Extreme Embalming vol. Honoring Loved Ones or Weird?

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https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/bod...-video-games-sunglasses-snacks-182105773.html

A family whose teenage son died honored his memory in an unusual wake: His corpse was positioned in a chair facing a television screen, a video game controller in hand and his favorite snacks next to him.

Renard Matthews, 18, of New Orleans, La., was robbed and shot to death on the evening of June 25 while walking his dog. Matthews, whom a neighbor described as “a nice young man,” loved football and basketball; his favorite athlete was Celtics guard Kyrie Irving, his mother, Temeka, told a local news station, WGNO. On Sunday, his wake presented a faithful reflection of his low-key lifestyle. The family had Matthews embalmed and placed in a stance that was typical for him. He was seated in a chair, wearing an Irving jersey and sunglasses, with a PlayStation controller in his hand, facing a television playing the Celtics. He was flanked by Doritos and soda.

The funeral home where the wake was held is accustomed to unique requests. “One time, we stood a deceased drummer from a grassroots band at a drum set,” a representative from the Charbonnet Labat Glapion Funeral Home in Tremé, tells Yahoo Lifestyle, adding that it recruits specialists to prepare bodies at varying costs, which differ depending on the details of the service.

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The funeral home also hosted the 2014 wake of Miriam “Mae Mae” Burbank, 53, who was posed with a beer, a menthol cigarette, and an ashtray at a table. Burbank, a fan of the New Orleans Saints football team, had her fingernails painted in the team colors of black and gold.

Burbank was described by her loved ones as a “party girl” who loved beer and scotch. “When I walked in, I feel like I was in her house and I didn’t hurt so much,” her sister Sherline Burbank told WGNO. “Because it’s more of her, and it’s like she’s not dead. It’s not like a funeral home. It’s like she’s just in the room with us.”

Burbank’s daughter Zymora Kimball also told the news station that not everyone approved of the send-off. “A lot of people didn’t accept what I was doing,” she said. “I didn’t let that stop me, and I know she’s happy with how she’s looking. That’s her, that’s Mae.”

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The unique custom has been called “extreme embalming,” reports ABC News, and honors the deceased in personalized ways. It’s particularly popular in Puerto Rico, where a handful of creative services have won attention. In 2015, Green Lantern fan Renato Garcia, 55, died of an asthma attack and was bid goodbye in the costume he often wore around town. “It is what he would have wanted,” said sister Milagros Garcia.

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That same year, the body of taxi driver Victor Perez Cardona, a former cancer patient, was positioned in his cab — with his hands on the steering wheel — a request his daughter says was characteristic of her father, who loved jokes. According to the Daily Mail, some mourners even sat beside Perez Cardona for one last ride.

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In 2016, the body of Fernando de Jesús Díaz Beato, 26, was seated in a chair with one leg crossed over the other, wearing a black cap, glasses, khaki pants, and sneakers. “Some people say that it doesn’t look good,” his sister Lhizz Díaz Beato told BuzzFeed. “They prefer something more traditional. But if that’s something that the family wants, why wouldn’t you do it?”

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This is weird. Why prop up the dead to make make them act as they would alive when they are not? People are just trying to hold on to things that they don't have a grip on.
 
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To me that's just very weird and not something I'd be comfortable with but I know that in some cultures (the Tingguian people for example) they have traditions regarding the dead that would be seen as odd/uncomfortable by others. Personally I'd like my body to be cremated when that time comes but I'm a registered organ donor so they'll have to strip me of useable parts first. To me a corpse is just a corpse and cremation is a lot cheaper. At the end of the day it would be up to family what they decide to do with my body and it doesn't matter all that much to me.
 
Coworkers we talking about it this morning hadnt seen dude yet. Crazy they put my boy in Nike slides and all lol

One of my coworkers said they get real saucy with it in PR, had some dude from there on a motorcycle
 
Better than laying in a casket, I guess. One of the reasons I don't view open caskets is because that's not how I want to see them for the last time (laying in a box with arms folded like a dead *** sucka). It's just sad and depressing. Post the homie up one last time! It'd be weird but I'm more likely to crack a smile rather than looking down at a corpse wondering how TF this is supposed to bring closure. Weirdos.
 
Coworkers we talking about it this morning hadnt seen dude yet. Crazy they put my boy in Nike slides and all lol

One of my coworkers said they get real saucy with it in PR, had some dude from there on a motorcycle



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Yeah, these gems usually pop up in the Fools Wildin' thread. Always a good laugh with how creative they get:lol:
 
I attended a funeral yesterday and the priest said a few words that resonated ... Essentially acknowledging that we can never be certain of what happens once our living body is no longer, but faith enables you to accept reality ...

I view this as a way for loved ones to cope ... To each their own ...
 
I didn’t want to say anything but this is OD to me. I personally find it kinda creepy. I’m just waiting for some YouTuber to do a prank revolving around not being dead and scaring folks at his wake
 
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