Vancouver Sun

BOOK EXPLORES WHAT HAPPENS WHEN WE DIE

Mortician-activist says funeral industry should offer more options

- TARA BAHRAMPOUR Washington Post

In some Indonesian villages, families live with and care for the bodies of their loved ones for months or years after they die. In Japan, relatives of the deceased use chopsticks to remove large bone fragments from cremated ashes. In Mexico, mummified babies and children were once revered, and people would hold parties and games for them.

If those practices sound alarming, Caitlin Doughty would like to remind you that injecting a body with formaldehy­de might seem appalling to people in other parts of the world.

Recently, she crisscross­ed the globe looking at how diverse, and even healing, death can be. Her new book, From Here To Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death, was published this month.

Doughty, 33, is a mortician in Los Angeles but, as she says, “that doesn’t really describe it.” She is an activist for a view of death that offers a lot more choices than North Americans have traditiona­lly been given. Doughty believes that what happens after a person dies can be much more personal, transcende­nt and comforting than the mainstream funeral industry would have us believe.

By exploring death rituals around the world, her goal was to open the door to new possibilit­ies.

“Even things that we find strange or repulsive or disrespect­ful can actually be quite beautiful when you break them down and tell the stories,” she said. “I was hoping to prove that change is possible and that even when I’m standing there with a son brushing off his father’s mummified corpse or I’m seeing a body being pulled off a compost pile, there’s so much respect there and it’s such a human process.”

Doughty, who has written a memoir about her profession and also hosts Ask A Mortician, a series of video shorts that discuss such phenomena as coffin births (when built-up gases cause a recently deceased pregnant woman’s body to expel a fetus) and what happened to the bodies of those who died on the Titanic. Some of the videos boast hundreds of thousands of views, perhaps testimony to a transforma­tion Doughty says is underway as more Americans consider alternativ­es to the standard funeral package.

“People are going to funeral homes and going to ‘traditiona­l’ services and they’re more and more not satisfied with them,” she said.

New ideas include allowing loved ones to attend a cremation, or doing a water cremation, in which the body is dissolved in very hot water and lye (avoiding the use of natural gas and the release of toxins).

Doughty got interested in death as a child after witnessing another child suffer a fall that was likely fatal. The experience made her afraid of death; she confronted her fear by entering a field in which death is commonplac­e. But once there, she felt something was missing.

“It was always my instinct that we weren’t doing enough for our families, that we weren’t giving them enough emotional space to really grieve and have feelings,” she said. “Nothing makes me more angry when I hear about someone asking a funeral director, ‘Do you think that I could come in and fix Mom’s hair and fix Mom’s lipstick, because she liked to wear it this way,’ and they say no.”

By contrast, many other cultures encourage intimate physical contact with the deceased, resulting in a warmer, less forbidding experience. “When you’re in Mexico, the whole cemetery is just glowing as they interact with the memories of the dead,” she said.

For the book, she also travelled within the United States to visit people who are promoting alternativ­e methods, such as a North Carolina group that experiment­s with composting human remains and a mobile funeral pyre operation in Colorado.

To Doughty, there’s no right or wrong way to do things, including the standard North American way, but she would like people to have access to a wider range of choices — such as burying a loved one’s remains on private property, or setting them on a mountainto­p for the vultures.

“These things aren’t available and you should be angry about that, because the American funeral system has a lobby,” she said.

“There are regulation­s in place that make it incredibly hard to enter the funeral industry or have any new type of dispositio­n become available.”

 ?? MARA ZEHLER. ?? Caitlin Doughty’s new book explores death rituals across the world.
MARA ZEHLER. Caitlin Doughty’s new book explores death rituals across the world.
 ?? CAITLIN DOUGHTY ?? A woman sleeps by altars she prepared for her family for the Day of the Dead in Janitzio, Mexico.
CAITLIN DOUGHTY A woman sleeps by altars she prepared for her family for the Day of the Dead in Janitzio, Mexico.
 ?? CAITLIN DOUGHTY. ?? Family members clean the mummified body of a relative in Indonesia.
CAITLIN DOUGHTY. Family members clean the mummified body of a relative in Indonesia.

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