Funeral wishes are no more than wishful thinking

Charles 8 Comments
Charles

wishful-thinking

 

‘You can decide everything in advance if you wish, down to the kind of music you’d like – and there’s no charge for changing or updating your wishes at a later stage.’ Golden Charter

‘…pre-planning your funeral is actually a thoughtful and responsible way to show that you care your family … your family are spared the emotional and financial burden of organising your funeral, with all the decisions and problems this can entail, at a time when they least cope.’ Golden Leaves

‘With a Liberty funeral plan you can … choose your own funeral arrangements for your own peace of mind.’ FPS

‘Where do you want your funeral to be held? Do you want readings and, if so, which ones and read by whom? Perhaps there’s even a particular route you would like your hearse to take. By taking the initiative and setting out what you want now, you can get on with living your life, knowing that when the time comes your loved ones will know what you wanted and be spared from having to make difficult decisions.’ ‘…by capturing your funeral wishes in writing you’ll know that your requests will be honoured.’ Dying Matters in association with the National Association of Funeral Directors

‘Nottinghamshire residents could soon be able to design and record their own funeral ceremony with the help of the County Council. The proposed service will allow individuals to work with registrars to make their own choices about their funeral ceremony and take away difficult decisions family members would otherwise have to make at a time when they are coping with a bereavement. The ceremony plan will be stored at the County Archive and accessible to the next of kin or the person arranging the funeral after their death. Mansfield and Ashfield Chad

What they don’t tell you, even in the small print (we’ve checked) is this: you can design your funeral, record your wishes, choose your music and your readings, select a route for the hearse and issue myriad such instructions to be acted on post mortem, but nothing you say or write or sign, however insistently, changes this one overriding fact: none of it is legally binding on the person with the responsibility to dispose of your body – or as all manner of information sources euphemistically and wholly inaccurately express it, “arrange your funeral”, an entirely separate and optional event).

You have no legal right to prescribe the manner of disposal of your dead body, nor can you prescribe the palaver that is to accompany that disposal (the funeral in other words).

You can issue legally binding instructions regarding the disposal of your property – this is the purpose of a will. But you cannot issue instructions regarding the disposal of your corpse because in law there is no property in a dead body, end of.

Sure, most ‘families’ will be grateful to learn that Mum wanted to be cremated and asked for the hearse to pause outside the village hall on the way to the crem. Most will want to do what the dead person wanted. But not all will want to.

Memo to anyone out there who sells funeral plans or encourages people to record their funeral wishes: tell them all the facts. They need to know. 

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Jonathan
Jonathan
10 years ago

“spared the emotional and financial burden” “spared from having to make difficult decisions” “take away difficult decisions family members would otherwise have to make at a time when they are coping with a bereavement” Charles, I’m not trying to hijack your point about it not mattering a flying fig what you stipulate for your funeral, or about funeral plan salesmen duping you into peace of mind about being driven past the pub, but I’m like a dog with a bone on this issue of the damage funeral plans can do (see a post of mine here in 2011). What is… Read more »

David Holmes
10 years ago

This is a nugget of information I always inform anyone thinking about their own funeral arrangements.

Remember to that Pre-planning doesn’t have to mean pre-paying.

I certainly advise anyone contemplating their own demise and its aftermath that they should choose the person they think most likely to respect their wishes to be their funeral arranger/booker. If not, who knows what will be chosen.

Charles Cowling
10 years ago

Jonathan, I couldn’t agree with you more. Memo to the living: we mustn’t plan our funeral. All we can do is be available for it. Write your funeral wishes in pencil. Hint, don’t prescribe. Die. Butt out. What other party given in your honour would you presume to micromanage? Everyone should get the funeral they deserve, and bereaved people should not be treated like girt lumps of blubbing uselessness. David, good for you. I think an awful lot of FDs and arrangers out there don’t know this. All decisions about anything should be made in full consideration of all the… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
10 years ago

… and, I think, redefined as ‘funeral preferences’, or even ‘funeral fantasies’.

Charles
10 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Still an essentially narcissistic exercise.

Jennifer Uzzell
10 years ago

Mustn’t, Charles? I broadly agree with all that is said here and our own ‘wish list’ has a whole page explaining that nothing in it is legally binding etc etc so no quibbles at all about the information thing. What I would say, is that I have dealt with two terminally ill ladies who have coped with the loss of control their illness brought by planning their funerals. It was very therapeutic for them and I would be loathe to tell anyone what they mustn’t do. Having said that one of the ladies initially wanted direct cremation with no family… Read more »

Charles Cowling
10 years ago

You make a very good point, Jenny; thank you. Yes, nothing is ever as simple as it seems, especially in the matter of funerals where unreason is often a powerful and necessary element. In the case of your terminally ill clients it’s easy to see the benefit. And in the case of your direct cremation lady it’s easy to see the motive: people do not want to give trouble. In the case of a sole survivor, of course, either they plan or no one will. I remember a FD telling me of a lady who required a horse-drawn hearse for… Read more »

Mike Cromwell
10 years ago

At Liviana, we spell out all of this and more. You are quite right that everything should be made transparent and clear and thats what we do better than any of the big providors.