Subject: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 18 Apr 18 - 01:34 PM I want written...finally no taxes Ugh I hate tax season feel like I am paying Stormy Daniels but only getting jack Daniels in a bottle |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 18 Apr 18 - 01:47 PM However our idiot governor will probably figure out a way to tax dead people some how |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: beardedbruce Date: 18 Apr 18 - 01:51 PM Hey, olddude, the dead get to vote ( for Democrats, it seems), so why shouldn't they pay taxes? |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: keberoxu Date: 18 Apr 18 - 01:55 PM One retired health practitioner of my acquaintance, conversant with folk remedies and holistic medicine, says their epitaph ought to be: Here lies Dr. **** in spite of castor oil |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 18 Apr 18 - 01:59 PM I also want i told you I was sick |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 18 Apr 18 - 02:00 PM "I told you I was ill!" |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Peter the Squeezer Date: 18 Apr 18 - 02:19 PM |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Peter the Squeezer Date: 18 Apr 18 - 02:21 PM Sorry - hit the button too early Olddude - Spike Milligan beat you to it, but it had to be written in Irish Gaelic. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/southern_counties/3742443.stm |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 18 Apr 18 - 02:22 PM Great minds think alike lol |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: gnu Date: 18 Apr 18 - 03:02 PM "He devoted his death to medical science."... assuming Dalhousie Medical School will accept my corpse. They have high entrance standards and, then, there is the fire code to consider. Hazardous waste, eh? >;-) It's a good deal. They pay everything! The round trip (maximum three years), the cremation of whatever they don't throw on the barbie, the urn... it's a hell of a deal. Plus, you get to designate who gets the urn so you can get you shipped to a jurisdiction that doesn't require a burial. That way, whoever gets the ashes can dump them in the toilet and sell the urn for at least enough to buy a bottle of the pure. Win-win-win I'd say. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Mr Red Date: 18 Apr 18 - 03:04 PM I think we can be sure the Twitler got to Jack Daniels............ |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: gnu Date: 18 Apr 18 - 03:13 PM Yeah, I know. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 18 Apr 18 - 03:35 PM Burn me up put me into a coffee can. I like coffee and well one last smoke |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 18 Apr 18 - 03:46 PM Please don't bury me in the cold, cold ground I'd rather have them cut me up and pass me all around You can blow my brain in a hurricane The blind can have my eyes The rest can take both of my ears If they don't mind the size There y'are. Music thread now courtesy of Mr I find :-) DtG |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: DMcG Date: 18 Apr 18 - 05:59 PM "An epitaph is a pretty poor way of remembering me.' |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Steve Shaw Date: 18 Apr 18 - 06:08 PM Spike was 100 yesterday, so how appropriate that we remember his epitaph! It was inscribed in Gaelic though, I believe, thus: "Duirt me leat go raibh me breoite." |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: BobL Date: 19 Apr 18 - 03:46 AM I've arranged for my body to be offered for medical research - no worries about not being really dead if I get dissected. However they might not be able to use it - e.g. if I get mangled, have bits missing or die of something horribly contagious, or if they simply have enough bodies already - so a normal funeral may have to be arranged. In which case I don't mind what happens to my remains, I shan't be there. A Biblical quote which keeps coming to mind as my possible epitaph, with a slightly different meaning when out of its original context, is from Ecclesiastes ch.3 v.4 "A time to mourn, and a time to dance". |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Paul Burke Date: 19 Apr 18 - 05:57 AM He didn't realise it's never too late until it was too late. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Georgiansilver Date: 19 Apr 18 - 06:43 AM Would have been better if you remembered me whilst I was still alive!! |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Nigel Parsons Date: 19 Apr 18 - 07:00 AM Veni Vidi Bibi |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Nigel Parsons Date: 19 Apr 18 - 07:11 AM "When I am dead and I'm in my grave No costly tombstone do I crave Just lay me down in my native peat With a jug of punch at my head and feet" |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Jos Date: 19 Apr 18 - 08:11 AM Bobl, you say: "I've arranged for my body to be offered for medical research - no worries about not being really dead if I get dissected." Personally, I'd be even more worried about getting dissected if I'm not really dead. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Jim Carroll Date: 19 Apr 18 - 08:21 AM "I've arranged for my body to be offered for medical research " Me too, which deprives me of the chance to echo an elderly native of Miltown Malbay who told his family "Put me in my coffin face down so they can all come and kiss my arse" Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Dave Hanson Date: 19 Apr 18 - 08:28 AM When I die, don't bury me at all, Just lay me away in alcohol. Dave H |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Rob Naylor Date: 19 Apr 18 - 08:41 AM "I was here on Earth for XX years and all I got was this lousy headstone" |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 19 Apr 18 - 08:50 AM 'Don't mourn for me now Don't mourn for me never. I've gone to eat crumpets for ever and ever.' |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: gillymor Date: 19 Apr 18 - 09:26 AM "Pardon me if I don't get up" or, better yet- "Enjoy yourself it's later than you think" from one of my favorite songs. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Donuel Date: 19 Apr 18 - 09:35 AM old dude - classic. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Mr Red Date: 20 Apr 18 - 02:25 AM I pprefer a tree planed above me...... So people can see - he is tree-mendous I'll get my shroud...... |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: BobL Date: 20 Apr 18 - 02:54 AM "Personally, I'd be even more worried about getting dissected if I'm not really dead. " Ah, but you see, someone would be bound to notice. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 20 Apr 18 - 03:44 AM "Here lies Eliza. They tried to surprise her With a very large spider Which they set down beside her. She jumped up and fled. And now she's dead." |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Nigel Parsons Date: 20 Apr 18 - 06:33 AM "Here lies Eliza. They tried to surprise her With a very large spider Which they set down beside her. She jumped up and died. And how Mudcat cried." Cheers Nigel |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 20 Apr 18 - 06:52 AM Hahahahaaaaa Nigel! How very kind of you. :) Actually there was one in our bedroom yesterday evening, enormous blooming thing. Husband put it outside, and I managed not to die of fright. As I recently renewed my life insurance, I wonder if it was he who put it there in the first place??? |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Rapparee Date: 20 Apr 18 - 04:17 PM Legally hanged. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 20 Apr 18 - 04:27 PM Well hung? :D tG |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 20 Apr 18 - 08:26 PM Fishing for angels |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 20 Apr 18 - 09:35 PM Death by chocolate |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: punkfolkrocker Date: 20 Apr 18 - 10:34 PM It seems some of us are in similar mind on this subject... My headstone...??? "Why did you waste good money on this nonsense. You know how much I despise parasitic funeral service businesses. I told you I wanted a cheap cremation, or better still donating my body to any medical science that would take it off your hands for nothing. Or ideally even pay you a few quid for it...!!!" |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 20 Apr 18 - 10:52 PM Exactly I want the money spent on a party and dump my ashes |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: JennieG Date: 21 Apr 18 - 02:39 AM As do I, Dan! However I would like the assembled multitudes......all right, perhaps two or three.....to burst into song with "So long, it's been good to know you". Seems a fitting last song, to me. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 21 Apr 18 - 03:30 AM My uncle Dennis had the theme to 'The Great Escape' played at his funeral :-) |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Rusty Dobro Date: 22 Apr 18 - 02:39 AM I'm guessing that this one, (from the Charnel House at Bury St Edmunds) caused some thoughtful discussion at the time: Here lies interred the Body of MARY HASELTON A Young Maiden of this Town Born of Roman Catholic Parents And Virtuously brought up Who being in the Act of Prayer Repeating her Vespers Was instantaneously killed by a flash Of lightning August the 16 1785 Aged 9 years |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Jim Carroll Date: 22 Apr 18 - 05:44 AM How about S*** - didn't see that coming Jim Caaarroll |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Jim Carroll Date: 22 Apr 18 - 06:27 AM Must dig out my copy of "Grave Humour" - full of classics Jim |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Rusty Dobro Date: 22 Apr 18 - 08:58 AM And another from Bury St Edmunds churchyard: Reader Pause at this Humble Stone a Record The fall of unguarded Youth By the allurements of vice and the treacherous snares of Seduction SARAH LLOYD on the 23d of April 1800 in the 22d Year of her Age Suffered a Just but ignominous Death for admitting her abandoned seducer into the Dwelling House of her Minstrefs in the Night of 3rd Oct 1799 and becoming the Instrument in his Hands of the crimes of Robbery and Houseburning These were her last Words May my example be a warning to Thousands. (Personally, I've always quite enjoyed the treacherous snares of seduction.) |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Mooh Date: 22 Apr 18 - 10:21 AM No grave, thank you very much. Just spread my ashes in the woods, or in the lake. Or leave my corpse to rot in the woods. I will accept a monument though, Parliament Hill would be a nice place for it. On it, let it be written, "You too, Mooh?" That is all. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 22 Apr 18 - 09:42 PM My favorite fishing hole is a good place for me |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 22 Apr 18 - 09:44 PM Wasn’t it wc fields that wrote rather be here than in Philadelphia |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 23 Apr 18 - 03:36 AM There's a new burial place which they've opened not that far from us called 'Bluebell Wood', where they have a system of burying folk in cardboard caskets and tree saplings are planted. Very natural and there's an ancient ruined church on the site, so the ground is consecrated. They've put up a sort of wooden circular hut for mourners. There are no gravestones or monuments of any sort, so it just looks like...well... a bluebell wood. In UK a burial must be recorded as to its position, so presumably they keep a record of who lies where. I'd like to be plonked there. I love Billy Connelly's monologue where he describes a cemetery in Glasgow for all Christians. But they've built an underground wall between the Catholics and the Protestants. He was really convulsed at the idea of the corpses of different persuasions trying to get at each other under the ground! |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Jos Date: 23 Apr 18 - 12:48 PM Sounds perfect - the bluebell wood, not the segregated cemetery. I've already specified in my will that I would prefer a woodland burial, and DEFINITELY a cardboard box, don't waste good wood on a flashy coffin. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: punkfolkrocker Date: 23 Apr 18 - 12:56 PM If you live/die in the USA can you donate your body to the Texas Body Farm.. and if so, will they collect it free of charge...??? http://www.txstate.edu/anthropology/facts/labs/farf.html I notice at the bottom of the main page, a link for "Job Opportunities"... Essential qualification for applicants - "must be dead"...??? |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 23 Apr 18 - 01:53 PM I'd hate to think of any sizeable sum of money being spent on either my funeral or my burial. I'll be dead, so I shan't know. I've told my husband to pack me into a bin bag and wheel me off in our garden wheelbarrow to our village church cemetery. He can dig a hole and shovel me in, I shan't mind at all. In Ivory Coast, deceased people, wrapped only in a sheet, are buried before nightfall on the day they die. They don't often have any kind of headstone, although my husband had one made for his father when he died last year. It all seems very sensible. They don't have money for fancy flowers, tombstones or caskets. They are however expected to feed literally hundreds of people who visit the family afterwards. It involves slaughtering lots of scraggy sheep and cooking giant pots of rice etc. Everyone wears white clothes. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Jos Date: 23 Apr 18 - 03:09 PM I'm sure they won't bury me that quickly after I die, so there is a chance someone WILL notice if I'm not really dead. I once heard a radio discussion on the subject, in which an undertaker assured listeners that they couldn't possibly be buried while still alive because they would have been embalmed. I didn't find this at all reassuring - I would be just as unhappy at being embalmed if I wasn't really dead. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 23 Apr 18 - 03:53 PM Actually Jos, my husband's people have no need for a death certificate or even a doctor's examination. If someone seems to be dead, they bury them. It's rare for someone to have an actual diagnosis either. Could be problematic couldn't it? |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: olddude Date: 23 Apr 18 - 04:43 PM Ok now ya got me worried, shoot me in the head to make sure before I am tossed in the fire ok |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Jos Date: 23 Apr 18 - 04:46 PM I can understand why people in hot countries would have developed a tradition of burying the dead as quickly as possible before the body starts to go off, but even so, yes, I think there probably have been cases where death was 'misdiagnosed'. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Raggytash Date: 23 Apr 18 - 04:59 PM My aged Mother died in February, aged 93. It took 30 days before the funeral could be held, apparently the grave diggers can only manage two a day (despite having a mini digger!) The day before the Grandfather of a young man I know in Ireland had died. The family dug the grave and he was buried two days later. I know which practise I prefer. I have told my good lady to put me in a bin bag (bio-degradable) on leave me out for the bin men. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 23 Apr 18 - 05:28 PM I'm truly sorry about your mother Raggytash. She obviously had a very long life and I hope a happy one. I sometimes think modern Western ways of dealing with death distance us from the experience of reality. We don't prepare the body, we don't dig the grave. Often we aren't even present at the end of the person's life. It's all very sanitised. It makes grieving a bit inhibited in my view. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: BobL Date: 24 Apr 18 - 03:09 AM Not only that Sen, but more and more funerals are announced as "celebrations" of the deceased's life, with bright colours to be worn. Nothing necessarily wrong with that (and when it's my turn I want all my Morris colleagues to wear full kit), but it's a bit far removed from the original idea of helping people to manage their grief. Grief is love that no longer has an outlet - did I get that from another thread here? |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: fat B****rd Date: 24 Apr 18 - 06:41 AM All paid for. Soundtrack sorted. Into the fiery furnace!! |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 24 Apr 18 - 07:23 AM I think the worst thing about grief is the frequent and sudden realisation that one will never see that person again. I feel that very deeply about my dear father-in-law, and of course about my own parents. What's on the music list? My only choice is 'Na Laetha Geal M'Oige' sung by Enya. "The lost days of my youth" makes me weep every time I hear it. Heart-wrenching. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: punkfolkrocker Date: 24 Apr 18 - 07:28 AM A loud HiFi cassette recording of this over the crematorium PA was my dad's soundtrack as he slowly entered the furnace... |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: fat B****rd Date: 24 Apr 18 - 08:07 AM Good one, PF. Charlie's Last Ride OST On the way in - The Promenade from Moussorgsky's Pictures etc. A certain obvious Dylan song for the "quiet bit". The Ride of the Valkyries as I disappear from view. Exit Music - "Keep a Twinkle In Your Eye" by Buck and Bubbles. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 24 Apr 18 - 08:33 AM I always thought I wanted to be cremated but on reflection I think I would prefer a burial. Biodegradable cardboard coffin and a fruit tree instead of a gravestone. That way I can feed the fruit tree as it grows and make sure all the fruit is bitter and twisted like me :-) (All true apart from the last bit) |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 24 Apr 18 - 09:29 AM No Dave, your fruit tree would produce lovely sweet fruit. You can be buried next to me if you like, in Bluebell Wood. |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Steve Shaw Date: 24 Apr 18 - 09:31 AM Saw four guys wandering around the cemetery for three hours carrying a coffin on their shoulders. I thought, those guys have really lost the plot... |
Subject: RE: BS: On my gravestone From: Senoufou Date: 25 Apr 18 - 03:57 AM Hahahaaaaa Steve!!! |