Yorkshire Post

THE LOCKDOWN’S EFFECTS ON HOLDING LOVED ONES’ FUNERALS –

- ■ Email: chris.burn@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @chrisburn_post

With funeral numbers limited by lockdown, personalis­ed ceremonies are growing ever more important to those who have lost loved ones. Chris Burn reports.

There have been some plus sides – services have become more intimate and some people are more likely to speak. People lining the streets on the way to a service has been beautiful.

“THE FUNERAL industry is not renowned for its use of technology but we have embraced it in the past year,” reflects Sarah Jones as she considers how her job has changed as a result of the Covid pandemic. “We have focused on what is possible. There has been lots of live-streaming, lots of online tributes but also lots of people lining the streets when a funeral is taking place. Some people have found it really difficult but other people have adjusted their plans to still create really beautiful funerals.”

When Jones co-founded Full Circle Funerals back in 2016 with the aim of offering services that moved away from tradition and instead focused on more accurately reflecting the lives, loves and passions of the person who had passed away, it was impossible to anticipate the restrictio­ns and imposition­s coronaviru­s would bring about on usual ways of grieving.

Currently, a maximum of 30 people are allowed to attend ceremonies, with that reduced down to six for wakes and the scattering of ashes. But Jones says despite the obvious challenges, there have been some silver linings to emerge from the bleak situation. “There have certainly been disadvanta­ges but there have also been some plus sides. Services have been arguably more intimate. Some people are more likely to speak because there are less people there. People lining the streets on the way to a service has also been beautiful.”

Jones worked as an NHS doctor before being involved in community care for adults with learning difficulti­es prior to becoming a funeral director and says her experience­s on the medical frontlines set on the path to establishi­ng a company that is focused on compassion above tradition.

“I started my profession­al life as a medic. I was working in A&E and had to deliver some really difficult news and I had a sense I was quite comfortabl­e with that responsibi­lity even though I was quite young at the time. I felt that was something I wanted to do well and wanted to be there for the people involved. That seemed different to some of my colleagues, who shied away from those situations.

“A couple of people I spoke to referred to arranging a funeral for a loved one and said they couldn’t understand why they had made the decisions they did. I also went to funerals myself that were fairly similar but for people I knew were very different. That triggered in me the idea that I want to bring everything I have learnt from health and social care into this area.”

One person to have used Full Circle’s services in recent months is Rachel Roberts who had the tragic job of arranging a service for her husband Martin after he died in January at the age of just 55, only ten weeks after being diagnosed with a brain tumour. “I still feel like I am in a bad dream and he is going to walk in the back door,” she says of the loss of Martin, who worked as a window fitter for REP Windows. “He was very proud of his work. He has left quite a hole at his company because he was always very handy. He hated the phrase ‘that will do’ because he wanted things to be perfect.”

Rachel says her and her two children are still suffering a deep sense of shock and loss from Martin’s passing but the close-knit family from Yeadon in West Yorkshire say they were grateful for the chance to use his funeral as a chance to celebrate what he had meant to them and share some of their many happy memories. “It was very uplifting - it sounds a bit strange but we still like to watch the video. The celebrant we used knew him and had know him for years. She did the service and was absolutely amazing. She usually does weddings and she incorporat­ed a lot of his sense of humour. There was more laughter than there was tears. It was quite a surprise. We did shed tears but there was a lot of laughter. It was just Martin down to a tee.”

The Roberts family joined the growing number of people opting for personal touches to make funerals memorable both for those who can attend and those unable to be there. In Martin’s case, that involved his favourite drink - Yorkshire Tea.

“Martin loved his Yorkshire Tea so we did the Order of Service with a Yorkshire Tea bag and thought other people who couldn’t attend could raise a cup of tea to him at home,” Rachel explains. “He drank tea until the cows came home.”

Those who were in attendance were given an afternoon tea box at the end so they could have a slice of cake with their tea and remember Martin in an individual wake at home.

“We met in Halifax which is where I am from, it was a kind of blind date,” Rachel says of her relationsh­ip with Martin. “He was very quiet and shy but we just hit it off.

“He had a very dry sense of humour and he just made people laugh. That side of him came out when he got to know you.”

Among Martin’s requests for the funeral were having the hymn Jerusalem - as well as the Prodigy song Firestarte­r. “I was adamant I didn’t want Firestarte­r but my dad and son said you have got to do it,” says Rachel. “As a compromise, we did it when people were walking out.”

Another person to use Full Circle to plan a funeral with a difference was Gill Hendy following the death of her mother Marjorie Linn.

“My experience of funerals in the past has been the traditiona­l one,” she explains. “The Full Circle approach is totally different.”

In addition to the event having a purple theme in honour of her mum’s favourite colour, they placed a bag of her favourite chocolate – Cadbury’s Daily Milk Buttons – in her coffin, along with cards and letters from family members. She also made sure the music reflected her mother’s upbeat outlook on life.

“I thought back to all the songs I used to remember her singing during my childhood – Abba, songs from musicals, the Glenn Miller orchestra. She was full of life. She was a nursing sister and midwife and her late 20s she and my godmother went across from Harrogate to Canada to do nursing. It wasn’t very common in those days and they made the local press.

“My father was a doctor who worked in Canada and she met him on the way back to the UK. She loved life and she had a great sense of humour.”

Hendy says: “One of the things that was nice was we chose everything ourselves with members of our family. It also gave me an opportunit­y to come to terms with it.

“I was dreading having to read a eulogy but because we had planned it all when it came to the day I was able to enjoy it.

Hendy adds: “I think the most important thing is to do what you feel is right – not only for yourself but for the person whose funeral it is. There is a tendency to be driven by tradition and what people expect of you. You can be led down a route that isn’t what you want.

“But with this approach it gives you the opportunit­y to do what you feel the best thing is.”

 ?? Top, Sarah Jones of Full Circle Funerals, and PICTURES: ERNESTO ROGATA ?? SAYING GOODBYE DIFFERENTL­Y: inset, Martin and Rachel Roberts.
Top, Sarah Jones of Full Circle Funerals, and PICTURES: ERNESTO ROGATA SAYING GOODBYE DIFFERENTL­Y: inset, Martin and Rachel Roberts.
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 ??  ?? Sarah Jones, funeral director, on how services have been changed by Covid restrictio­ns.
Sarah Jones, funeral director, on how services have been changed by Covid restrictio­ns.

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