The GFG Blog

2013Feb

Positively the end

Charles
Feb 13
2 comments
“Most of us do not want to talk about [drawing up an advance directive]. Is it up to our doctors to bring this up only in a crisis situation? Shouldn’t we be informed about our health care options, even when healthy, and especially when we have a chronic or terminal
Categories:  End-of-life issues

The race grows sweeter

Charles
Feb 12
No Comments
Posted by Vale Here on the blog we often rail against society’s thoughtless pursuit of longevity. Rightly so – it is cowardice not kindness that endorses the suffering that medicine – seemingly without reflection or conscience – prolongs. But it’s important to remind ourselves that it isn’t always so; that
Categories:  Attitudes to older people, End-of-life issues

Grief

Charles
Feb 12
4 comments
“Grief is like a drunken houseguest who keeps coming back for one more goodbye hug.” Source
Categories:  Grief

Why did we delete that blog post?

Charles
Feb 11
9 comments
This morning we received an email which had been forwarded in error by Mr Potts, Customer Relations Manager at The Co-operative Funeralcare, to a bereaved family – not we hasten to add one of the families referred to in the message – who forwarded it to us.  On reading it,
Categories:  Co-operative Funeralcare

Adios Noninos

Charles
Feb 11
1 comment
Posted by Vale In my very occasional series (see Song for my father by Horace Silver) here’s another piece written as a tribute to a much loved father. It’s a version of Adios Noninos by the great musician of the tango, Astor Piazzola.
Categories:  Art and death, music

Jennifer Paterson, Francis Bacon and other fallen stars

Charles
Feb 11
5 comments
Posted by Richard Rawlinson — in sparklingly shameless name-dropping form – ED ‘Thank goodness for inequality,’ quipped a friend with nonchalant disregard for political correctness as we casually admired inequality’s legacy of beautiful architecture lining the streets of Belgravia this weekend. The plethora of blue plaques adorning these grand houses
Categories:  Uncategorised

The extraordinariness of ordinary people

Charles
Feb 11
2 comments
“I just love the work. Much of it isn’t anything to do with being at the cutting edge of any ‘new’ movement, but about listening to people, giving them attention and valuing a person’s life that I am told was just ordinary.” Sue Goodrum, celebrant. 
Categories:  celebrants

Close thine eyes

Charles
Feb 08
2 comments
Posted by Vale I was at a funeral recently when this song by Purcell was played at the committal. We listened to the Treorchy Male Voice Choir, but I couldn’t find their version on You Tube so this is the Kirkintilloch Male Voice Choir instead. Close thine eyes and sleep
Categories:  Art and death, Committal

Shrine on you crazy diamond

Charles
Feb 08
No Comments
It’s amazing, really, just how terrifically buttoned-up Brits are when it comes to commemorating their dead. Other cultures offer us examples of observances, duties, rituals and practices which can teach us a thing or two. We really ought to take them up on it.  One of these is the household shrine.
Categories:  memorialisation, Shrine

Yes, where were the humanists?

Charles
Feb 08
6 comments
We’ve held this over awhile, but the question it asks remains topical. The article is about the aftermath of the Newtown shootings:  The funerals and burials over the past two weeks have taken place in Catholic, Congregational, Mormon and United Methodist houses of worship, among others. They have been held
Categories:  Humanists