toldailytopic: Burial vs. Cremation: does it matter what happens to your physical body after you die? |
I have a bit of experience with this...funeral director, retired.
It's a personal choice whether to be cremated or buried. It's the choice of a final disposition. Whatever your choice, get it in writing, plan ahead, don't leave that decision to your loved ones, especially in an at need situation, get it in writing. I know, "They'll know what to do," but do they? I've dealt with families who didn't know or have a clue, find out go to a funeral home, ask question, get the real McCoy truth, it's worth it. What can you afford, what would you want.
Remember this, guilt and "Don't you want the best" play into the hands of the funeral arranger, because we want the best, whatever is done how cheap or costly doesn't make the deceased any deader or safer from whatever the survivors think the deceased needs to be safe from.
Some say that's the way (cremation or burial) our family has always done it, and if it's good enough for our family it's good enough for me.
With either choice embalming is only required when there is a viewing and visitation or shipping the deceased out of state, other wise that is a personal choice, and for direct cremation or direct burial as well as natural burial it is a waste of money.
So far as the deceased is concerned it matters not, most families or POA's will follow the wishes of the deceased because it written in a will or pre-arranged funeral plan, or out of respect for the deceased as a loved one or friend. Some will not cremate because of religious beliefs do allow it, or private order doesn't approve of it, for those burial is the only option.
Cremation, cremation cost is least, after gathering the proper papers and permits for the crematorium, cremation requires only a wooden box or suitable corrugated cardboard box, however the people have used the finest wooden casket for cremation. The cremation oven uses natural gas and is heated to 2100 to 2700 degrees, cremation takes about 2-3 hours. When the cremation is complete, the gray ash and bones must be separated from any casket hardware and charred and wood ash as much as possible, the catch tray ash and bone is then poured into a pulverizer so as to break down the bones and bone fragments even more, then if there are large bone fragments and pieces remaining they are broken down down with a hammer. The ash and bone fragments are the placed into an urn with and identification tag and sealed. Believe me they do not get all of the ash and bone fragments in the urn.
Scattering cremated remains, permission has to obtained, scattered cremated remains after a rainstorm and drying out will be come like concrete hard and gray. Or there is putting cremated remains in an ossuary, and ossuary is like big barrel that the cremated remains are poured into and co-mingled with other cremated remains that have been poured into the ossuary barrel. When the barrel is full is is hauled away and dumped elsewhere, and the ossuary barrel is returned to be filled again.
Cremation is clean and efficient, and low cost for the basic service. Cremation is no more evil than leaving people who die along the way who get no proper final disposition.
Remember, it's a personal choice.