logo-image

With Dignity and Honor

Shackelford Funeral Directors • February 11, 2015

imageGrowing up I was always jealous of my friends’ parents and what they did for a living. I mean, come on. One of them had a car dealership so guess who got to drive the newest, bestest vehicle on the lot? If there was a clothing store affiliation, there were, of course, new clothes in the latest styles—and shoes were the same way.

We had a funeral home.

The only thing a funeral home provided for a teenager was a constant source of aggravation. It did come in handy when we had to have an insect collection and everyone else was going to the drug store for the chemical needed to make their “killing jars”. I could just use stuff out of the prep room. (Note to self . . . do not smell of it just to see what it’s like.) As an aside, I made the mistake of watching one after I placed it in the jar. From that point forward, I searched the area for already deceased bugs. Needless to say, I had a very small collection.

As I aged, the funeral home provided a job and I began to realize maybe it wasn’t such a bad legacy to have. Granted, they didn’t buy me a new car or offer me new clothes (we’ll have no cracks about burial garments being split up the back) or shoes (which I don’t like very much anyway), but when Death came to visit our family, it was a different story. I’m not talking about a free casket or the best vault available . . . I’m referring to the last thing we could ever do for one of our own.

When my uncle died, my father and brother drove to Bolivar and performed the task of embalming his body. And when my parents died, my son was the one who tended to their remains. At a time when it truly mattered, family took care of family. With reverence and love and respect, they closed the eyes that had watched them throughout their lives. They positioned the hands that reached out to them . . . cleaned and prepared the body that provided a home for the spirit of someone they loved deeply and would miss forever—someone who helped make them the person they were. And those of us who could not perform that task saw to the details of their service, planning and preparing for that last farewell.

There are those in this world who will tell you the body doesn’t matter because the person they knew isn’t there anymore, and in one respect they are right. At death a portion of that person ceases to exist as we knew them, but their body remains. That body is the physical manifestation of their lives, the vehicle in which they lived and breathed and cared for those around them. It is the picture that springs to mind when you close your eyes and think of them, the picture that we never want to lose as the years proceed without them. To care for those remains after death is an honor, a duty, an obligation—and a blessing when it is one of your own. It is the last act of service we can perform, allowing us to recognize their importance in our lives and the pain that comes with their absence. It allows us to escort those remains from life to their eternal resting place with dignity and reverence. And I’ll take that over the newest and bestest car on the lot any day of the week.

By Shackelford Funeral Directors April 27, 2017
Spring has sprung. In all of its pollen-filled, inconsistent glory, it has arrived.  Like many others with whom I am […] The post No Rhyme or Reason appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors April 19, 2017
Easter and the week preceding the day are busy times around my house. Our church has taken to having the […] The post A Place of Peace appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors April 12, 2017
“Brother Srygley, his own heart bleeding and almost breaking, in strictest confidence submitted a strange suggestion to some of us. […] The post Of Love and Desperation appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors April 6, 2017
Whenever there is a special day coming up at Memory Gardens, I try to find time to walk the cemetery, […] The post You Can’t Do Battle With a Ghost appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors March 30, 2017
In case you missed it, we had a bit of rough weather on Monday. Actually, that might be an understatement […] The post Be Prepared appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors March 23, 2017
Memory is an amazing thing; to quote one of my favorite fictional detectives, it’s a blessing . . . and […] The post Will You Remember Me? appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors March 16, 2017
Tuesday night we posted a link on our Facebook page to a USA Today article about a funeral home in […] The post Would You Like Fries With That? appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors March 9, 2017
It’s Wednesday night and I’m sittin’ at church in a classroom full of four and five year olds. The lesson […] The post Choose Wisely appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors March 2, 2017
“We have met the enemy and he is us.” So observed Walt Kelly’s character Pogo in the comic strip by […] The post We Have Met The Enemy . . . appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
By Shackelford Funeral Directors February 23, 2017
She walked into our office for one reason and one reason only—to confirm her father’s death. Or perhaps what she […] The post Ask First, Post Later appeared first on Shackelford Funeral Directors | Blog.
More Posts
Share by: