Archive | funeral book RSS feed for this section

Your Funeral Guy is for Create a Great Funeral Day-Oct 30th|YourFuneralGuy

8 Oct
United States Trident II (D-5) missile underwa...
Plan Your Funeral  You Can  even Have Your  cremation ashes shot into outer space  Image via Wikipedia

Create a Great Funeral Day is October 30th 2010. Create a Great Funeral Day has been around a couple of years. It is very important to plan your funeral but not to prepay.

A Funeral planner is a great asset in planning  a Funeral. If you live in the UK You should consider using A Good Funeral Guide by Charles Cowling.

For  the USA, Another  great resource is Death For Beginners by Karen Jones. Rest in Peace Insiders tips to the Low Cost Less Stress Funeral will also help.

There is a New Book coming out that i  have read and recommend A Good Goodbye:Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die

Funeral Industry|Funeral News | Funeral Blog By Your Funeral Guy

Enhanced by Zemanta

Q and A with “Final Bath” Author-YourFuneralGuy

15 Sep
Raceland, Louisiana. Funeral home.
Funeral Home Image via Wikipedia

Today we have a Q and A Session with Amber Lenore Winckler a pioneering Woman Funeral Director in the Funeral Industry in California. Her work “Final Bath” is  the best Book published   looking inside the Traditional Funeral Business.

What made you decide to go into the funeral profession? What is your professional experience and/or background?
The first time I became aware of the profession, I was 15 years old. My Mom came across a newspaper article about Cypress College of Mortuary Science. I was fascinated by the program and since that time have never had a question that I wanted to be a mortician.
I graduated from Cypress College of Mortuary Science in 1995. I hold current California licenses as an Embalmer, Funeral Director, and Crematory Manager. I was the General Manager of Alhiser-Comer Mortuary in Escondido for 8 years. I was the first woman ever hired by the San Diego Medical Examiner as a Forensic Autopsy Assistant, where I worked for 5 years. I am currently a trade Embalmer for a couple of local mortuaries, where I also perform restoration, cosmetics, and casketing.

Why did you write these books? Are your books based on real experiences?
I have been an avid journal writer since I was 15 years old. Through the process of going back and reading my journal entries, I realized that themes were naturally developing— employee burnout, for instance. The process of burnout and its many methods of negative coping amongst death-care workers is something I feel strongly about revealing in my work. Every single one of us has to cope in some way; we have all had to find a way to deal with the horrifying things we may have witnessed that day, and then go home and eat dinner and take out the trash like everyone else.
Both of these novels are taken from my journals, although I altered many of the people, places, and timelines both for privacy and for a more readable storyline.

You first wrote THE FINAL BATH in 1998; what made you decide to publish it almost eleven years later (in 2009)?
I was still young and full of false bravado when I first wrote THE FINAL BATH. I shelved it because the writing had a self-aggrandizing and a lack of humility that literally made me nauseous. I didn’t want to put out another ‘see how great and caring I am’ book about funeral service. Ten years after I wrote the original draft, I finally felt secure enough to tell the story how it really happened— with me in my completely imperfect, van-crashing, sweater-staining state of being. I wasn’t embarrassed anymore that I didn’t start off as the best mortician in the world, and I found the new version more authentic and readable (evidenced by the fact that I could get through it without my stomach turning…)

INTO THE HANDS OF STRANGERS follows the same character out of the funeral home and into the Medical Examiner, but is decidedly darker than your first novel. What effect did the Medical Examiner environment have on your writing and your characters?
At the mortuary I saw a variety of deaths, but mainly the cause and manner were primarily natural. We performed a variety of tasks, including meeting with families and conducting funeral services. At the Medical Examiner, the deaths are more concentrated in the tragic— even the natural deaths were completely unexpected.  Every homicide, suicide, motor-vehicle accident, alcohol-related, (the list goes on)… ended up on those tables. Autopsy Assistants assist on autopsies for the entirety of their shift. There are no families to interact with, no green cemeteries to stand in. You start with this type of atmosphere, then throw in endless County bureaucracy, failed attempts at pushing diversity, and a system that pays everyone the same no matter what work ethic they manifest— and you end up with INTO THE HANDS OF STRANGERS. Admittedly, it is a much more brutal book to read. Some have reacted strongly to the changes in my main character, Louise, but I use Louise to show what type of toll the job can take.

What will you choose, a green burial, traditional funeral or cremation?
I have cemetery property at a local park. I plan to be buried without body preparation, in a wood casket. I find comfort in the concept of decomposition as a natural process; dust returns to dust.

Do you have plans for more books?
I have finished a third book called THE DISTRIBUTION OF FLUIDS, a collection of fictional short stories that is slated for publication in 2011. I am currently working on a fourth book.

Has burnout affected your funeral services career?  Can burnout be avoided in this profession?
This is the million dollar question… Burnout definitely affected my decision to leave the Medical Examiner environment; which I discuss more in depth in INTO THE HANDS OF STRANGERS. Some personalities appear to weather the profession better than others. It appears to me that as long as a workers home and/or social life remain stable (and let’s face it, whose life doesn’t face upset from time to time?), then the stress at work is tolerable. When stress mounts on both fronts, burnout becomes a serious threat. And by stress in the death profession, it can mean anything from a horrific tragic death, to tension with a boss or co-worker with daily death and despair as merely a backdrop. Morticians are tough breed, and I believe that most of us are called to this type of work, but our emotional needs and mental health are rarely addressed.

What major funeral service issues do you think most need addressing?
First and most definitely burnout of the workforce. How do we keep good people from dying out on the front lines after just a few years?
Second, the resistance of some traditional funeral homes to change their staffing, merchandise, pricing, and services to better reflect and appeal to the modern consumer.

What advice would you give to women seeking to enter the profession?
I receive many letters from women asking this question. Some fear being under-estimated and relegated to front office work. I have just one answer: don’t make a big deal about being a woman. Do your work, do it as good or better as the guy next to you and you will ultimately succeed. Respect is earned. Pay attention to the seasoned workers who understand the physics of lifting and use pivot points instead of brute strength. You don’t need to be able to lift a thousand pounds to be valuable; you can navigate most situations by using your brain. The profession needs women; we are naturally compassionate and great multi-taskers. I encourage all interested women to not be intimidated or afraid to enter this profession if you think it may be your calling.

Funeral industry|Funeral News| Funeral blog by Your Funeral Guy

Enhanced by Zemanta

New Funeral Book Can help With a Funeral-Your Funeral Guy

4 Sep frontcovergoodbye

A new Funeral Book  will be out soon that can help with your Family Funerals.

A Good Goodbye addresses the Baby Boomer generation with gentle humor on the vital information about funeral arrangements that most people don’t learn about until faced with a death in the family.

via thefamilyplot.wordpress.com

The Book is “A Good Goodbye  Funeral Planning for those who Don’t want to die“  The book does a good job of explaining what you will need for a funeral arrangement and has some good ideas on Funeral Cost.

Funeral Industry|Funeral News| Funeral Blog by Your Funeral Guy

Enhanced by Zemanta

Not Worth a read:Curtains Adventures of an Undertaking in Training| your funeral guy book review.

22 Apr

Adventures of an Undertaking in Training- In this book a Media Guy goes underground in the Funeral Biz giving us  Funny Funeral stories  quips, but no meaningful content beyond that. There are underlying agendas, opinions, in this work, something that should never be found in a Funeral Book.

This work is somewhat entertaining .But that is where the value the book ends.There is plenty in this book about the Funeral Business. Media types have reported and gone underground in the funeral industry before reporting on the dismal trade with great humor. Other authors have been able to add practical advice for the consumer along the way. Tom Jokinen’s book does not do either.

There are humorous descriptions of dead bodies and what is done to them in the preparation room. There is a plethora of funeral books like that.

What is striking is the way the author supports the traditional North American way of the Funeral. The book tries to present cremation as revolutionary approach. That revolution is over cremation is mainstream in funerals. The funeral cost practice of Funeral Homes charging too much for a cremation is not addressed. The issue of Funeral Expenses and the way the industry charges the consumer is glossed over.

To the authors credit he does point out pre need, and the prepaid funeral scam(page 171)-but does not touch on the extent of the problem,  preneed scam that abounds in North America.

Chapter 16 ends With a quote “This… might be the future of the funeral trade: change how people understand death like religion used to” There is a religious bias in this book.

That the book is biased, a strong statement.The authors personal beliefs and opinions jump out on every page. In a book on Funerals personal bias needs to be  kept o a minimum, for a funeral like a wedding is uniquely personal.

The book concludes with a funeral director saying,”I’ll take family over everlasting life”. Jokinen’s humor in the book is laced with disrespect for the afterlife,and offends. If the author wanted to share his thoughts on the afterlife, write about God or Non God, a better forum could have been chosen than a book on undertaking.

This book fails  because it is a failed attempt at humor, better books like this have been done before, it is a biased work and 6 months in the funeral home business is not enough time to begin to have a look at what it is like.

At Amazon.com, The book is tagged in business, and investing.This book will not help you to make an investment in a funeral business  because it does not portay the business realistically.

The blind support by the traditional  media and funeral business is simply out to lunch. ConnectingDirectors.com plagiarized a Time.com  piece called Undertakers Q and A. and posted it in their main section. The sad thing is that Tom Jokinen is a member of the media and not an undertaker at all. What an embarrassment for Time and the Funeral Media site Connecting Directors.

Funeral industry|Funeral Book review|Funeral Blog by Your Funeral Guy.

It may not be wise for one funeral author to come down on a fellow writer on funerals.In this case though being forthright is important.

You can Make it easily through a funeral without…-yourfuneralguy

16 Nov

Yes, you can make it through a Funeral without the full  use of a Funeral Direct0r, and expensive casket. In many cases however it is still best to hire a funeral director but not for all of his services. You do not have to get a Casket from the traditional funeral directors- Aurora, Batesville, or York Casket Company.

In fact if you are informed, some of the services of a funeral director can be done, by your friends, church members, clergy and others. In actuality you can do some of it before you die.

To some this may seem radical but it is quite simple.

From Rest in Peace Insiders tips to the Low cost Less Stress Funeral.

“The everyday role of the funeral director has been changing
over time. Some of the funeral director’s functions are not
as necessary as they once were. The reality is that today the
average person can plan a funeral that reduces the role
of the funeral director.” Copyrighted Material  from R.Brian Burkhardt

Funeral Industry|Funeral Blog by Your Funeral Guy

Michael Jackson|Burial|Private Family Program-Your Funeral Guy

5 Sep

Revealed here is the Michael Jackson Private Family Burial Program. For the 200 guests at the burial funeral on Thursday night there was a special program. You can click on the Link here to see the program in PDF format from the MJ Burial at Forest Lawn, Glendale. This program contains the order of service and speakers.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE MICHAEL JACKSON  FAMILY BURIAL PROGRAM IN PDF FORMAT.

burial_michael_jackson_funeral Photo Source

Funeral Industry|Funeral Blog by Your Funeral Guy.

Burr Oak Cemetery Scandal: the Sheriff’s Question:-YourFuneralGuy

2 Aug

Blog+Image_sized_oldgateThe Cook County Sheriffs question on Friday deeply troubles me.   Why did not anyone  speak up? The answer to the Sheriff’s question is quite frightening. But it is not entirely unexpected.

Below is Sheriff’s Dart’s question on Friday after discovering more atrocities.

Snippet From the ChicagoSunTimes:

“How in God’s name this industry has been able to get away with having virtually no regulation or enforcement all these years is mind-boggling,Dart said.”

The answer is we do not like to think of death. When a loved passes on we are forced to think about dying. We  think about  it for awhile and shove our thoughts to the back of the  head, or deep inside. This goes for everyone families, funeral directors, cemetery workers, politicians, and folks from all walks of life. Except when something like Burr Oak happens the wounds are ripped wide open.

iStock_000000089603SmallOn Friday it was reported that the Alsip police looked the other way. The politicians local and national looked the other way. I do not know the local politicos who turned their heads from Burr Oak Cemetery. Most probably did not know. But I am aware that Democratic and Republican leaders in Washington of the past and present  have strong ties to the the Funeral and Cemetery interests. We will explore this further. I have no problem giving names because others have mentioned them before.

About a year ago I wrote a Funeral Book and said that the way to not being ripped off by the industry is to “make em follow the rules.” Problem is most people, even the authorities and those in the industry,  do not have a firm grip on the rules(law). Cemetery workers have no professional training. Ethics classes in Mortuary Schools for Funeral directors  are lame.

I am not holding out for cemetery and funeral reform. Where were the funeral directors in the Burr Oak Scandal?Some had to notice graves were gone when they rolled in driving  their black  hearses? -They collected the big money, looked the other way and went home.

So where are the owners of Burr Oak? Their negligence is quite incomprehensible. They have been conspicuously absent for a reason.  The owners of Perpetua, Inc and the investors that put money in Perpetua, Inc looked the other way as well.

Funeral and Cemetery Scandal needs to stop. Many need to speak up now. The moment is here.

Funeral Industry|by Your ANGRY Funeral guy

You can get some help here: Cook County Sheriff’s website:www.burroak.net

Burr oak cemetery pic from religion dispatches.org

President Obama the Dead Need a Bailout too.-yourfuneralguy.

6 Mar
President Obama the Dead need a bailout because of too much Debt.

President Obama the Dead need a bailout because of too much Debt.

One of the unknown secrets in the funeral industry is that the Dead need a funeral cost bailout. So President Obama instead of bailing out mortgages please consider bailing out the dead after their funeral. This is not political satire. It is the honest to God Truth. Many a dead person has left their family with extreme financial death: a large amount of debt.

I have had some personal experience with this. When I almost died in 2007 i wrote the book Rest in Peace: Insider’s Tips to the Low Cost Less Stress Funeral

One of the big fears at the time was that I would leave my family with too much debt.  So I wrote the work at a supersonic speed. The threat of death gave me an almost divine laser focus. The book helps folks but is not a big money maker. It has not helped in the elimination of my debt.

I bring this up because tough economic times have  given rise to a a funeral industry spin off the “DEATH DEBT COLLECTOR” it is something to keep in mind when planning for a funeral or when someone dies. Death debt collection  is big business now.

These folks really exist and they are devilish folks. This according to a  New York Times article:

Collecting from the dead, however, is expanding. Improved database technology is making it easier to discover when estates are opened in the country’s 3,000 probate courts, giving collectors an opportunity to file timely claims. But if there is no formal estate and thus nothing to file against, the human touch comes into play.”

Funeral Industry| Funeral Cost Blog by Your Funeral Guy.

Mmmm…I wonder if these new funeral industry guys will collect from the IFDA?

Your Funeral Guy: Corpse Left in Hearse 2 months dead 2 years!

26 Feb

As mentioned before it is important to sign your Funeral (Cost) Contract. A funeral is both an emotional contract and a financial or funeral (Cost) contract. BE Sure To Sign and Understand YOUR CONTRACT! This is both for your financial and emotional protection..

According to the Associated Press and KansasCity.com some folks did not do this and there was shocking results. A cremation did not happen. Instead:

Funeral Director Allegedly leaves Corpse in Hearse” for over 2 months,person dead 2 years!

“A funeral director faces a felony charge after police found a woman’s decomposing body in the back of a hearse. Police said the 76-year-old funeral home owner was charged Tuesday with abusing a corpse. Police said the woman died of natural causes in November 2007 at the age of 52. Relatives said they wanted her remains cremated.”

The family was negligent in that they never signed the cremation papers or paid the funeral home.

You can find out more information on your funeral cost contract either preneed or at need here.

Rest in Peace: Insider’s Tips to the Low Cost Less Stress Funeral by R Brian Burkhardt

Funeral Cost/Funeral industry Blog by Your Funeral Guy.

Source: kansascity.com




Your Funeral Guy: Exposing the Funeral Cost Scam-by World Famous Author

25 Feb

In March  a Creative work exposing the Funeral Industry and your funeral cost will be published by a world famous author. The story is a creative mystery and it addresses problems in the funeral industry.

The Undertakers Tale” will Rock the Funeral Industry with humor and creativity and expose charlatan behaviors. I have not read the story but because of the author’s world wide status it will be good. This author is very creative so I do not believe that the current Illinois Funeral Directors Association (IFDA)Scandal-Alleged Ponzi  scheme or the National Prearranged Services (NPS) scandal  will be addressed. There are rumors of another  eastern exposure of these recent events.

The best selling author has a large number books published and was at one time the most popular author in the United States of America. I am the author of a book on the funeral industry and will never be as  famous as the “Undertaker Tale” guy. Neither will anyone else alive today.

You see the famous author is Mark Twain.

Funeral Cost/Funeral Industry Blog- Your Funeral Guy.-R.Brian Burkhardt

Information on the upcoming story is here.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 108 other followers