hello with tearing eyes.

 

That was the first time I went un-chaperoned, but my parents had been taking us kids to funerals and calling hours as a matter of course for years. By the time I was 16, I had been to five or six funerals. I remember two things from the funeral circuit: bottomless dishes of free mints and my father saying on the ride home, “You can’t come in without going out, kids. Always go to the funeral.”

 

Sounds simple — when someone dies, get in your car and go to calling hours or the funeral. That, I can do. But I think a personal philosophy of going to funerals means more than that.

 

“Always go to the funeral” means that I have to do the right thing when I really, really don’t feel like it. I have to remind myself of it when I could make some small gesture, but I don’t really have to and I definitely don’t want to. I’m talking about those things that represent only inconvenience to me, but the world to the other guy. You know, the painfully under-attended birthday party. The hospital visit during happy hour. The Shiva call for one of my ex’s uncles. In my humdrum life, the daily battle hasn’t been good versus evil. It’s hardly so epic. Most days, my real battle is doing good versus doing nothing.

 

In going to funerals, I’ve come to believe that while I wait to make a grand heroic gesture, I should just stick to the small inconveniences that let me share in life’s inevitable, occasional calamity.

 

On a cold April night three years ago, my father died a quiet death from cancer. His funeral was on a Wednesday, middle of the workweek. I had been numb for days when, for some reason, during the funeral, I turned and looked back at the folks in the church. The memory of it still takes my breath away. The most human, powerful and humbling thing I’ve ever seen was a church at 3:00 on a Wednesday full of inconvenienced people who believe in going to the funeral.

What to do when the goldfish dies

by Rebecca Eckler

 

Many parents try to soften the blow with white lies, but a proper burial –or flush-might be best.

 

“I honestly had no idea that flushing a dead fish would create so much drama, “ wrote Julie Cole, mother of six and co-founder of Mabel’s Labels, on her Facebook page recently. “RIP Thomas the Blue Fish.” It was instantly apparent she’d struck a nerve: her loyal Facebook followers soon posted dozens of recollections of their own fish- flushing travails.

 

“Sniff. Sniff. Memories,” one woman posted. “Maddy insisted on a full-out funeral, including chairs, flowers and even neighbours. We were even asked to present a speech. I have to admit, I cried. Poor ‘Goldie.’ We buried him, and the next day dogs had dug him up. Never told Maddy. Sorry for your loss.” Some posters suggested other ways to dispose of dead fish while preserving their kids’ innocence of death. One explained, “We had to take our fish down to Lake Ontario ‘to let it find its family before he died.’ Worked like a charm. No tears!” Others chimed in with cautionary tales. “We once had to bury a fish,” wrote one follower. “Problem is, it died mid-winter and it was too cold to dig a hole. So we froze the fish in a baggie in the freezer one day and it fell out and literally shattered. Fun and games! Thank God for the baggie.” One grandmother relayed how she softened the blow with a romantic twist:

 

“When my granddaughter’s male fish died and we had to flush him, I told her he was going to fish heaven, probably in Bermuda, and when he woke up there he’d be surrounded by gorgeous female fish all saying, ‘OMG, he’s so cute.’ That really made her smile.” I pulled something similar when my daughter’s fish Miss Rosie was flushed. “She’s going to see the mermaids in the ocean,” I lied, which seemed to appease her. Interestingly, what parents did not confess to on Cole’s page was actually telling their children the simple truth: “The fish is dead. It’s going down the toilet because that’s where dead fish go.”

 

When I called Cole to discuss all this, she said, ”I was so surprised by the response. My eight-year-old actually said, ‘Why couldn’t you have been like every other mother and just have gone and bought another fish and tricked us into thinking it was Thomas?’ She wanted me to lie to her!” says Cole, whose company sells personalized labels for kids’ belongings. Her five-year-old on the other hand, barricaded himself in the washroom, a kind of human shield between the dead fish and the toilet-until Cole’s 11-year-old intervened and provided air cover so that Cole could flush the dearly departed while the five-year-old wailed.

 

Parenting expert Alyson Schafer, author of Ain’t Misbehaving, says that if lying to your children about how or where the fish goes after it dies is your worst boo-boo, then it isn’t the biggest deal. However, she believes that the death of a fish can be a teachable moment, especially for the kids of helicopter parents. “Honestly, in the old days, children knew about death,” she says. “They used to go to slaughterhouses on field trips! But now modern parents want to protect their kids form everything.” Letting children experience the emotions that follow a fish’s death is, Schafer says, “good preparation for more important and meaningful deaths in the family, like the dog that’s been with the family for 13 years, or the grandparent.” She suggests that when a goldfish dies, parents should ask children how they’d like to deal with it. Some might choose flushing, while others might prefer a ceremonial burial. “Maybe some would like to get a little cracker box and bury them in the grass and say a few words to Goldie.” She doesn’t believe in sneaking out and buying a new fish and trying to trick kids into believing it’s the same one, because “what you’re really saying to your children is that you don’t trust them to handle emotional things. Having a goldfish die helps build emotional muscles.” Plus, Schafer says, you don’t want your kids to find out you’ve lied to them.

 

But, it seems, many parents have no intention of giving up their “Big Goldfish in the Sky” lies. After all, kids’ grief isn’t as easy to flush as dead goldfish are.

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Helpful Resources

At Turner & Porter, we understand that planning a funeral service, for yourself or for a loved one,
can be a difficult process. Here are some helpful links to make the process a bit easier.

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First Steps.

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Support for Grief and Loss.

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We’ve got the answers.

Our Locations

We have four locations available ready to serve you.

Yorke Chapel

2357 Bloor St W
Toronto
Telephone 416.767.3153
yorkechapel@turnerporter.ca

Butler Chapel

4933 Dundas St W
Etobicoke
Telephone 416.231.2283
butlerchapel@turnerporter.ca

Peel Chapel

2180 Hurontario St
Mississauga
Telephone 905.279.7663
peelchapel@turnerporter.ca

Neweduk Chapel

1981 Dundas St W
Mississauga
Telephone 905.828.8000
newedukchapel@turnerporter.ca