Category Archives: A Good Goodbye

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Common Grief Reactions: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance

Can grief be a good thing? Recently, I participated in the Toastmasters International Speech Competition. The title of my speech: “Good Grief!”

With all of the losses we all have incurred during the pandemic, we may not recognize we are grieving – a lot. Using Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’ model of the Five Stages of Grief, I talk about how to recognize grief. The key is that we need to allow ourselves to feel what many consider “negative” emotions.

Here’s the speech, followed by the text. I hope it helps you understand and feel better about all the challenges we are facing.

Good Grief! Speech Text

What words describe 2020 for you? Closed. Cancelled. Isolated. “You’re muted.”

Remember when we used to get dressed up to go out? Good times. Are you wearing pajamas right now? How about slippers?

Fellow Toastmasters, if you didn’t have a loved one get sick or die, you may not recognize our society is grieving enormous losses.

You may have heard of Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross and The Five Stages of Grief. It’s been part of popular culture for decades. Early in her career, she interviewed dying patients to find out how they felt about their impending deaths.

She found their reactions fell into five categories: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance. These reactions may not happen in any specific order. Not everyone experiences all of these reactions.

But Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance are common grief reactions to almost any kind of loss. For example, have you ever lost your keys?

My husband Dave and I were in Austin, Texas pre-pandemic for a bar mitzvah. My parents, who can’t drive anymore, needed a chauffeur for the event. We rented an SUV to drive my folks around.

On Sunday, we dropped my parents off at the airport. We stayed an additional day to visit downtown Austin’s fun funky shops. We planned meet a friend outside of town the next day. Back at the hotel, we walked over to the next-door shopping mall for lunch.

We had plans to go out to dinner with some of my cousins that evening. But, when it came time to find the key for the rental car, it had disappeared.

Denial. How could this car key be missing? I know I put it in my purse.

Dump everything out of the purse. Look in the backpack, look in all the pockets of my jackets, look in the suitcases, we looked everywhere in that hotel room – nothing. How can this key be missing?

Anger. I call up the car rental company to tell them the key is lost. “It will cost $250 to replace the key and you must pay for the tow company to return the vehicle to the airport.”

I’m angry, because my plans to drive out to the Texas countryside the next day are shot. I’m supposed to pick up a friend’s cremated remains and take them back to New Mexico to scatter. And now, I can’t fulfill that commitment.

Bargaining. I don’t usually pray to a higher power to help find a car key, but I was desperate. I said to my guardian angel, “Oh great universal spirit, please, please help me find this missing key. I will thank you forever.”

Didn’t help. Depression.

Instead of going out for Chinese food with my cousins, Dave and I walked to a nearby grocery store. I bought a bottle of wine, cheese and crackers, nuts … and dark chocolate. Dinner was not a Happy Meal.

Finally, I said, “Oh well. We’ll just pay the 250 dollars and the bill for the tow. We’ll have Pete’s ashes mailed to Albuquerque.” That is Acceptance.

I washed my face, brushed my teeth and got into my jammies. As I slid under the covers, I felt something move. Plink, the key fell on the floor. Hallelujah! Did I hear the rustling of angel wings? (thank you, thank you!)

Losing a key is nothing compared to losing a loved one. The dead don’t miraculously return … usually. And even after this incredibly tough year, you are not dead.

What words describe your life now? Anxious? Exhausted? Overwhelmed? Overweight? I know about pandemic poundage. Took me three months to drop eight pounds. But I did it!

Loss is endemic during this pandemic. Hoarding toilet paper doesn’t help. But feeling our feelings does.

Are you angry or depressed? Are you muting yourself, denying your grief? Emotions are meant to be expressed. When suppressed, they fester. Scientific studies show when we express our emotions, even the so-called “negative” emotions, we feel happier.

Recognize we are all grieving losses in many different ways. Healthy grief is good. Be present. Listen, understand, and share.

Are you muted? Unmute yourself.

About Gail Rubin

Gail Rubin rehearses Good Grief!

Gail Rubin, Certified Thanatologist (death and grief educator)

Gail Rubin, CT, The Doyenne of Death®, is a pioneering death and grief educator. A speaker who uses humor and film clips to get end-of-life conversations started, she’s the author of the award-winning books A Good Goodbye: Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die, Kicking the Bucket List: 100 Downsizing and Organizing Things to Do Before You Die (Rio Grande Books), and Hail and Farewell: Cremation Ceremonies, Templates and Tips. She is also the coordinator of the award-winning Before I Die New Mexico Festival, which won the ICCFA’s KIP Award for Best Event in 2018.

A doyenne is a woman who’s considered senior in a group who knows a lot about a particular subject. The “CT” after Gail’s name means Certified Thanatologist. Thanatology is the study of death, dying and bereavement. A fellow CT dubbed Gail “The Joan Jett of Death Education.” Her TEDx talk, A Good Goodbye, focuses on the importance of starting end-of-life conversations before there’s a death in the family. Albuquerque Business First named her one of their Women of Influence in 2019.

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Royal Funeral Planning Applies to You Too

Royal funeral planning has lessons for us commoners.

The British Royal Family will have a funeral for Prince Philip, the husband of Queen Elizabeth, on Saturday, April 17. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, there will be no public involvement in his funeral.

According to the BBC, coronavirus restrictions in England mean only 30 people, socially distanced, are allowed to attend funerals. Full details of the invited guests are yet to be announced, but it’s expected the majority of the reduced guest list will be family members. Prince Harry will attend but his wife Meghan, who is pregnant, will not make the trip from the US, on medical advice. It is the first time the Duke of Sussex has returned to the UK since stepping down as a senior royal last year.

Attendees are expected to wear masks in line with government advice. The pallbearers and clergy are not included in the number of attendees.

Prince Philip’s body is resting in a private chapel at Windsor Castle. He will be interred in a royal vault inside St. George’s Chapel, which is on the grounds of Windsor Castle. The duke is reported to have requested a funeral of minimal fuss and has not laid in state – where members of the public would have been able to view his coffin. The procession and service will be televised.

The duke will have a ceremonial funeral, rather than a state funeral. There is a subtle difference – state funerals are usually reserved for monarchs, although wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill was given a state funeral. The Queen Mother had a ceremonial funeral in 2002, as did Diana, Princess of Wales in 1997.

On the day of the funeral, the coffin will be moved from the private chapel to the State Entrance of Windsor Castle. It will be placed on a modified Land Rover, that the duke himself helped design, to be carried the short distance to St George’s Chapel.

Even if you don’t want a fuss for your own funeral, there are lessons to be learned from watching royal funeral planning. We all need to plan ahead.

Royal Funeral Planning

The Queen film posterBack in 2014, I did a Friday Funeral Film review about the 2007 movie, The Queen. The film traces The Royal Family’s evolving response to the death of Princess Diana in 1997 and the planning and implementation of her funeral. She died in a fatal automobile crash in France a year after she divorced Prince Charles. As the mother of young princes William and Harry, there was confusion about how to hold a funeral for an ex-royal family member.

Royal funerals are ordinarily planned well in advance. In the film, Princess Diana’s funeral plans are based on Tambridge, the code name for The Queen Mother’s eventual funeral plans (she was still alive in 1997). It’s the only one that had been rehearsed and could be put together within a week’s time. Instead of 400 soldiers, 400 representatives of the Princess’ various charities could march behind the coffin. Instead of foreign heads of state and crown heads of Europe, the guests would include “actors of stage and screen, fashion designers and other celebrities.”

Whether you are a pauper or a prince or princess, this film shows that a public recognition of loss is needed, especially when the person is highly beloved. It also shows that it takes some coordination to create a funeral, big or small. The Queen is a great film to watch to help start a funeral planning conversation.

Need Help with Your Funeral Plans?

A Good Goodbye New CoverFor an excellent guide planning ahead for your eventual demise, get a copy of A GOOD GOODBYE: Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die. It covers everything you need to know before you go.

A GOOD GOODBYE: Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die provides the information, inspiration and tools to plan and implement creative, meaningful and memorable end-of-life rituals for people and pets. Learn how to save money, reduce family conflict, and avoid stress at a time of grief. Chapters include:

  • How Do I Work This? Event planning under pressure
  • A Grave Undertaking: Working with a funeral home
  • We Can Do That? New trends in death care
  • It’s My Party and I’ll Die If I Want To: Unique memorial ceremonies, remains disposal, and receptions
  • Amazing Grace: Religious customs for death

Just as talking about sex won’t make you pregnant, talking about funerals won’t make you dead – and your family will benefit from the conversation.

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April 18: Online Death Cafe

Join the Conversation in the Next Death Cafe!

The Blue Screen of Death

The Blue Screen of Death by Richard Thompson

The next Albuquerque Death Cafe will take place ONLINE on Sunday, April 18, 3:00 to 4:30 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time. Due to self-distancing imposed by the coronavirus pandemic, we will meet through Zoom. RSVP to Gail [at] AGoodGoodbye.com to receive the link for the meeting.

The objective of the Death Cafe is “to increase awareness of death with a view to helping people make the most of their (finite) lives.” It’s an interesting, unstructured conversation with no specific agenda. The Death Cafe offers a relaxed, confidential and safe setting to discuss death. We drink tea (or your favorite beverage) and eat delicious cake or cookies.

Please provide your own refreshments. Have a cup of tea or coffee and a cookie or other snack handy.

The Death Cafe concept was started in the United Kingdom by Jon Underwood. He was influenced by the ideas of Swiss sociologist Bernard Crettaz, who started holding Cafe Mortel events in France and Switzerland. Albuquerque was the first city in the U.S. west of the Mississippi to hold a Death Cafe. Gail Rubin hosted it in September, 2012.

For more information about Death Cafes, visit this page at AGoodGoodbye.com or visit www.DeathCafe.comJoin the Albuquerque Death Cafe Meetup group to be kept apprised of upcoming events. Click here to go to the Meetup page.

Gail Rubin, humorous motivational speaker for hospice

Gail Rubin, Certified Thanatologist and The Doyenne of Death®

Your Death Cafe Host

Gail Rubin, Certified Thanatologist, hosts the Albuquerque Death Cafe. She is a pioneering death educator. Rubin is a public speaker, a published author of three books, host of a TV interview series and podcast, a blogger, a funeral industry trade journalist, a Certified Funeral Celebrant, and an innovator in the funeral business. She created a conversation-starting game called The Newly-Dead Game®, introduced the Death Café movement in the United States, and held the first Before I Die Festival west of the Mississippi in 2017. Albuquerque Business First named her one of their 2019 Women of Influence.

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The Book A Good Goodbye

We plan our finances, our families, our retirement, just about everything except our funerals. Without end-of-life planning, life’s other plans can come undone. Just as talking about sex won’t make you pregnant, talking about funerals won’t make you dead – and your family will benefit from the conversation.

A GOOD GOODBYE: Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die provides the information, inspiration and tools to plan and implement creative, meaningful and memorable end-of-life rituals for people and pets. Just as talking about sex won’t make you pregnant, talking about funerals won’t make you dead – and your family will benefit from the conversation. Learn how to save money, reduce family conflict, and avoid stress at a time of grief.

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KICKING THE BUCKET LIST: 100 Downsizing and Organizing Things to Do Before You Die

Kicking the Bucket List Downsizing

Do you plan to live forever — Do you ever plan to move — Depending on where you are going, you can not take it with you. In KICKING THE BUCKET LIST, death educator Gail Rubin brings a light touch to cleaning out those dark recesses of your home and organizing for end-of-life issues. In these pages, you will learn how to: tackle downsizing without being overwhelmed by the job; evaluate what to keep, toss, donate and recycle; creatively remove excess goods from your home; manage your finances for today and tomorrow; organize your funeral and create your legacy.

If you need guidance to downsize and organize, this book is for you. Baby Boomers facing their parents estates and their own downsizing will especially appreciate the information in KICKING THE BUCKET LIST.

The 128-page book, to be available in paperback and eBook formats, is a quick, easy read, with colorful photographs and bonus online information. Each of the 100 Bucket List items include links to helpful internet articles that expand on each point. The book, the eighth title in the Bucket List series, supports the work of the nonprofit National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization and the National Hospice Foundation.

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A Good Goodbye: Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die Television Interview Series

Kicking the Bucket List Downsizing

Fusing her humor and quick wit with years of experience as a Certified Funeral Celebrant and Thanatologist (a death educator), Rubin has already won multiple awards for her book A Good Goodbye: Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die. She’s now expanding that expertise onto television with the release of A Good Goodbye TV interviews on DVD.

The 12-episode series of 25-minute programs are offered as a set of four DVDs. Using her famous light touch to bring serious topics out into the open, expert interviews with Rubin equip viewers with everything they need to know “before they go.” DVD contents include:

DVD 1: Over My Dead Body: Essentials of Funeral Planning
Episode 1 – The Benefits of Pre-Planning a Funeral
Episode 2 – Cremation and Memorial Services
Episode 3 – Cemetery Questions and Answers

DVD 2: Trending Topics: Green Funerals, Life Celebrations and Pet Loss
Episode 4 – Going Green with Eco-Friendly Funerals
Episode 5 – Life Celebrations
Episode 6 – Pet Loss

DVD 3: Death and Taxes: A Primer on Finances and Funerals
Episode 7 – Estate Planning
Episode 8 – Cost Management
Episode 9 – Financial Issues

DVD 4: Good Grief! Save Money, Live and Die Better
Episode 10 – Medicaid and More
Episode 11 – End-of-Life Issues, Advance Directives, Hospice and Palliative Care
Episode 12 – Grief Counseling

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Death & Toys T-Shirt

Kicking the Bucket List Downsizing

If you love T-shirts with snappy sayings, snap up this T-shirt from A Good Goodbye. Declare the obvious with this existential statement: “The One Who Dies With The Most Toys… Still Dies.”

Available on Bonfire in Medium, Large, Extra-Large and XXL in always-in-fashion black with white text, these T-shirts come in comfy, long-wearing 50/50 cotton/polyester. Each is $20.00 plus shipping and state tax as applicable

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Equalitee Shirt

Kicking the Bucket List Downsizing

If you love T-shirts with snappy sayings, snap up this T-shirt from A Good Goodbye. Declare the obvious with this existential statement: “All men (and women) are cremated Equal!”

Available on Bonfire in Medium, Large, Extra-Large and XXL in always-in-fashion black with white text, these T-shirts come in comfy, long-wearing 50/50 cotton/polyester. Each is $20.00 plus shipping and state tax as applicable

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Hail and Farewell: Cremation Ceremonies, Templates and Tips

Kicking the Bucket List Downsizing

By 2016, 50% of those who die in the U.S. will be cremated. Thousands of families won’t know what to do with their loved ones’ cremated remains or how to create a meaningful memorial service. HAIL AND FAREWELL: Cremation Ceremonies, Templates and Tips provides all the answers. HAIL AND FAREWELL covers everything related to creating a meaningful memorial service with cremated remains: Why it’s important to hold some sort of goodbye ceremony. A description of the cremation process, so families know what to expect. Examples of different ways to scatter ashes – more than you’d think! Stories of creative memorial services in different settings to spark ideas. Templates to easily create meaningful memorial services. Sample scripts from actual memorial services to provide inspiration. Suggested readings, music and online resources for a wealth of meaningful materials to weave into a service. HAIL AND FAREWELL offers invaluable memorial service guidance and ideas. The best time to learn about these issues is NOW, before there’s a death in the family.

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COVID-19 Funeral Costs to be Reimbursed by FEMA

COVID-19 Funeral Costs

Caskets with price tagsDid someone in your family die due to COVID-19 and you have unexpected funeral costs? The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is offering to help pay for funeral costs incurred by the pandemic. If you didn’t have funds such as insurance to cover funeral expenses for a COVID-19 death, you can apply for up to the maximum amount of $9,000 per funeral.

The program is still being set up, and a toll-free 800 number will become available soon. One applicant will be able to apply for multiple deceased individuals, up to a total of $35,000. You’ll need to provide documentation: a death certificate citing COVID-19 as a contributing cause of death in the U.S., receipts from the funeral home or cemetery, and proof of funds received from various sources.

This news release from FEMA spells out all the details:

FEMA News About COVID-19 Funeral Costs

In early April, FEMA will begin providing financial assistance for funeral expenses incurred after Jan. 20, 2020 for deaths related to coronavirus (COVID-19) to help ease some of the financial stress and burden caused by the pandemic. The policy was finalized today (March 24, 2021), and FEMA is now moving rapidly to implement this funeral assistance program nationwide.

“At FEMA, our mission is to help people before, during and after disasters,” said Acting FEMA Administrator Bob Fenton. “The COVID-19 pandemic has caused immense grief for so many people. Although we cannot change what has happened, we affirm our commitment to help with funeral and burial expenses that many families did not anticipate.”

To be eligible for COVID-19 funeral assistance, the policy states:

  • The applicant must be a U.S. citizen, non-citizen national, or qualified alien who incurred funeral expenses after Jan. 20, 2020 for a death attributed to COVID-19.
  • If multiple individuals contributed toward funeral expenses, they should apply under a single application as applicant and co-applicant. FEMA will also consider documentation from other individuals not listed as the applicant and co-applicant who may have incurred funeral expenses as part of the registration for the deceased individual.
  • An applicant may apply for multiple deceased individuals.
  • The COVID-19-related death must have occurred in the United States, including the U.S. territories and the District of Columbia.
  • This assistance is limited to a maximum financial amount of $9,000 per funeral and a maximum of $35,500 per application.
  • Funeral assistance is intended to assist with expenses for funeral services and interment or cremation.

More Details

In the coming weeks, a dedicated 800 number will be established to help individuals who apply. In the meantime, potential applicants are encouraged to start gathering the following documentation:

  • An official death certificate that attributes the death to COVID-19 and shows that the death occurred in the United States. The death certificate must indicate the death “may have been caused by” or “was likely the result of” COVID-19 or COVID-19-like symptoms. Similar phrases that indicate a high likelihood of COVID-19 are considered sufficient attribution.
  • Funeral expense documents (receipts, funeral home contract, etc.) that include the applicant’s name, the deceased individual’s name, the amount of funeral expenses and dates the funeral expenses were incurred.
  • Proof of funds received from other sources specifically for use toward funeral costs.  Funeral assistance may not duplicate benefits received from burial or funeral insurance, financial assistance received from voluntary agencies, federal/state/local/tribal/territorial government programs or agencies, or other sources.

For more information about this assistance, visit COVID-19 Funeral Assistance | FEMA.gov.

Cremation Urns, Jewelry and Keepsakes

Need a cremation urn, cremation jewelry, or keepsake urns? Check out A Good Goodbye’s Urn Store. At this online shopping site, you’ll find a wide selection of quality products, the same ones that funeral homes purchase. You can place your order through the secure site, or call 888-317-3099 and speak with a live person.

There are urns of brass, wood, ceramics, marble, and biodegradable options. The jewelry includes options in gold, sterling silver, stainless steel, and glass. There are lovely handmade urns and jewelry, and fingerprint jewelry that can preserve the unique patterns of people and pets in silver or gold. The site also features The Life Chest, beautiful memento storage boxes in a range of styles.

The online store is run by UPD Urns, a respected company with a long track record of providing cremation products to funeral homes. The public can now browse and directly buy the same products carried by funeral homes. The FTC Funeral Rule allows the public to bring their own cremation containers to a funeral home, which must accept it without charging a fee.

You can choose your products and place your order online through the secure site, which accepts payment by Visa, Master Card, Discover, American Express and PayPal. If you prefer, call 888-317-3099 and speak with a live person. Visit the Memorial Store now!

Cremation Urns, Jewelry, Keepsakes

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