there are a quite few errors in this video, coming from a morticians son, someone who is actually in this industry. Usually the Medical Examiner (autopsy specialist) does not take the time to wash hair because during the procedure they also remove the brain, which requires cutting into the skull, after this is done it'd be very hard to wash your hair especially because they leave the job of reattaching the skull cap and brain (along with arranging the organs that all get tossed in the abdominal cavity) to the embalmer. Also taking belongings from the dead (like a bus pass or money) is very illegal and frowned upon if the deceased has living family members. Second you typically would never get embalmed and cremated, it's one or the other, for the main purpose of embalming is to preserve the body and keep it from rotting in the ground after burial, if the family wanted to view and cremate, a simple washing and bathing, packing of orpheus's and setting of features is taken place, before the viewing not a full embalming although it is highly encouraged, because it does look better. (it would be really expensive to cremate and embalm as well.) When the family does choose to cremate, they would never be cremated in a full casket!! they are NOT made for that and there would be a lot of bolts, screws and handles to pick out of the remains (which who would want to do that?) caskets are heavy too not to mention and a lot are made out of metal which isn't very flammable. Instead the body is placed in a cremation tray which is basically a piece of plywood with your body on it and a cardboard box over it to be ignited by the flame. The embalming process is primarily done through the carotid artery as well because that is the best artery to drain all the blood from which this video also forgets to mention. PLEASE CONTACT A FUNERAL HOME FOR ACCURATE INFORMATION!!!!
^^^^^^^^^^^ THIS!!!! I’m a mortician’s daughter and we run a family owned funeral home. Honestly it kind of made me angry how this video depicted some aspects of the process (also when they called a casket a coffin 🙄). Also, sometimes the coroner puts the brain inside the abdomen and just leaves the scalp open. I walked in on my dad sewing up a woman’s skull stuffed with rags bc her brain wasn’t in there. I think that depends on the coroner that does the autopsy though. Anyway, this comment above is much better than the actual video. Please please PLEASE do NOT always take what you see on the internet for a fact. There are many funeral homes that treat your deceased loved ones with so much more respect and care than this video cares to admit.
Thank you Connor Slack for that very thorough and informative correction. Your words are very professional and made it more comforting! it was better than the actual video for me!
1. They do not use a saw for the first incision 2. They do not wash the body after an autopsy 3. Would NEVER steal from the deceased, everything is accounted for 4. Not all funeral homes have a freezer 5. At least in Canada it is mandatory to tell clients embalming is not necessary 6. Your whole embalming process is completely wrong, especially because you stated this person is an autopsy 7. Eyes don't usually need to be glued 8. Workplace harassment seems like a thing in your funeral home 9. Crematory operators cannot open caskets 10. Usually takes 3-4 hours for a cremation to take place From: a funeral director
Thank you for clarifying, just from watching ask a mortician I thought there were some things wrong. And the thing that annoyed me the most was the embalming process, thank you for letting me know I'm not the only one who wondered how they could pump the embalming fluid in after an autopsy 😂 why wouldn't they ask an embalmer if they were going to present how the body is prepared for viewing 😂 However I think that in USA you are not required to say that embalming isn't necessary, I just think that you can't lie about it if asked.
they didn’t mention the head being “opened” to examine the brain during autopsy, i have never heard of drying the eyes out, nor do most people get put into pampers, for certain cases they would use “plastics” which are like a plastic jogging suit... my 2 cent lol
@ Robert, Maria, Pedro, and greo : So very sorry for your loss, but your loss is only temporary. There is the coming Resurrection of the dead, mentioned in the Bible. Stay strong, and have faith. You will see your loved ones again !
As a hospice nurse who regularly interacts with those in the funeral service and at the medical examiners office, thank you for what you do. This video misrepresented the field and the work that you all do to help families when they are grieving a loss. I've had so many interactions with people in the field and have never come across someone who didn't have a profound respect for both the deceased and the families that they work with. Every field has a few bad apples, but this is definitely never been my experience over many years as a hospice nurse.
I heard on the news that a lady donated her mothers body. Then found out the armed forces used the body to test the effects of some sort of bomb. She wasnt happy.
I just recently got a job as a body removal and will be helping at the funeral home, let’s just say everybody who went or is going to school for this type of career, does this because we want to help in some way. I want to help families at their lowest and decided to become a mortician. Though I’m starting out as someone who picks up the body, I’m still going to respect the loved one that passed and the family who is effected in the situation.
I do the same except mortician that is about all that I don't do and nobody from the hospital does anything in the funeral home unless the work for one
I want to say, thank you to those who handled my friend Emily with respect And making her look beautiful at her funeral. Your family and friends love you Emily
(Embalmer for 17 years) ... there’s so much wrong with this video. The order of things for one. Autopsied cases aren’t aspirated. Freezers aren’t used, coolers are. The incision locations are wrong. Scattered info, poorly arranged. This is why the public is so poorly informed of these processes
I paid to watch my dad go in the cremator. I was so worried they would just throw together whoever and give us someone else's ashes, they explained the entire process and how the numbering works internationally as well as the respect taken, i watched his coffin go in and saw how clean it was before. Its done very respectfully, its the heart ache afterwards thats the difficult part. At least I know where my dad is now 🙏
@@STZNCCTXBecause this is South Africa, they charge you to make money off you in every aspect. There isn't much that is out of bounds when it comes to making a fast buck...sadly.
Considering most people dont die of just old age I imagine this process is probably a lot more gross then we are even thinking it is. Imagine cutting open a deceased dead animal on the side of the road. A lot different than something from the butcher. Anyone who has this job is taking one for the team.
When my sister died last Oct 2021, after 3 days of viewing she was cremated. The crematorium did not include the casket and asked us what to do on the casket. We just gave it to the Funeral Home. The body was put to the chamber including her dying clothes. After less than 2 hours, there are some bones not totally turned to ash. They were put in a grinder. The whole process was viewed by the family, thus some members don't want to be cremated when they die due to "painful" process. Told them that dead person will no longer feel the pain. Personally, I want to be cremated when my times come but to autopsy, I don't want it.
I’ve worked for a funeral home for 4 years now from pickup, assisting in the embalming process, all the way up to the end for services and burial. Some of this information is not accurate: 1. There are no “freezers”. The body is cold from refrigeration, but not frozen. 2. After an autopsy, the internal organs are not “repositioned,” but simply placed in a trash bag, then laid in the chest cavity before sowing up. 3. They completely left out the makeup part of preparation for a viewing after embalming and dressing. 4. Not every funeral home uses diapers. And lastly, 5. Caskets are reused if they are rental caskets.
@@braindrain1407 If you're going to be cremated you may have a viewing prior to and why pay thousands of dollars for a casket if you're going to be cremated.
You are right about all above, I did Autopsies, and everything else with the funeral business. Yes the speaker of this video was incorrect about lots of things.
This hit home, my father wasn't cremated but a little over a year ago my mother in law passed away and was cremated. I'm still sensitive about her passing but I'm glad to know how the process was, I miss them both greatly so I'm glad to know how things are done. Thank you.
How can you take anything with you or hide stuff in your body you can't take anything with you when you Die your dead for a reason when people are no longer with us here
My family has owned and operated multiple funeral homes since before I was born. My grandfather used to work late and listen to music on a old record player. Well one night I was there helping and my dad left to get something, I put a old record on and the corpse looked like it was smiling. My dad said sometimes temperature change or how the skin is pulled when handling them will make their faces do odd things. So when we got a elderly gentleman who was known for publicly shunning colored couples in town, I played 2Pac's "I get around" and the face was frowning so hard he was grinning in disgust.
@Metal Scarif this video is suposed to be about America funerals most of the details are wrong I've never gotten a body from the medical examiner 'clean' nor do they replace your organs in there proper place. Thay get put in a plastic bag all together and all that gets put in the cavity. after you get to the funeral home if the family wants embalming we do it right away theres no need to wait for the autopsy report.
Hate to break it to you.. but postmortem examiners are not doctors, they are Forensic Pathologist. completely different field and career from Medical Doctors this is like calling Dentists Doctors.
I worked in a funeral home once and one thing this video missed was how they cut up the back of the clothing and literally drape it on top of the body. When you see a dead person in the casket you can pretty much assume that the back of their clothes have been cut up because it's not possible to dress them completely due to rigormortis
Dearest Arcaithe: I just happen to be your rotten, awful, mean boss.....who heard that giggle.....WHEN you should have been working! Be in my office first thing tomorrow!!
The receptiacle that the body is placed into for cremation is called a retort and the ashes are called cremains. There was NEVER any theft from the deceased person when I was in funeral service and we treated the body with the respect it deserved.
I had my dad cremated in 2016 and when I got his remains there were curly wires that you were showing in them. In 1985 he had open heart surgery and they use those to close his ribs together and they were actually in the ashes sitting on top, but it’s funny my dad always talked about those things he would take my hand and put it on his chest and say “ son do you feel that that’s the wires they used to close my ribs.” so I was kind of weirded out.
Magnet can't pickup titanium and most medical fasteners . The crematory operator should done a better job removing by sight after the cremains cool down.
Now, now.......I happen to be your nice funeral home embalmer (who will work on you) and I am very partial to "cutting up" as they say......besides, I have a nice new set of sharp knives I'm just "dying" to try out!
Embalming has never been required. Its recommended when transporting a corpse across state lines (to avoid decomposition), but never necessary. If you watch Ask A Mortician, she'll tell you all about it.
You don’t need embalming if you’re burying either. Some families like the results, but others don’t. For ‘woodland’ or ‘green’ burial it’s required that the body is not embalmed.
When my mom passed away I was her makeup artist. I ask the funeral place if they have make supplies and they handed me bunch of filthy looking supplies. So I told my boyfriend to go out and buy all the NEW STUFFS I’m sure she’ll thank me for it from heaven🙏
My uncle was a mortician back in the 60s and cremation was very unheard of back then. My uncle enjoyed his job and he worked in several funeral homes and when he got sick he was able to tell us (his family) which funeral home he wanted to be buried from and how he wanted his remains treated. He chose cremation as well, I too think that cremation is my way too!
@@buffalobillsfan2649 Same. I didn’t even get to know my great grandpa because he passed away years before I was born. Same with my great grandma. And to make up for it I’d like to give back to them by getting put in the same resting place.
FYI, that's not a coffin, it's a casket. Coffins are "body shaped," wider at the shoulders than at the head and feet. They are also less flashy. Caskets are rectangular, have plush padding and are much more ornate.
it is unfortunately children the end is inevitable, so enjoy every second of your life in the right way so as not to regret it later at the wrong time, for those who want to live a little longer I suggest you donate your organs and stay alive for a longer time on earth and in most of the time making another child happy for the time they should deserve 😁👍🏼
I worked in a funeral home and assisted a few embalming. And if anyone took any personal belongings of the deceased they were fired. That was number 1 rule No Taking Any Items unless specified by the family to do so like jewelry, or metal fillings like gold or silver, etc and give those to the family.
Makes me glad I live in Sweden, where closed-coffin funerals are the default and you don't have all that embalming stuff. I never got what's the deal with embalming the dead if you aren't going to keep the mummies around forever to be put on display like Lenin, and open casket funerals just seemed needlessly ghoulish to me. I want to remember my loved ones as they were when they were alive, I don't want the last image I ever get to see of a loved one to be of their cold dead corpse.
Open coffin funerals are also about closure. Its definitely hard to see a loved one in there (even harder if you grab their hand and find it stiff and cold as ice) but the overwhelming sadness of the moment can help with the long term for some people.
@@jamesbarnes5769 Maybe for some, I know other people for whom such a moment would only make it all harder to handle. But it's not like closed casket funerals are sterile and emotion-free affairs, there's a portrait of the dead person and people are still crying and taking in the emotions and talking about their memories of them. When physically seeing and touching the deceased isn't an expected part of your culture, the vast majority of people in it simply don't feel they need to do that specific thing to process their emotions. Plus I've heard lot's of embalming chemicals are both dangerous for the environment as well as the people working with handling the dead bodies, so for me at least that's another reason I am uneasy about the idea of embalmings.
@@blondbraid7986 Oh definitely. Been to both kinds and either way tears are shed for sure. Different cultures have different ways to deal with the grief and service. Grandmother in law passed recently and her husband fell to the ground in tears once he saw her. That might sound terrible (and it was) but it did make the rest of the service easier with such an intince moment of emotion already had. Typically in a open casket funeral the family/close friends comes in 30min prior to the public so they may grieve in peace so as to better receive the visitors paying there respect. Again both types are fine but our family has always practiced open casket typical of most Southerners in America.
My lil 15 year old cousin was murdered june 10th 2021, yesterday was her open casket and i bawled my eyes out. as my aunt and i drove to the funeral what was sad and what made my stomach turn was the hurst that was carrying her was right behind us it hurt a lot and i got instant chills. than I saw her and it didnt even look like herself at all she looked older and gone. Then when we were leaving I saw her casket being carried back into the hurst and ready for cremation. A sad depressing process tbh and its horriying, tramautizing, and heartbreaking to see her body in person and to know that she was cremated.
When I die before I leave this precious earth I would love to see everything that goes on with my earthly dead body and also I'm going to be checking up and in on all of my family members and love ones that are still alive on earth and let everybody know including my Beautiful Father and my Mother and to the rest of the family and everybody all around across the world it is okay to Cry
I will say that our local funeral home is amazing. When my dad died at the hospital, it took forever for them to release him. I had to wait for a phone call so i could tell them that No, they couldn't have my 76 year old dad's eyes or anything else for that matter. It was 10 pm before i finally got that call. Bridges and Cameron went straight to get him immediately, in the middle of the night. Once i got there the next morning, he was already embalmed. None of his organs were removed. I asked. He wasn't cut on at all. I asked. He had been cut on enough. I couldn't ask for any better treatment of my dad. They were amazing. I will never use anyone else.
Marilyn Willett, what do you mean “just trust Jesus”? There are many other religions to trust, or no religion at all. Telling people everything is fine as long as you pray is a bit close minded. That’s like telling an addict that their addiction will go away if they pray everyday, highly unlikely.
I'm 46 years of life at 44 years of life I attended my very first funeral. At 23 years of life my son was laid to rest. I don't see anywhere the rest of my days on earth that I'll end my tears nor will my heart be mended but at least now I know what they did to my son from the hospital, funeral home and onto the crematory I'm absolutely devastated with an infinite broken heart. Thank you RUclips for letting me share/comment
MAAM, IM SO SORRY FOR YOUR EXPERIENCE. THIS IS NOT THE BEST DEPICTION OF THE PROCESS. PLEASE BE WELL ASSURED THAT YOUR SON IS WITH YOU FOR LIFE!!! GOD LOVE YOU. HIS PRESENCE IS AMONG US ALL
One correction and one addition. The eye caps have a kind of barb that hooks onto the inside of the eyelid, this is what keeps the eyes closed. Also, you skipped the mouth sewing to stop your jaw dropping open. Aside from that, great video!!
What I find interesting is they did an autopsy on his body so it would be different in the embalming process. Nothing to puncture. Also, my mother wanted to be cremated. My funeral director did not say she needed to be embalmed. Once the hospital released her, they took her body to the crematorium. Her funeral was her ashes in the urn. I have seen funeral homes not giving that option but it is there. No embalming necessary for direct cremation.
Interesting, by law, I need to tell my clients all of these details when preparing a contract for disposition, so nothing is a secret. I worked in the removal end of the funeral business for over 10 years and never once did we help ourselves to the belongings of the deceased. The incision in the chest for an autopsy is made with a scalpel... the bone saw ( not a rusty hacksaw) is used to cut through the ribs only. And if this video is in any way true to your understanding of the funeral industry, you have been dealing with the wrong funeral home!
Thank you! Fellow licensed individual here and man. So much misinformation here haha. Little stuff but enough to get people thinking all the wrong things!!
I find death so disturbing. The part of your organs stopping, the fluids draining. Rigor mortis. leaving your body behind for someone else to care for. Knowing they'll be cutting you open. Imagining my body being tossed in a box thrown underground or burned. My name on an urn or tombstone is eerie. I guess I struggle with knowing such horrible things will happen and I cant control it or help myself outta it
Wow this was an interesting take on Death rites... I’m definitely going for a more natural Finale...I don’t want nasty chemicals pumped though my body-my temple!
They make bucks! and they basically go to med school like a doctor but a year or two less, so, to them, it's more like a hospital/medical environment which interests a lot of people. And again, they make big bucks and work alone and don't have to deal with annoying managers and creepy coworkers. They don't get any grief from their client so it's probably pretty cool except when there is a child involved or a really rotted body that stinks. Then it's all about Lysol and air freshener and cleaning that mess up to honor the dead person.
Alison B yeah I would much rather work around dead bodies over alive people anyday. The dead won’t hurt you. It’s the living that you should be worried about
Dear Joseph (Still around)......I AM your nice barber......BUT, cutting hair on the deceased is not my thing.......do this.....buy yourself a nice wig (in advance), and then you'll look super fab for your "viewing".......bye for now.....and It's time for your haircut right now!
I’m the son of a mortician. Up until I was six years old, we lived inside of my father’s funeral home. All of the stuff on this video is true, and was vocabulary I was exposed to and surrounded with during my entire childhood. Quite a creepy childhood... we used to play hide and seek in the casket selection room, we would eat dinner while my dad was in the next room embalming a body, and I walked in on many autopsies by accident. I currently am typing this inside the office of the F.H as I spend many evenings studying here with our WiFi. I do not live in here anymore but my father continues to run our local funeral home to this day. I’d love to answer some questions if anyone has any.
Hey what's up? I'm thinking of working for a cemetery. This uh business had always been interesting to me. It is an important profession obviously. I guess if I had a question it would be this. What can you do in this field with no schooling or experience. Can you just start at a funeral home with no history in it? Thanks
i am not getting cremated i want my body to be whole i want to to be sent to the bottom of the ocean only natural things for the coffin so that there is no pollution so i may see or become a part of whats down there
Cremation adds to air pollution . Ash is sterile, inorganic like plastic and harmful to marinelife. Greenburial better than cremation. Nontoxic and naturally decompose.
Going to a funeral has destroyed me on how I feel about them. My wife and daughter passed away in 2013 and when I saw my wife after the funeral home fixed her up, she looked bloded but was still gorgeous. She looked peaceful. Which gave me some peace but ill never go to another one again. Thank God my mom and dad wants to be cremated and doesn't care about a funeral.
Actually the medical examiner / coroner would have jurisdiction over unattended deaths. Such a death would go to the coroner or medical examiners office for an autopsy or death investigation, not the hospital for a doctor to deal with. I don't even want to start in on all the other things they got wrong. Such a shameful and false depiction of my work.
You can rest easy knowing they probably didn’t do a lot of this to him. There’s a lot of misinformation in here. Sounds like the guy looked up a blog from a conspiracist on reddit as his source lol.
My folks own two funeral homes in northern Maine. Lived in one growing up, and picking up bodies was one of my first jobs. I can't speak for everyplace, but we always showed the up most respect toward the deceased. No jokes like that were made. That's not professional. That's not how you behave. No to mention the autopsies we're never done at the funeral home. Cause of death is not the funeral homes job. Our job is everything after that. Maybe some states differ. Idk
Every state I've been in has treated the deceased with nothing but dignity and respect. I wish they'd take this video down. I can't imagine how traumatic it could be to families who just lost a loved one.
My uncle passed away suddenly. We came from a country where funeral is very family-oriented which mean family member do some of body cleaning. It's quite unsettling to not being able to see what's going on behind the close door. But at least they allow use to load the body into the burner. Thank you for letting us know.
I used to work in a funeral home. This is pretty spot on. The worse part is selling the funeral packages to the bereaved. Most of the time they are strong and reserved. other times they are a wailing mess that you need to try to comfort and sometimes you cant help but also feel for the families of the deceased.
I worked in a funeral directors for 18 months and it would be very difficult for someone to take something from a wallet as a proper trail is started from the very moment the body is collected, each time the body is moved the things are checked and logged so if anything went missing it would be obvious. Sometimes the family are there when the body is brought into care and the funeral director will check pockets and jewellery and give it straight back to the family so there is no finger pointing later on. Also the part where the man jumps out of the coffin, if anybody did do this they would not be in the business very long as working in the industry is not a joking matter and requires upmost respect and care for the deceased and their families.
I agree my grandpa has been working Miss dead bodies are either a funeral director or other sorts of that person he's also a verified license mortician he agrees with you it is very hard to steal anything from a body when when it's going through processes
To all reading this... I pray you have a long and blessed life ...
But I dont want a long life.
@@sooo1201 why?
You 2.... well now I'm not doing it
Thank you
Thx and I needed this bc my gramp died:
there are a quite few errors in this video, coming from a morticians son, someone who is actually in this industry. Usually the Medical Examiner (autopsy specialist) does not take the time to wash hair because during the procedure they also remove the brain, which requires cutting into the skull, after this is done it'd be very hard to wash your hair especially because they leave the job of reattaching the skull cap and brain (along with arranging the organs that all get tossed in the abdominal cavity) to the embalmer. Also taking belongings from the dead (like a bus pass or money) is very illegal and frowned upon if the deceased has living family members. Second you typically would never get embalmed and cremated, it's one or the other, for the main purpose of embalming is to preserve the body and keep it from rotting in the ground after burial, if the family wanted to view and cremate, a simple washing and bathing, packing of orpheus's and setting of features is taken place, before the viewing not a full embalming although it is highly encouraged, because it does look better. (it would be really expensive to cremate and embalm as well.) When the family does choose to cremate, they would never be cremated in a full casket!! they are NOT made for that and there would be a lot of bolts, screws and handles to pick out of the remains (which who would want to do that?) caskets are heavy too not to mention and a lot are made out of metal which isn't very flammable. Instead the body is placed in a cremation tray which is basically a piece of plywood with your body on it and a cardboard box over it to be ignited by the flame. The embalming process is primarily done through the carotid artery as well because that is the best artery to drain all the blood from which this video also forgets to mention. PLEASE CONTACT A FUNERAL HOME FOR ACCURATE INFORMATION!!!!
^^^^^^^^^^^ THIS!!!! I’m a mortician’s daughter and we run a family owned funeral home. Honestly it kind of made me angry how this video depicted some aspects of the process (also when they called a casket a coffin 🙄). Also, sometimes the coroner puts the brain inside the abdomen and just leaves the scalp open. I walked in on my dad sewing up a woman’s skull stuffed with rags bc her brain wasn’t in there. I think that depends on the coroner that does the autopsy though. Anyway, this comment above is much better than the actual video. Please please PLEASE do NOT always take what you see on the internet for a fact. There are many funeral homes that treat your deceased loved ones with so much more respect and care than this video cares to admit.
Thanks for clearing things up. I immediately went to the comment section as soon as the joke about a metro card was made.
Thank you
Thank you Connor Slack for that very thorough and informative correction. Your words are very professional and made it more comforting! it was better than the actual video for me!
Thanks for this. So what happens to that expensive coffin then?
1. They do not use a saw for the first incision
2. They do not wash the body after an autopsy
3. Would NEVER steal from the deceased, everything is accounted for
4. Not all funeral homes have a freezer
5. At least in Canada it is mandatory to tell clients embalming is not necessary
6. Your whole embalming process is completely wrong, especially because you stated this person is an autopsy
7. Eyes don't usually need to be glued
8. Workplace harassment seems like a thing in your funeral home
9. Crematory operators cannot open caskets
10. Usually takes 3-4 hours for a cremation to take place
From: a funeral director
Thank you for clarifying, just from watching ask a mortician I thought there were some things wrong. And the thing that annoyed me the most was the embalming process, thank you for letting me know I'm not the only one who wondered how they could pump the embalming fluid in after an autopsy 😂 why wouldn't they ask an embalmer if they were going to present how the body is prepared for viewing 😂
However I think that in USA you are not required to say that embalming isn't necessary, I just think that you can't lie about it if asked.
Thank You
they didn’t mention the head being “opened” to examine the brain during autopsy,
i have never heard of drying the eyes out, nor do most people get put into pampers, for certain cases they would use “plastics” which are like a plastic jogging suit... my 2 cent lol
Thank you so much for telling the truth Nicole. Embalming rules are the same in the US. It’s not a requirement.
@@Ms.Mortician this frustrates me because it still isn't telling the truth on what we do and makes us look terrible.
My mother passed January 5, 2021, it took several weeks to get her creamated remains. She always said every possession stays behind. I miss you ma!
Our son went to heaven December 5 2020, I'm still grieving probably forever. I'm sad to hear your mother passed🙏 🙏 🙏
So sorry for both of you guys, stay strong. They're still with you in some form or another.
Mine past n February 28,2021. I feel what you feel
@ Robert, Maria, Pedro, and greo : So very sorry for your loss, but your loss is only temporary. There is the coming Resurrection of the dead, mentioned in the Bible. Stay strong, and have faith. You will see your loved ones again !
So sorry for your loss. Mine passed on 7th of July 2020.
Death a strong reminder of how fragile humans are.....
Literally everyone dies you condescending piece of plastic
tutorial: brush him, r/rareinsults
tutorial: brush him 😂😂🤣🤣😅😅😅
Pink Floyd4 is it really?
Where did I hear that before? A movie? Some kind of superhero movie tell me
YOU DIED BUMMER
Don’t you just hate when that happens?
Edit: why are you guys liking this 🤠✨
RoseMary LMFAOOSSKFJDD
Ivan Sanders awe thanks 😀
Not really.. only when demons come back with my soul.
The lat time I brought back abaddon.
LOL
The man that handled my grandma for her funeral made her face look like she was asleep but smiling at us at the same time 🥺
Emya Earl Thats what they did to my grandma to and sorry for your lost
Same😢
I'm sorry but that's kinda creepy
@The Dawg pfft xD
@The Dawg wow buddy
As a hospice nurse who regularly interacts with those in the funeral service and at the medical examiners office, thank you for what you do. This video misrepresented the field and the work that you all do to help families when they are grieving a loss. I've had so many interactions with people in the field and have never come across someone who didn't have a profound respect for both the deceased and the families that they work with. Every field has a few bad apples, but this is definitely never been my experience over many years as a hospice nurse.
When I die I want my body parts to be donated so I dont have to worry about being buried alive and to help others.
When you're embalmed then you're definitely dead
Bored Flavor a lot of people want their body donated to teaching hospitals for teaching
Ew I want my organs in my body
@adam cecic ya ew who would do that Adam thank u for telling this person...
I heard on the news that a lady donated her mothers body. Then found out the armed forces used the body to test the effects of some sort of bomb. She wasnt happy.
I just recently got a job as a body removal and will be helping at the funeral home, let’s just say everybody who went or is going to school for this type of career, does this because we want to help in some way. I want to help families at their lowest and decided to become a mortician. Though I’m starting out as someone who picks up the body, I’m still going to respect the loved one that passed and the family who is effected in the situation.
Are you still working in this field?
Same!
I pray for you
I do the same except mortician that is about all that I don't do and nobody from the hospital does anything in the funeral home unless the work for one
Nice pic😍😍😍
Me: DIES
African coffin dancers joined the chat
🕴🏿⚰🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿
@Adrian Cole if u hate urself, how do u expect others to respect u. Think about it
@@ak20ak20 wh- bruh what do you mean
they just put a bunch of poodles and coffins
how is that d i s r i s p e c t f u l
🕴⚰🕴
🕴 🕴 🕴
The pallbearers
I want to say, thank you to those who handled my friend Emily with respect
And making her look beautiful at her funeral. Your family and friends love you Emily
May her soul rest in peace spice king
Rip Emily Who was she
@@d3r3r3k he just said it. Emily was his friend
I’m sorry for your loss. I’m sure Emily was a kind person. Rest In Peace Emily
Spice King, u scare me really bad ..
This video made me realize how short life is and eventually we all gon end up here one day🙈...never stop praying guys🤞😇
No one ask dude
Mr Death how dose someone ask that you ok?
@@randompotatopotat8 😂
@@cooletpyroyoutubechannel466 I said it anyway 🥱🖕
Prayers or not, you are going to die. That is if you are are not dead yet.
Me trying to calm myself during the lockdown
Infographics: Imagine dying
Imagine dying
This post was made by living gang
I already imagined dying... Before this video
Exactly
Such a bummer!
Ok
(Embalmer for 17 years) ... there’s so much wrong with this video. The order of things for one. Autopsied cases aren’t aspirated. Freezers aren’t used, coolers are. The incision locations are wrong. Scattered info, poorly arranged. This is why the public is so poorly informed of these processes
Mortician here as well... Yes this "story" has way too many holes in it. Poorly explained.
And they don't put the cascket in the incenerator eaither
@@joelrenfrow770 either*
@@joelrenfrow770 what happens to the casket?
@@nick63837 isnt a cardboard box used during cremation?
I hope and pray everyone has a great long lasting life. You are amazing just the way you are. Live every day to the fullest as much as you can.
Thank you, you're awesome!
I paid to watch my dad go in the cremator. I was so worried they would just throw together whoever and give us someone else's ashes, they explained the entire process and how the numbering works internationally as well as the respect taken, i watched his coffin go in and saw how clean it was before. Its done very respectfully, its the heart ache afterwards thats the difficult part. At least I know where my dad is now 🙏
Why would they charge you to watch your dad go in the cremator?
@@STZNCCTXBecause this is South Africa, they charge you to make money off you in every aspect. There isn't much that is out of bounds when it comes to making a fast buck...sadly.
@@AmiraSmyrna you're also South African?
Hi sorry to hear your that I only got to view my grandfather I didn't get to see him get cremated or buried
@@kristenswanepoel1449 hi yes, I paid doves who handled the cremation sorry to hear :( loss is awful
@@AmiraSmyrna yes it is especially when it only hits that they're gone when you see them not breathing ...
me: oh sweet this looks cool
infographics show: Y O U D I E D B U M M E R
I'm planning on being cremated when it's time for me to go
welcome to dark souls
I wanna be stuffed
Why did this make me laugh so much?
U died bummer
Me: sees video that seems interesting, clicks on video. Hears you died
Oh no, dies from heart attack immediately
Bummer
"bummer!"
HEAVY BREATHING INTENSIFIES
Bummer😕
What's sad is
One day we all gotta go man :/
Only the Christians live for eternity if u know what I mean
@@janetterallison3408 🤣🤣
@@ravioli6699 hi, I’m James’s mom 🤝
@@janetterallison3408 ay bro
What?
@@ravioli6699 nothing
When you realize that you knew all this because you watch, “ask a mortician”. 😬🤣
Exactly 😂
Great channel, even though it’s a little creepy.
Yas amazing channel
the comment I was looking for.. im like uhhh this video is whack we knew all that
its been ages since i have been to her channel brb
Considering most people dont die of just old age I imagine this process is probably a lot more gross then we are even thinking it is. Imagine cutting open a deceased dead animal on the side of the road. A lot different than something from the butcher. Anyone who has this job is taking one for the team.
esp. if the body has been decomposing for a while, not everyone is found dead right away
That is how Jeffery Dahlmer got his start.
if someone messes with my body, i'm coming back as a spirit to haunt them for all eternity!
😂same
It gon happen...
Im just gonna hang out as a ghost after I die
That'll get old after about 5 million years or so .....
Several necrophiliacs are typing
When my sister died last Oct 2021, after 3 days of viewing she was cremated. The crematorium did not include the casket and asked us what to do on the casket. We just gave it to the Funeral Home. The body was put to the chamber including her dying clothes. After less than 2 hours, there are some bones not totally turned to ash. They were put in a grinder. The whole process was viewed by the family, thus some members don't want to be cremated when they die due to "painful" process. Told them that dead person will no longer feel the pain. Personally, I want to be cremated when my times come but to autopsy, I don't want it.
Sorry for your loss
I’ve worked for a funeral home for 4 years now from pickup, assisting in the embalming process, all the way up to the end for services and burial. Some of this information is not accurate: 1. There are no “freezers”. The body is cold from refrigeration, but not frozen. 2. After an autopsy, the internal organs are not “repositioned,” but simply placed in a trash bag, then laid in the chest cavity before sowing up. 3. They completely left out the makeup part of preparation for a viewing after embalming and dressing. 4. Not every funeral home uses diapers. And lastly, 5. Caskets are reused if they are rental caskets.
yep lots wrong with the process here lol but it was fun!!
Rental caskets?!
@@braindrain1407 If you're going to be cremated you may have a viewing prior to and why pay thousands of dollars for a casket if you're going to be cremated.
Jim Barney lol agreed
You are right about all above, I did Autopsies, and everything else with the funeral business. Yes the speaker of this video was incorrect about lots of things.
imagine all this time you was actually alive and you accidentally fell asleep for a bit too long.
DAS TUFG
Das very tuff
Das tufffff
That happened in the old days if people where in a coma sometime they got buried an woke up in a coffin underground
Your post mortem will take care of that! If that doesn't when they embalm you it's really over!
I'm so disturb about how he talk about "You" as if it is you who died
This is far my most liked comment ever in youtube 😂
Your going to die one day. Deal with it
@@zero1zerolast393 So are you.
@@zero1zerolast393 im not gonna die im immortal
@Suni Victor So are you.
Ineed ABreak so are you
"I hate it when Rick and Mortis sets in" that's what I heard someone say about rigor mortis. I got a good chuckle.
This hit home, my father wasn't cremated but a little over a year ago my mother in law passed away and was cremated. I'm still sensitive about her passing but I'm glad to know how the process was, I miss them both greatly so I'm glad to know how things are done. Thank you.
Tryna find who asked
@dogetuberyt dont be rude that was his parent
Dogetuberyt we did. now get back in the kitchen
@@ethanpanayotti687 Still trying to find who tf asked.
@dogetuberyt due can u not come up with another roast or did ur mom tell u to be nice?
Me: **about to die**
"Any last words?"
Me: "B... Br... Bravo Six, going dark..." **dies**
A man of culture you are
@@Christarfire well
There’s...1 million....dollars in the-
Franco R I would have wrote it in the will
your here and this was a few seconds ago so hi
I’m gonna hide a grenade in my fake kidney....
Ur ghost: ALLAH AKBAR
Put a camera in your eyeball too
For when they steal your bus pass. Lol
Jeet Jepard best comment ever 😂
How can you take anything with you or hide stuff in your body you can't take anything with you when you Die your dead for a reason when people are no longer with us here
sad to realise how most of us are wasting their life every single day
My family has owned and operated multiple funeral homes since before I was born. My grandfather used to work late and listen to music on a old record player. Well one night I was there helping and my dad left to get something, I put a old record on and the corpse looked like it was smiling. My dad said sometimes temperature change or how the skin is pulled when handling them will make their faces do odd things. So when we got a elderly gentleman who was known for publicly shunning colored couples in town, I played 2Pac's "I get around" and the face was frowning so hard he was grinning in disgust.
The detailed way he describes this entire process makes me wonder if he actually did this in the past... 🤔🤔
The details are completely false! I’m a mortician. This video is wrong .
@Metal Scarif this video is suposed to be about America funerals most of the details are wrong I've never gotten a body from the medical examiner 'clean' nor do they replace your organs in there proper place. Thay get put in a plastic bag all together and all that gets put in the cavity. after you get to the funeral home if the family wants embalming we do it right away theres no need to wait for the autopsy report.
Shirley Wagner why are you watching this then?
But that's just a theory, A LIFE THEORY
Shirley Wagner well since is ur job we don’t expect u to say is true though no one will shade his/her job
me: dies
doctors who like to take people’s possessions: allow us to introduce ourselves
Dude I could tell your gonna get a lot of likes
So your calling yourself rich brat
@@funnyguy-qo6ut *you're
Hate to break it to you.. but postmortem examiners are not doctors, they are Forensic Pathologist.
completely different field and career from Medical Doctors this is like calling Dentists Doctors.
@@MrJustin2105 thx for correcting my spelling
I worked in a funeral home once and one thing this video missed was how they cut up the back of the clothing and literally drape it on top of the body. When you see a dead person in the casket you can pretty much assume that the back of their clothes have been cut up because it's not possible to dress them completely due to rigormortis
That intro “you died” caught me mad off guard and I let a giggle slip out in my cubical at work
At least if you were fired you know how to do this job
Fun
Bummer😇😂
Dearest Arcaithe: I just happen to be your rotten, awful, mean boss.....who heard that giggle.....WHEN you should have been working! Be in my office first thing tomorrow!!
I was an autopsy tech and we don't use a saw to cut open the chest cavity, we use a scalpel or knife.
No one:
The Infographics Show: you died
Bummer
bummer
Also infographics show: bummer
Bummer
Bummer
To watch this makes me so sad to die😭😭😭
Live life to the full and never stop praying ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
The receptiacle that the body is placed into for cremation is called a retort and the ashes are called cremains. There was NEVER any theft from the deceased person when I was in funeral service and we treated the body with the respect it deserved.
I work in the business now and their hasn't been any where I work only respect for both the deceased and their love ones
I had my dad cremated in 2016 and when I got his remains there were curly wires that you were showing in them. In 1985 he had open heart surgery and they use those to close his ribs together and they were actually in the ashes sitting on top, but it’s funny my dad always talked about those things he would take my hand and put it on his chest and say “ son do you feel that that’s the wires they used to close my ribs.” so I was kind of weirded out.
This man had 7 strokes at once
@Harsh Sidhu Harsh Sidhu Bro, are you still alive or you died of the strokes?
finally found it
@Harsh Sidhu Harsh Sidhu That's the worst.
Magnet can't pickup titanium and most medical fasteners . The crematory operator should done a better job removing by sight after the cremains cool down.
Craziest conspiracy:
They have a fun coffin dance with you after everyone leaves.
TikTok yesss
"You know I wont forget"
It's meme
YEESSSS
*upbeat music starts playing*
When I'm dead I'm dead and nobody's cutting me open to find out why I died
Hopefully not 🚫 fight for life insurance ‼️🤷😅
They DO IT WEATHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT, IN THE NAME OF SCIENCE, THEY PLAY WITH YOUR ORGANS LIKE A PIANO.
@@arthurwilliams7958 that's not true most don't have autopsies
Now, now.......I happen to be your nice funeral home embalmer (who will work on you) and I am very partial to "cutting up" as they say......besides, I have a nice new set of sharp knives I'm just "dying" to try out!
I learned that a person do not have to get embalmed when they are going to be cremated and it is cheaper for the cost. Thank You.
Embalming has never been required. Its recommended when transporting a corpse across state lines (to avoid decomposition), but never necessary. If you watch Ask A Mortician, she'll tell you all about it.
Chinquita Lewis my mom requested no embalming. ( regular cemetery burial) They make it sound required cuz of $
You don’t need embalming if you’re burying either. Some families like the results, but others don’t. For ‘woodland’ or ‘green’ burial it’s required that the body is not embalmed.
Unless there is foul pray why is autopsy necessary.
What's the point being embalmed at all ...wether buried or cremated ...? You are not Toutanhamum
If you're curious about the funeral industry, watch Ask A Mortician's channel. It's not as scary as the Infographics Show portrays.
Caitlin Doughty is the Corps Queen. I’m totally a deathling.
Or ask me. I am a mortician
None of this is true and it's all mixed up not in the right order. I'm very offended as a mortician.
Read a book called the final bath, it was very interesting.
James Johnson what do you mean
When my mom passed away I was her makeup artist. I ask the funeral place if they have make supplies and they handed me bunch of filthy looking supplies. So I told my boyfriend to go out and buy all the NEW STUFFS I’m sure she’ll thank me for it from heaven🙏
....
I did my mums make-up and dressed her
Makeup for the dead is different than for the living.
@@ronbaxter940 while true it's actually pretty common for morticians to use normal drugstore makeup.
,, go do t
I am getting cremated like mom and dad. My dad worked in a morgue. That’s why he chose cremation! 😩
My uncle was a mortician back in the 60s and cremation was very unheard of back then. My uncle enjoyed his job and he worked in several funeral homes and when he got sick he was able to tell us (his family) which funeral home he wanted to be buried from and how he wanted his remains treated. He chose cremation as well, I too think that cremation is my way too!
Why does so many choose cremation?
@@MilleniaStone I can only speak for myself the work that goes into preserving the body for burial is why I want to be cremated
I want to get buried next to my grandpa
@@buffalobillsfan2649 Same. I didn’t even get to know my great grandpa because he passed away years before I was born. Same with my great grandma. And to make up for it I’d like to give back to them by getting put in the same resting place.
I like how this video starts with just,"you died"
FYI, that's not a coffin, it's a casket. Coffins are "body shaped," wider at the shoulders than at the head and feet. They are also less flashy. Caskets are rectangular, have plush padding and are much more ornate.
Wait there is a difference?
@@BlackDeath1973 absolutely think coffin old school six sided wooden box. casket modern four sided aluminum box.
it is unfortunately children the end is inevitable, so enjoy every second of your life in the right way so as not to regret it later at the wrong time, for those who want to live a little longer I suggest you donate your organs and stay alive for a longer time on earth and in most of the time making another child happy for the time they should deserve 😁👍🏼
:)
How will donating your organs help you stay alive longer ? 🤨
I got an oculys quest today!
Reeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
Yes donate your organs so doctors have a reason to not save you and harvest your organs before you die.
I worked in a funeral home and assisted a few embalming. And if anyone took any personal belongings of the deceased they were fired. That was number 1 rule No Taking Any Items unless specified by the family to do so like jewelry, or metal fillings like gold or silver, etc and give those to the family.
I agree no decent human being would do something like that
They treat you better when you're dead than they do when you're alive. Bummer!
@@mego5078 True indeed! What are arc soles?
Facts
"Secrets" you've obviously never watched Ask a Mortician. Hi fellow Deathlings 👋
Hi! 👋
My fav channel
Yes!!
Right lol uneducated video.
Would lovw to watch her videos but im afraid of graphic surprises. Are there any?
Makes me glad I live in Sweden, where closed-coffin funerals are the default and you don't have all that embalming stuff. I never got what's the deal with embalming the dead if you aren't going to keep the mummies around forever to be put on display like Lenin, and open casket funerals just seemed needlessly ghoulish to me. I want to remember my loved ones as they were when they were alive, I don't want the last image I ever get to see of a loved one to be of their cold dead corpse.
Open coffin funerals are also about closure. Its definitely hard to see a loved one in there (even harder if you grab their hand and find it stiff and cold as ice) but the overwhelming sadness of the moment can help with the long term for some people.
@@jamesbarnes5769 Maybe for some, I know other people for whom such a moment would only make it all harder to handle. But it's not like closed casket funerals are sterile and emotion-free affairs, there's a portrait of the dead person and people are still crying and taking in the emotions and talking about their memories of them. When physically seeing and touching the deceased isn't an expected part of your culture, the vast majority of people in it simply don't feel they need to do that specific thing to process their emotions.
Plus I've heard lot's of embalming chemicals are both dangerous for the environment as well as the people working with handling the dead bodies, so for me at least that's another reason I am uneasy about the idea of embalmings.
That’s the point. They’ll fix your loved ones so they gonna look just like you remembered them.
@@blondbraid7986 Oh definitely. Been to both kinds and either way tears are shed for sure. Different cultures have different ways to deal with the grief and service. Grandmother in law passed recently and her husband fell to the ground in tears once he saw her. That might sound terrible (and it was) but it did make the rest of the service easier with such an intince moment of emotion already had. Typically in a open casket funeral the family/close friends comes in 30min prior to the public so they may grieve in peace so as to better receive the visitors paying there respect. Again both types are fine but our family has always practiced open casket typical of most Southerners in America.
I still want the coffin open, at least get a quick peek to make sure that they have the right person.
My lil 15 year old cousin was murdered june 10th 2021, yesterday was her open casket and i bawled my eyes out. as my aunt and i drove to the funeral what was sad and what made my stomach turn was the hurst that was carrying her was right behind us it hurt a lot and i got instant chills. than I saw her and it didnt even look like herself at all she looked older and gone. Then when we were leaving I saw her casket being carried back into the hurst and ready for cremation. A sad depressing process tbh and its horriying, tramautizing, and heartbreaking to see her body in person and to know that she was cremated.
Infographics: “you died”
Me: WOAH WOAH LET ME ATLEAST FINISH EATING MY NOODLES OK, thank you
Lol
I'm eating noodles as I'm watching this too 😂
Bummer!
Nope. You can't say that to grim reaper.
And besides noodles is unhealthy you cheapskates.
When I die before I leave this precious earth I would love to see everything that goes on with my earthly dead body and also I'm going to be checking up and in on all of my family members and love ones that are still alive on earth and let everybody know including my Beautiful Father and my Mother and to the rest of the family and everybody all around across the world it is okay to Cry
Brandon Ahmed you look like kid cudi
sorry, but you will be stuck in a room with 2 windows and you can only see your visitors and you can hear them (for 50000 years) not that bad tbh
@Zeal! It's like that until the second coming.
Honey this earth not precious enough
@Zeal! not true the spirit lives on
A lot of people died while you watched this video
More than just someone.
Due to coronavirus
You forgot that there's a pandemic outside?
@@milkdrinker117 oh yeah i totally forgot that
Try thousands. Wherever you live isn't the whole planet. Unless you're those Americans who think the U S, IS the Earth
I will say that our local funeral home is amazing. When my dad died at the hospital, it took forever for them to release him. I had to wait for a phone call so i could tell them that No, they couldn't have my 76 year old dad's eyes or anything else for that matter. It was 10 pm before i finally got that call. Bridges and Cameron went straight to get him immediately, in the middle of the night. Once i got there the next morning, he was already embalmed. None of his organs were removed. I asked. He wasn't cut on at all. I asked. He had been cut on enough. I couldn't ask for any better treatment of my dad. They were amazing. I will never use anyone else.
embalming is an ancient egyptian ritual and I doubt we know what is really done to the body and why. They seem to want to get at the blood.
Just trust in Jesus, its important where you spend eternity.
Marilyn Willett, what do you mean “just trust Jesus”? There are many other religions to trust, or no religion at all. Telling people everything is fine as long as you pray is a bit close minded. That’s like telling an addict that their addiction will go away if they pray everyday, highly unlikely.
Thank you for speaking the truth. We are only here temporarily. We need Jesus for eternal salvation.
Amen. Some here are treating it as a joke!
Ok boomer
Amen
Did you just made this episode so we will be prepared because of this pandemic?
Yes
I don’t know why I watched this. I’m so disturbed.
Same here. And my country don't even have all that embalming and open-casket display stuff!
After watching videos of death due to wuhan virus, this was suggested by youtube... I assume this is just conincidence 😔
LuminaryPrism75 Me too...
I'm 46 years of life at 44 years of life I attended my very first funeral. At 23 years of life my son was laid to rest. I don't see anywhere the rest of my days on earth that I'll end my tears nor will my heart be mended but at least now I know what they did to my son from the hospital, funeral home and onto the crematory I'm absolutely devastated with an infinite broken heart.
Thank you RUclips for letting me share/comment
MAAM, IM SO SORRY FOR YOUR EXPERIENCE. THIS IS NOT THE BEST DEPICTION OF THE PROCESS. PLEASE BE WELL ASSURED THAT YOUR SON IS WITH YOU FOR LIFE!!! GOD LOVE YOU. HIS PRESENCE IS AMONG US ALL
*clicks on video*
video: you died, bummer.
What the fu-
Bruh moment
ck
Me: dies
African Coffin Dancers: *A S T R O N O M I A*
DatAustralianMatt being an african i take this as an offense
@@FalseStartPod sooo
SunriseTV on RUclips I’m African to I find this funny tho
@@FalseStartPod you clearly haven't seen the video of the dancing pallbearers
@everyone who replied its just not my tradition
One correction and one addition. The eye caps have a kind of barb that hooks onto the inside of the eyelid, this is what keeps the eyes closed. Also, you skipped the mouth sewing to stop your jaw dropping open. Aside from that, great video!!
Have you seen the gadget at goodwill they use to tag clothes? They use something similar to that now lol
Many corrections. None of this is right
Vee Cee I’m from Australia and we always stitch there mouth closed no glue
@@Preppapigslays you mean suture
James Johnson yes mate
What I find interesting is they did an autopsy on his body so it would be different in the embalming process. Nothing to puncture. Also, my mother wanted to be cremated. My funeral director did not say she needed to be embalmed. Once the hospital released her, they took her body to the crematorium. Her funeral was her ashes in the urn. I have seen funeral homes not giving that option but it is there. No embalming necessary for direct cremation.
Embalming is not mandatory.
U sticking round that body imma call ghost busters
Hes Here Hes There Hes Everywhere Who You Gonna Call Quikick Friend Fredbeaaarrr
-MATPAT
@Cheezit Police pope francis😂
Interesting, by law, I need to tell my clients all of these details when preparing a contract for disposition, so nothing is a secret. I worked in the removal end of the funeral business for over 10 years and never once did we help ourselves to the belongings of the deceased. The incision in the chest for an autopsy is made with a scalpel... the bone saw ( not a rusty hacksaw) is used to cut through the ribs only. And if this video is in any way true to your understanding of the funeral industry, you have been dealing with the wrong funeral home!
Thank you! Fellow licensed individual here and man. So much misinformation here haha. Little stuff but enough to get people thinking all the wrong things!!
What about the blood?
I find death so disturbing. The part of your organs stopping, the fluids draining. Rigor mortis. leaving your body behind for someone else to care for. Knowing they'll be cutting you open. Imagining my body being tossed in a box thrown underground or burned. My name on an urn or tombstone is eerie. I guess I struggle with knowing such horrible things will happen and I cant control it or help myself outta it
Whell, they won't be your ashes in the urn they will be the coffins ashes insteed. DO NOT HAVE A COFFIN WASTED
Remember this comment when your time has come you’ll be at peace
Trust me, your not the only one.
Wow this was an interesting take on Death rites... I’m definitely going for a more natural Finale...I don’t want nasty chemicals pumped though my body-my temple!
I guess we wouldn't know but neither do I.
Government is trying to convince people"you will survive"
Infographic show:''what happens when you die" giving me a panic attack
@Oscar Burner because diyying means you can't do anything
How do these embalmers have the guts to work with dead people, that is one of my biggest fears
They make bucks! and they basically go to med school like a doctor but a year or two less, so, to them, it's more like a hospital/medical environment which interests a lot of people. And again, they make big bucks and work alone and don't have to deal with annoying managers and creepy coworkers. They don't get any grief from their client so it's probably pretty cool except when there is a child involved or a really rotted body that stinks. Then it's all about Lysol and air freshener and cleaning that mess up to honor the dead person.
Alison B yeah I would much rather work around dead bodies over alive people anyday. The dead won’t hurt you. It’s the living that you should be worried about
Alison B embalmers don’t go to medical school, they go to mortuary school. You’re probably thinking of medical examiners, who do go to medical school.
Compare to a surgeon only thing after surgery patient usually wakes up the surgeon mortician doesn't worry about his patients waking up!!!..
My mom used to say, "The dead won't hurt you, but they can make you hurt yourself! "
they’re in a business everyone is dying for
😨😨😨
When I die, I want my barber to give me a fresh haircut.
most people are given a fresh haircut before the viewing :-)
@@emmib1388my hair would be hard to do
Dear Joseph (Still around)......I AM your nice barber......BUT, cutting hair on the deceased is not my thing.......do this.....buy yourself a nice wig (in advance), and then you'll look super fab for your "viewing".......bye for now.....and It's time for your haircut right now!
And this is why I’m doing a natural funeral. Rinse my body, wrap me in a shroud, and put me right in the dirt
Yeet ya in that dirt real nice
That’s what I say. 24 hours after death or before, put me in the earth.
@@710MaryJanel
Same
@@710MaryJane at first I thought you meant 24 hours after or 24 hours before death, put me in the ground. 😳
I’m the son of a mortician. Up until I was six years old, we lived inside of my father’s funeral home. All of the stuff on this video is true, and was vocabulary I was exposed to and surrounded with during my entire childhood. Quite a creepy childhood... we used to play hide and seek in the casket selection room, we would eat dinner while my dad was in the next room embalming a body, and I walked in on many autopsies by accident. I currently am typing this inside the office of the F.H as I spend many evenings studying here with our WiFi. I do not live in here anymore but my father continues to run our local funeral home to this day. I’d love to answer some questions if anyone has any.
Hey what's up? I'm thinking of working for a cemetery. This uh business had always been interesting to me. It is an important profession obviously. I guess if I had a question it would be this. What can you do in this field with no schooling or experience. Can you just start at a funeral home with no history in it? Thanks
Any paranormal activity while living there?
Autopsies in a funeral home?
Once the body parts needed removed those that are not damaged what happens
As soon as you said autopsy in the funeral home I knew you were a liar.
Infographics: "You die..."
Also infographics: Das tuffff
Im a pathologist so this is my job..and i love what I do to letting them rest in peace..and also so family's know why they died 😊
When a body has metal in it IE back surgery "rods" . What is done with them?
"oh, he's handsome" "I know." I love this channel already 4:36
I've been working with the dead for a few years, never heard anyone say anything about the way someone looks... that itself is creepy...hahaha
This is for the people who died during the "worst punishments," isn't it.
This happens at most funeral homes
i am not getting cremated i want my body to be whole i want to to be sent to the bottom of the ocean only natural things for the coffin so that there is no pollution so i may see or become a part of whats down there
Evanston Conner the ocean is seriously my biggest fear. i could never do that, wow. i do want to be cremated though, i always have...
Angel Rose same here, I don’t want to go into deep water,
Cremation adds to air pollution . Ash is sterile, inorganic like plastic and harmful to marinelife. Greenburial better than cremation. Nontoxic and naturally decompose.
Never listen to celebrities they say anything for fame and fortune. Some say they already sold their souls.
@Brayan Carmona that is the point much less that i want to atleast give back to the enviorment from what i took from it
Going to a funeral has destroyed me on how I feel about them. My wife and daughter passed away in 2013 and when I saw my wife after the funeral home fixed her up, she looked bloded but was still gorgeous. She looked peaceful. Which gave me some peace but ill never go to another one again. Thank God my mom and dad wants to be cremated and doesn't care about a funeral.
Me: "Do you mind if I say a word?"
Widow: "Please do."
Me: clears throat "Plethora."
Widow: "Thank you. That means a lot."
Lol.
Infographic show - "Since there's not much you can do about it - you're a ghost, after all."
Me - "Are you sure......I mean conjuring, ring etc"
I know I thought of that too
"You died, B U M M E R."
**coffin dance plays at a distance**
Imagine liking your comment
Stop the comment
To All Reading this in 2022 I Pray You Make it Through This Year Safe & Blessed
Rigor is gone in 24 hrs. He already had the autopsy when you said " your body has rigormortis ". No. Long gone by then.
This is not the funeral home. This would be the pathologist.
Exactly Kari.. I hate how things like this misinform people 🤦🏻♀️
They said an autopsy would have been done before transferring to funeral home
Actually the medical examiner / coroner would have jurisdiction over unattended deaths. Such a death would go to the coroner or medical examiners office for an autopsy or death investigation, not the hospital for a doctor to deal with. I don't even want to start in on all the other things they got wrong. Such a shameful and false depiction of my work.
mortygal they seem to get a lot of info wrong on many subjects then need to get it straight if they are putting it to the masses
I stuffed myself with popcorn kernels before I died
Same
How are you commenting this when you are dead? Are you a ghost?
@@goosemann2389 i don't even know if i can whoosh your comment
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Nah, I'm gonna insist my pockets are filled with firecrackers before I go up in smoke.
This was awesome! Thanks for uploading.😌🙏🏾
Me:Died
Coffin dancers: Our time have come
Bro learn English
Rodri Nerf fr
My uncle died near Christmas. This is shocking I just found out what they did to him. Rest In Peace uncle, I’ll be strong without you.
Yeah I hope u feel better
My grandfather died near Christmas too this gonna happen to all of us though you see
You can rest easy knowing they probably didn’t do a lot of this to him. There’s a lot of misinformation in here. Sounds like the guy looked up a blog from a conspiracist on reddit as his source lol.
my uncle died 2 minutes after christmas in 2017 .💔
@@varilowkey aww that had ruin the joy Rip sorry to hear
Then how do you know the secrets if they're secrets?
Wooh your right
They are actually not secrets. We just don't ask them. You can read these procedures in WikiHow.
Or go to ‘Ask a Mortician’ channel. She’s talks about all this stuff in more detail. And she’s a mortician 😂
@@Moneypanda012 If they got this nonsense from her channel then she definitely needs to be banned from the funeral industry.
My folks own two funeral homes in northern Maine. Lived in one growing up, and picking up bodies was one of my first jobs. I can't speak for everyplace, but we always showed the up most respect toward the deceased. No jokes like that were made. That's not professional. That's not how you behave. No to mention the autopsies we're never done at the funeral home. Cause of death is not the funeral homes job. Our job is everything after that. Maybe some states differ. Idk
Every state I've been in has treated the deceased with nothing but dignity and respect. I wish they'd take this video down. I can't imagine how traumatic it could be to families who just lost a loved one.
My uncle passed away suddenly. We came from a country where funeral is very family-oriented which mean family member do some of body cleaning. It's quite unsettling to not being able to see what's going on behind the close door. But at least they allow use to load the body into the burner. Thank you for letting us know.
I used to work in a funeral home. This is pretty spot on. The worse part is selling the funeral packages to the bereaved. Most of the time they are strong and reserved. other times they are a wailing mess that you need to try to comfort and sometimes you cant help but also feel for the families of the deceased.
I worked in a funeral directors for 18 months and it would be very difficult for someone to take something from a wallet as a proper trail is started from the very moment the body is collected, each time the body is moved the things are checked and logged so if anything went missing it would be obvious. Sometimes the family are there when the body is brought into care and the funeral director will check pockets and jewellery and give it straight back to the family so there is no finger pointing later on. Also the part where the man jumps out of the coffin, if anybody did do this they would not be in the business very long as working in the industry is not a joking matter and requires upmost respect and care for the deceased and their families.
But not for a loaded metrocard: Who's going to interested for a metrocard, it won't be that obvious than other items.
I agree my grandpa has been working Miss dead bodies are either a funeral director or other sorts of that person he's also a verified license mortician he agrees with you it is very hard to steal anything from a body when when it's going through processes
Everyone is nodding,such an agreeable and positive vibe from beginning to finish!