In a youth crazed society is it any wonder almost nowhere do
you find organizations, magazines, websites and newspapers,
supposedly devoted to informing seniors about the one thing
that lays at the end of that so called golden road of
retirement bliss, Death.
You hear all about where to spend your money on trips,
orthopedic beds, motorized scooters, so called healthy living
products, insurance and anything else some marketing company,
or to be honest about it, the very organization supposedly
doing the “informing”, can come up with to sell to this
exploding population sector of 50 plus adults. A population
growing so fast that everyday 10,000 Americans turn 50 and
will do so for the next 15 years.
Yet, despite the full-page magazine ads and websites’
popup, flashing bill boarded and newsletter sign up pages,
pushing the membership enrollments, auto and home insurance,
prescription cards and advice add-nauseum death doesn’t even
get a mention. Whether it is this society’s fear of the very
word death or its obsession with possessions, which, lets face
it, when death comes possessions become a mute point, nobody
wants to talk about it. The one exception to this rule is
AARP, who has devoted a goodly amount of web pages to the
subject on their site at www.aarp.org/griefandloss/.
We will discuss forever dad’s Alzheimer’s disease,
mom’s diabetes, where we should buy that retirement home and
where to spend the winter, but we won’t talk about what
we’re going to do, if tomorrow, somebody isn’t here
anymore.
Yet, when that day comes, armed with extreme emotion,
stress and grief the survivors will venture out into that
world of death care salesmen and pay whatever we are told it
will cost. Since we never talked about what to do nor did most
of our senior watchdog organizations spend much time
discussing the subject, we won’t have a clue when the
funeral or burial pitch starts what is real and what is
Memorex.
In a 1989 book published by Reader’s Digest, *The
Consumer Adviser, the editors stated, “While few people
are comfortable about discussing funerals in advance, it is
really a very poor idea to decide on arrangements under the
pressure of time and emotional stress.” Since the
publication of those words little has changed when it comes to
death and what is done when it occurs to, either, shed light
on options or change the way we American’s mourn our
deceased loved ones.
We still are buying expensive caskets, having loved ones
embalmed (incidentally, not a law required by any state in the
U.S. unless the body must be transported across state lines),
buying thousands of dollars worth of flowers, displaying loved
ones in rooms that cost more than some suites in the finest
hotels in the world do per day, and generally never knowing if
any of this was what the loved one, we are doing this to,
would have wanted in the first place.
What should we do about this? Everyone who is or will soon
be over 50 should do at least the following;
· Talk about death. Talk about it like you would if you
were thinking about a vacation spot or buying a car or
anything you are going to spend thousands of your family’s
money on.
· Get some facts. Use the Internet and find some sites
that discuss things like final arrangements, preplanning,
cremation arrangements, funerals, etc.
· Do a search in Google, MSN, AOL, etc. for things like
cemetery lots for sale and get some pricing on what it would
cost if you actually had to pay today for a loved ones funeral
and burial.
· Use some of the free online final arrangements
preplanning programs on the Internet like the ones at
www.finalarrangementsnetwork.com or
www.thefuneraldirectory.com/planityourway/. They’re free to
plan and use and re-plan and you don’t have to spend a dime.
Unlike most supposed preplanning sites on the Internet, these
two don’t request a name, address and phone number so some
friendly death care salesman can call you up and, you guessed
it, sell you. At planityourway you do have to become a
free member but there is nothing beyond that.
· Once you know what you want to have done for you, tell
your family, write it down, give to your lawyer, account,
somebody. Don’t put this plan in your will or that drawer in
your bedroom where it won’t get read until long after its
instructions are needed.
Death is not one of anybody’s favorite topics, except the
people in the death care business, but as the U.S. population
begins its 30 years of “baby boomers” aging and dying it
should be something you and every member of your family has
that discussion about and soon. The death rate in the U.S. is
currently at 2.4 million per year. It will grow by 50% and
reach nearly 3.6 million by 2032. This fact will make the
numbers of people close to someone who just died increase and
the costs of those funerals even more expensive than they are
now.
If buyers and the eventual users of funeral services
don’t educate themselves they will still do what Reader’s
Digest pointed out we did nearly 24 years ago, *“Few
consumers would ordinarily admit to spending $5,000 or more on
something that they know little or nothing about. Yet everyday
thousands of Americans do just that when a family member dies.
On short notice, with their judgment often clouded by grief or
guilt, they turn to the nearest funeral director to tell them
what to do.”
*The Consumer Adviser (pages 325-326), copyright
1989 The Readers Digest.