Why do kids go free?

Charles 30 Comments
Charles

Graveyard with lots of tributes and toys

 

“We lost our son at 22 weeks … My husband and I were not religious so we had a small cremation. The funeral company did not charge us for the service. A humanist also held a short service for us and yet again there was no charge. I know money isn’t everything but it was so lovely to know this wasn’t an additional thing to have to worry about.” A mum on Mumsnet.

Commodification is when something done for nothing becomes something sold for money. The dead used to be cared for, free, by members of the community, whose work had no market value. It does now, though. It’s been commodified.

Bereaved people often find it hard to get their heads around this business of making money out of misery. Many undertakers aren’t entirely comfortable with their commercial function, either, which is why the word ‘service’ is so prominent in their vocabulary.

Presumably it’s also why hardly any of them charge for the funerals of children.

What does that say? It’s not as if the workload is any less. On the contrary, it’s likely to be far greater, both physically and emotionally. Sure, many parents are unprepared for the expense of arranging a funeral, but they’re not the only ones. Is it because the death of a child is particularly, poignantly tragic? Okay then, what about the death of a young bride on her honeymoon? What about suicides? Hit-and-run victims?

Is it that charging for adults is bad enough, but that charging for children would just be going too far? If that really is the message, it shows some undertakers to be very unconvinced commodifiers – as, indeed, some are. It’s why a few of them hardly charge enough to put food on their tables. They’d love to be able to wind the clock back and do it for nothing.

Some undertakers may feel like this, but not all. Offering free funerals for children is cynically reckoned by some to be an eyecatching loss-leader. It lends an aura of compassion to what is actually an act of ingratiation, because one child’s funeral earns you, what, three adult funerals? Someone in marketing, we may be sure, will have done the maths.

So: who pays? There’s no such thing as a free funeral, obviously. No, the funerals of babies and children are subsidised by either by the profits of the funerals of adults, or the marketing budget, or the undertaker. If the undertaker is taking a personal hit every time, I don’t know that I can think of a single good reason for that. Can you?

Celebrancy, too, is commodified. Some celebrants lead babies’ and children’s funerals for nothing, others don’t. Some don’t get to decide either way. A celebrant told me:

“I’ve come across a funeral directors’ manager saying she would never employ a celebrant again who charged money for a child’s ceremony. She still uses Interflora and all the rest who charge, doesn’t expect the local petrol station to fill the hearse for nothing and, as far as I know, she still keeps that part of her salary relevant to organizing the funeral. Are there double standards at work here?  It may be admirable if you want to decline payment, for anything at all and for whatever reason, but why would it be an expectation?”

Why indeed? Do doctors and nurses who treat children decline pay? Do the grief counsellors of bereaved parents waive their fee?

An undertaker told me:

“It’s a fine line to walk, isn’t it? Some parents appreciate the gesture, but I think that some parents don’t want ‘pity’, ‘charity’. They actually want their child to be ‘worth’ something like a ‘real person’ would be – they somehow feel the life is validated by paying for the funeral. One father said, ‘I’ll never walk her down the aisle on her wedding day, but I can give her the best funeral.’

“But then we run the danger of getting into the conspicuous spending loop, don’t we? If we do one for ‘free’ and they spend thousands on flowers… what do they think of us charging nothing? What are we saying by charging nothing – that we don’t want to be sullied by taking money associated with their child’s death? That there’s not so much work involved? That we feel that not charging somehow could help mitigate their loss?”

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gloria mundi
9 years ago

Jeez, this is a difficult subject, and an excellent post, for which, thanks. I think we each have to feel our way through this one, and your calm open-eyed look at it will help us do so. Comparisons are odious, as the point about a child’s funeral compared to that of a young bride, or a young suicide, makes clear. We can’t charge according to some personal tragedy-meter. Rationally, I can see no reason for not charging, but “the heart also has its reasons.” They may not help. When (if only) funerals were de-commodified, as in your community co-operative model,… Read more »

Richard
Richard
9 years ago

I agree with GM, an excellent post, Charles. What a dilemma.

Mark Shaw
9 years ago

Perhaps I am unusual. I charge cost for children unless money is a genuine issue. I’m not doing it for free or at a loss. Nor am I making anything in the circumstances. Even at cost most parents remark at such a low charge. It does however risk putting me at a possible long term disadvantage over competitors.

Lucy
9 years ago

This is a really thought provoking post and it is a subject I have always struggled to find a solution to. Having worked for large companies who undertake anyone who is under 18 years old for no fee, I too wondered if it was the right thing to do. I asked my Mother, sister and friends who all have children what their thoughts were. They unanimously came back and said they would all want to pay for their child’s funeral. Not to do so would make them feel like they hadn’t ‘done their best for them and that their child… Read more »

Kateyanne
9 years ago
Reply to  Lucy

Such a great conversation over a heart breaking topic. One thing I think is that framing it as ‘profiting from the death of a child’ is putting too fine a point on it. No one, ever, I cannot imagine, is setting out to profit from a child’s death. We are setting out to pour our best work, our heart and soul and hours and minutes, our sleepless nights, our pulling the car over and sobbing on the side of the road into every tending to a death, and more so at that of a child. I believe an argument could… Read more »

Paula
9 years ago

I have such a dilemma with all of the above that I feel I have done death to death and I need to get out. I will always grieve a family, but not at their expense.

Quokkagirl
Quokkagirl
9 years ago

Ah a dilemma indeed. As a celebrant I used to be caught up in the no fee sentiment. Then I heard other voices who reminded me that the florists, the printers, etc would all be charging. So what does one do? Like Mark and Lucy, I have come to the conclusion that I need my costs covered. I have no wish to profit from the death of a child, whether I am in business or not, but I think this middle ground sits well with most people, offends no-one and helps me to sleep and night – and cover my… Read more »

A Celeb
A Celeb
9 years ago

It’s not only some funeral directors who expect celebrants to provide their services free of charge for babies and children. A few years ago I was discussing this with some fellow celebrants. They all expressed their disapproval that I was even considering asking for a small amount to cover my expenses.

William Eccleston
9 years ago

Interesting blog – This has been a topic of much debate at NFFD house – I see merrits in both arguments but remain confident that, wherever possible, our time should be given up for free to help those in need. Here at NFFD, we support the new charity CFC (Child Funeral Charity) who have set up to help fund childrens funerals. It is our intention to donate all future fundraising efforts to this charity who are doing a sterling job. See http://www.childfuneralcharity.org.uk to see what they are up to. To achieve their targets, CFC require £20,000 per year and all… Read more »

Charles Cowling
9 years ago

Readers may suppose the Child Funeral Charity to be some sort of offshoot or affiliate of the NFFD. It is not. It is wholly separate.

William Eccleston
9 years ago

They woould only suppose it if you say it Charles – Is it not about time you gave up?

Frances Alcock
Frances Alcock
9 years ago

I have been a nurse for 30 years and have recently been researching the funeral business. I believe without a shadow of a doubt that Funeral Celebrants and Funeral Directors should not feel guilty about charging for a childs funeral. As Charles rightly points out Dr’s, Nurses, grief counsellors, Florists and many other people involved with the child will be paid. The main consideration is that they are offered choice, support and guidance for the funeral that they want for their child. The costs need to be transparent during this process as they should be with all funerals.I believe many… Read more »

Wendy Coulton
9 years ago
Reply to  Frances Alcock

I tend to agree with your stance Frances. Although an honourable intention of professionals not to charge the family whose child has died there is a risk that this implies the loss of a child is greater than any other circumstance. I have conducted funerals of adults without a charge in a couple of instances of extreme financial hardship. It is understandable that parents of babies or young children would feel that no funeral costs was one less aspect to worry about but that can be said of any bereavement, particularly if no financial provision was made in advance. An… Read more »

Jonathan Taylor
Jonathan Taylor
9 years ago

While something inclines me, too, to offer a free service for the death of a child, I detect, even in myself, a whiff of sentimentality about refusing payment because it’s a kiddy. Certainly, I can see no practical or moral reasons for bereaved parents to be given a free service, any more than for parents in general to be given free nappies, food, clothes, bedrooms, privileged education or the deposits for their children’s first house, which of course over the years will dwarf the cost of a funeral for a baby who turned out not to need any of these… Read more »

Ru Callender
9 years ago

We charge the same for everybody. Recently the time for various reasons between the death and funeral of one of our clients was five weeks. The husband visited his wife’s body seven times, each visit was a minimum of an hour and a half. This excluded other arrangements. Same charge as everyone else.

X Piry
X Piry
9 years ago

Thanks for this post, Charles. It’s a thought provoking subject. On a logical level, I know that charging is the right thing to do, but it just doesn’t sit right with me. When I have trained funeral celebrants in the past, I have warned them that the hardest ceremonies to do are often the ones that we make the least money on; the babies and the ceremonies for friends and family. To me, these fall into a similar category; some things I will happily “make money” from but not these. If someone really wants to give me a fee, I… Read more »

John Porter
9 years ago

The number of responses to this issue indicates to me that it is important to consider. I am very unclear concerning my own position and content with that for now. I remember at theological college being convinced at each eschatology (study of the “last days”) lecture that the view being presented was the “correct” one. This resulted in jibes from other students who were firmly entrenched that the view they agreed with was the right one. Blinkered. I responded robustly to this but must admit that both my mind and emotions were in a discombobulated (I just love that word)… Read more »

Mark Shaw
9 years ago

Perhaps part of this debate is similar to the issues arising over cremated remains for children. What used to “just happen” is possibly no longer acceptable. Parents want their much loved children of whatever age treated like all other humans whether or not the lived after the time of birth. This includes the “right” to pay for the to be looked after as such.

Puts a very interesting twist on any debate over abortion.

David Holmes
9 years ago

Well, I definitely fall in to the no charge camp. I am not really sure why, perhaps because every child death is somehow different, they always touch me in a very personal way and yes, I know suicides and other before time deaths often do too. What can I say? My car is older than most, my mortgage is larger than I would like.. Cynically, I do think ‘free children’s funerals’ are probably good for marketing our business – but have no idea if this is actually true and works for us as a business. In my experience, no-one has… Read more »

Jonathan Taylor
Jonathan Taylor
9 years ago
Reply to  David Holmes

Well, I think the difference you point out is that church ministers are usually getting paid for the time they’re spending on the funeral anyway, whereas florists, celebrants, printers et al don’t have an overarching organization to give them a stipend or to dictate their policy for them.

GMT
GMT
9 years ago

Touching and pulling the heart strings here Charles, a post that was sure to gain a number of comments…… David Holmes has said it like it should be said, and I agree with every word. I don’t charge for a child’s funeral and hope I never feel the urge to do so, a death at any age is traumatic, even if its expected it is a loss of life and life is precious. Disbursements must be covered at the end of the day as we are in business and I’m sure a family would expect to have a invoice for… Read more »

Jane Morgan
Jane Morgan
9 years ago
Reply to  GMT

The funeral world is one where our humanity is often at odds with our business heads. I perhaps naively imagine that its not, like many professions, one that we become involved in merely for the money (just as well being a celebrant!). But I also think that it is a confused and dangerous road to be on where we differentiate between which situation is more deserving of our voluntary contrition than another. Kindnesses can be and are given in all sorts of different ways, and I don’t think any of us struggle with being kind and compassionate in such a… Read more »

Ru Callender
9 years ago
Reply to  GMT

GMT, I really don’t understand your logic. We are a small company, my wife and I are it. We deal with the family, the body, all the arrangements right through to co creating and taking the ceremony, which, incidentally, is even more tricky than normal when you’re dealing with a life that hasn’t actually been. We work weekends and evenings, my phone is never off and never away from my side, we are called at all times by our families, we become emotionally entwined with them, we support them before, during and after the funeral, why on earth should we… Read more »

Melissa Stewart
9 years ago

Across all eight of our burial grounds, we charge nothing for children’s graves but we do charge our normal burial registration fee and a gravedigging charge. This policy came about following the pressure we felt from funeral directors that it was practically immoral to charge anything at all. So we now charge the minimum to cover our costs. Within the last few weeks, a funeral director was horrified that we charge anything at all and told me ‘There is no compassion left in the world’ because they were giving their services entirely for free. I think that had he been… Read more »

Lucy
9 years ago

Some really interesting points have been made about reasons for not charging, but the main one being “future business.” Maybe I am extremely naïve, but while arranging and conducting a funeral, I have never thought about who else in that family I may get to arrange funerals for in the future because I am solely focused on the person I am currently looking after. I understand completely why other funeral directors on here wouldn’t charge, but if we applied the same emotional response to every family who walked through the door, we wouldn’t be in business for very long. I… Read more »

David Holmes
9 years ago

Thank you GMT. I think people often forget we are humans first, funeral directors second. I have six children of my own and frankly, every time I have to deal with the death of a baby or child, I can easily imagine what it might feel like. I realise that isn’t very PC – as professionals we are supposed to know that we couldn’t possibly imagine what it feels like – but I have a very vivid imagination! Tragedy has affected my family, as I suspect it does all families. I know how we felt. We were devastated – shocked… Read more »

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[…] an interesting debate that was, the one about whether undertakers and celebrants should charge for the funerals of children. A great many people followed it silently; the 25 comments represent a tiny fraction of the […]

Richard
Richard
8 years ago

I thought it might be interesting to give you one set of thoughts from the family’s side of this interesting debate. Our five-month old baby died suddenly and traumatically in the early hours six weeks ago. The maelstrom this creates is easily the most disorienting and emotionally destructive experience I’ve yet had. We were already on very tight finances and the sudden interruption to work and life in general, we’re both self-employed freelancers, had added financial hurt and stress to the deep emotional torment. When it became clear that our funeral director did not intend to charge us for anything… Read more »

Vita Incerta
Vita Incerta
8 years ago
Reply to  Richard

Condolences, Richard at such a sad time. I have a baby funeral tomorrow and ‘my’ kids all go free. A little snippet of an e mail from the family, which I shared with the FD, also charging £0 ‘We’d also like to take this opportunity to thank you for your generosity in performing the service and understanding how important saying goodbye to ***** is to us, it really does mean the world for so many people to give us such support at times like this. It restores my faith in humanity to be honest! From the bottom of our hearts,… Read more »

Malinda
Malinda
3 years ago

I losted my baby at 15 weeks I’m only 22 I didn’t have to pay for my little funeral but now I’m struggling to get a little headstone I really don’t know if there is any help you can get

Last edited 3 years ago by Malinda