Showing posts with label Funeral Panner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Funeral Panner. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Highest quality funeral arrangements at a sensible price


Funerals with care, without worry

We can arrange everything to suit exactly your (or your loved one’s) wishes. You choose how your funeral should be. Whether you prefer a traditional or an eco-friendly funeral, we can arrange it for you. We can handle receptions and wakes to suit your family culture. We can organise the Order of Service (including readings, music and poetry) and deal with Church Ministers (or the official at a non-religious funeral) if you prefer.
 
Throughout, you are assured of a caring and understanding service and an extremely
high level of personal attention. Our expert services also include pre-planning (Funeral Plans), Wills and legal services, counselling, advice on senior care and post-funeral services. We always remember that you are in control and this day should be as you would have liked it to be.
 
Visit us online at www.funeralplanner.co
Tel: 0161 283 9060 & 07581 705303
 
Order your
Funeral Planning
Journal for only £9.95 :

Sunday, 16 January 2011

Should young children attend the funeral of a parent?

I copy this excellent article from Jon Henley at the Guardian,please log on the link below to check the many responses:

Should young children go to their parents' funerals? It's a question, thankfully, most of us aren't called on to answer. But if we are, our decision can have a lasting impact.
It has just come up in (of all places) The Archers. In a moving speech, Jill Archer, mother of Elizabeth Pargetter, whose husband Nigel famously died in a recent rooftop fall, explains to her daughter why the Pargetters' 11-year-old twins should go to their father's funeral.
Having lost her father at an early age, she reveals, she was denied "the chance to say goodbye" when her mother died not long afterwards, because at seven, she was thought to have been through enough. But, Jill says: "It made me think people could just disappear, without any explanation – people you loved, and who you thought loved you."
Long afterwards, she continues, "I was a very wary person. I didn't want to be hurt again. But then I met your father. He taught me to love again, so I could start to forgive my mother for leaving me without a word and never coming back."
Research by educationalpsychologist Dr John Holland, a specialist in the field, who describes Jill's story as "totally accurate", bears her out. In a pioneering study of adults who had lost a parent while still at school, none of the 47% who attended the funeral reported any negative experiences. Two-thirds said it was positive or helpful, allowing them to "grasp reality" and "letting them say goodbye".
Of the 53% who did not attend, however – many were forbidden outright, others distracted from going – more than 75% later wished they had. They felt regret, exclusion, anger, hurt, frustration, or a "detachment from reality". Those who were given the choice and decided not to go did not experience the same negative feelings.
"A funeral is a family rite of passage and important in the grieving process," says Holland, author of Understanding Children's Experiences of Parental Bereavement. "Don't force them, but it's important for children to feel involved. The golden rule is to explain what it's about, in terms they can understand – and give them the choice."
There is, he adds, no lower age limit: "A child will always gain something. And you should see the anger of people, 40 or 50 years later, who were banned or tricked into not going."