Theresnoescape
Each year feels like 10
- May 29, 2024
- 81
Short derailment. It's not a question of thinking but doing. We aren't colleagues talking shop. We used to have a mortician member here who created an AMA resource type thread as well. They also mentioned the necessity of gallows humor. Everyone knows that's what people in these professions do. But even so they never said a statement like that which I couldn't help but bristle a bit at myself. It is understandable why a member here would have that reaction. People don't like feeling misunderstood especially by relevant people. That mortician identified themselves as having dealt with the types of feelings themselves this site revolves around so if they had said something like that in relation to their work, it probably would have been more palatable. That's a key difference as has been noted as to how people may respond differently.Oh please people joke in here all the time. There are people in the world whose job is death. They look at it differently. They're actually interested in the hows and whys. They tend to think about it differently.
Tbh the humor from the first post didn't even stand out to me as offensive when I read it. But that's me.Short derailment. It's not a question of thinking but doing. We aren't colleagues talking shop. We used to have a mortician member here who created an AMA resource type thread as well. They also mentioned the necessity of gallows humor. Everyone knows that's what people in these professions do. But even so they never said a statement like that which I couldn't help but bristle a bit at myself. It is understandable why a member here would have that reaction. People don't like feeling misunderstood especially by relevant people. That mortician identified themselves as having dealt with the types of feelings themselves this site revolves around so if they had said something like that in relation to their work, it probably would have been more palatable. That's a key difference as has been noted as to how people may respond differently.
We live in a free market economy, so why should someone be creative if nobody pays for it? The payment couldbe be something you need for a painless death.I think most people lack creativity in that in the past 30 days I had 2 by train, 1 by gunshot, and 3 by hanging. But other than that I did not see any other method this month.
Thank u <3I think you're so awesome for taking the time to post here and answer our questions! We appreciate you!
I thought about this for a few minutes but i couldn't really come to a consensus.With gun suicides, do you see a majority of these going through the mouth (aimed towards back of head), at the temple, under the chin, at forehead? I'm sure it's all different types but wondering what you see the most and what is the most disfiguring...
Big stuff to have admitted to hahaha.A friend of me is necrophile, thougth she has a university degree she prefers to work in a business like yours. Is it true that many necrohile people are working in jobs where they come close to corpses legally? If so, how do you deal with it?
The same could be said just as much for their friends.@InterestedParty
You said families are devastated when their loved ones disappear. Can the same be said for their friends?
What if the person who died brought them suffering in life? Has anybody ever complained about how selfish and sick and toxic their loved ones were when they were alive?
Has anybody ever come in saying "I'm glad this person is dead"?
I already got chewed out once for my sarcasm, ill have to stay quiet hahahaWe live in a free market economy, so why should someone be creative if nobody pays for it? The payment couldbe be something you need for a painless death.
To follow up on what @LaVieEnRose said, it's not so much an offensiveness or even about the jokes themselves.Tbh the humor from the first post didn't even stand out to me as offensive when I read it. But that's me.
I dont personally know of any institution that accepts suicides. Theyre just not very suitable for their intended purposes. You will have already been autopsied at the coroners. Just cross referencing it to universities specifically, UCLA's documentation specifically mention not accepting suicide donations.I'm not sure if my questions are something that you are able to answer, but I'll ask anyway just in case (since the mortician we once had on the forum doesn't seem to be here anymore).
Do you know if university body donation programs accept suicides? I'm signed up for my local university's school of medicine body donation program, and the only exemptions are severely obese people and those with a history of contagious diseases. Nothing I can find says they don't accept suicides.
And more specifically:
Do you think they'd accept a sodium nitrite suicide? Given how it works in the body (skin color change, blood turns brown, cell death from anemic hypoxia), I'm not sure if that would play a factor in rejection.
And if I happen to get autopsied, how invasive would it be do you think? If it's just a blood serum analysis for toxicology, that would be fine. But if they have to go chopping up my corpse to examine my organs, it'd be an instant rejection.
Thanks in advance for any info you're able to provide, or simply for reading if you're unable to answer.
Ah damn. That sucks. One of the main benefits of donating one's body is to significantly reduce the post-mortem costs, as everything except death certificates are free of charge; no funeral costs or anything.I dont personally know of any institution that accepts suicides. Theyre just not very suitable for their intended purposes. You will have already been autopsied at the coroners. Just cross referencing it to universities specifically, UCLA's documentation specifically mention not accepting suicide donations.
Think that answers the rest of your questions, but even if the autopsy is not invasive, suicides just not accepted
Varies from place to place. There is almost definitely a way for your state to pay for the costs of a simple direct cremation.Ah damn. That sucks. One of the main benefits of donating one's body is to significantly reduce the post-mortem costs, as everything except death certificates are free of charge; no funeral costs or anything.
So in lieu of this, what would happen then? My family wouldn't be able to cover any significant costs. I think I remember reading that the state covers expenses in the event that the next of kin is unable to pay, is this the case? I would hate to dump a financial burden on top of the emotional one in my wake.
So if I'm understanding you right, they covered the major expenses?Re: costs
To be very clear, my sibling and I loved our mother very much, but when she died, we asked for the state to cremate her and do with her ashes what they would do for any pauper.
If there had been an affordable and more ecologically responsible alternative, we would have taken that route, but there simply wasn't in our area.
What Wren said ^Re: costs
To be very clear, my sibling and I loved our mother very much, but when she died, we asked for the state to cremate her and do with her ashes what they would do for any pauper.
If there had been an affordable and more ecologically responsible alternative, we would have taken that route, but there simply wasn't in our area.
That is very good news.Varies from place to place. There is almost definitely a way for your state to pay for the costs of a simple direct cremation.
welcomeThat is very good news.
I appreciate you answering my questions. You're providing a valuable service here.
So if I'm understanding you right, they covered the major expenses?
I am very sorry about your mother.
I hope her passing wasn't agonizing and marked with suffering.
I hope that you and your sibling are as okay as you two can be now.
That is wonderful to hear, and that's exactly what I planned for with donating my body. So it sounds like it'll all work out regardless of where my body ends up going.Correct. They covered expenses for everything except copies of the death certificate.
Of course!Thank you.
I am glad to hear that it was not a rough process. But dementia is so brutal, I am so sorry. But I suppose that sort of worked in her favor, given she wouldn't be able to remember anything or properly process things. The silver lining, I suppose. But fuck man, dementia... I hope she's at peace now.As such things go, she suffered very little. She also had advanced dementia (which her own doctor had never diagnosed, but the medical staff in her last months made clear was profound), the upshot of which is that she didn't remember anything for very long, so things that would have caused her massive embarrassment (in years past) she forgot almost as soon as they happened. As much as dementia sucks, their is that tiny blessing.
I can relate in a way. Prior to my grandfather passing, I had been thinking quite heavily about CTB. I had been emotionally distant from everyone for a while up to that point, like you. When he passed, it was indeed surreal. And I didn't cry until the next day. But it didn't last very long before I began to move on. That isn't to say it wasn't world-shattering; of course it was. But in terms of the attachment and actual loss, it wasn't as bad for me as it was for my grandmother.I was made actively suicidal before our mom's health plummeted, so I had already been pulling away. It's been a few months, and I can't say her loss has been hard for me. (I can't say that's a blessing of having been made actively suicidial, but it definitely made her loss less impactful than it would have been otherwise.) Although, her absence is still very, very surreal! (https://wrenbriar.gitlab.io/#Mourning)
Thanks for answering!As for awful for first responders, train suicides are always pretty graphic.
All good thx
Id say the only thing in an urn that matters are the ashes, most urns are just mass produced junk that eventually gets thrown out.
They would probably care as much as you.
Yup yup, mortuary makeup will even out whatever color you might end up
love vanilla milkshakes,butHave you ever seen a sodium nitrite overdose?
thank youlove vanilla milkshakes,but
no, not common at all
This website strikes me as interesting though in that many people on here seem so motivated to learn and try out these elaborate suicides methods.
Thank youI would say take some of the things that you see on here with a grain of salt. I came to this site, downloaded the guide and tried SN which unfortunately did not work for me. Unfortunately it's look like a handgun to the head is going to be my method. Ideally I don't want to do something so 'violent'. I am really scared of that method and it not working and traumatizing some poor soul who has to find me. My preference would be to be able to go somewhere, be put to sleep and have my organs donated to people who want to live and then be creamented or terramation to not create any polution...
There are alot of people who come on this site and post their morbid curiosities as opposed to people really being supported, there are usually big influx of fake profiles and 'saviors' who show up when an article comes out linking this page. Some person is guilt ridden and blames this site for the person ctbing.. you work with death so I am sure you have seen the guilt, the greed, the greif.. don't need to explain that to you.
With that being said, there are some very 'normal' people on here.. We are just tired of this world and tired of exisiting, there are some here who are physically sick and would prefer to go out on their own terms instead of having to spend months or years in severe pain and suffering.
Out in the 'real' world you can't talk about it.... People want to label those of us who don't want to be here as 'crazy'... Hey spend a week in a facility or chin up or get medicated and you'll be fine... just 'be happy'.. or someone has it worse, or don't worry it will get better... or whatever other bullshit people say that makes them feel better.
Anyway. Welcome to our little corner of the internet.
Well, if they really wanted to, they could ask to see you at the coroners, before we even get the body, but this is not a common request at all, and is usually discouraged by every party involved
If someone were to ctb with SN will it always be apparent that it was suicide? Will the cyanosis fade if they are not found for a few hours?Well this is my first post on this website, as I very recently found it while prowling through the CoE website.
I am a funeral director in a major Californian city, so naturally, I see my fair share of suicides a month.
This website strikes me as interesting though in that many people on here seem so motivated to learn and try out these elaborate suicides methods.
I think most people lack creativity in that in the past 30 days I had 2 by train, 1 by gunshot, and 3 by hanging. But other than that I did not see any other method this month.
But what I was trying to get at is that is from my personal experience, hanging is by far the most popular method at least in this part of California...
Also, yes, I can confirm that many families look ruined after one of their loved ones decides to go through with it, so keep that in mind I suppose.
If anyone has any questions though would be more than happy to answer them :)
My health is bad enough that natural causes would be an acceptable explanation as long as there's no direct evidence otherwiseIf someone were to ctb with SN will it always be apparent that it was suicide? Will the cyanosis fade if they are not found for a few hours?
I don't think you can refuse an autopsy. The coroner is supposed to do it no matter what, especially in case of a suicide.But if they have to go chopping up my corpse to examine my organs, it'd be an instant rejection.
Yes. You cannot make it look like death from natural causes.If someone were to ctb with SN will it always be apparent that it was suicide?
Yes will be apparentIf someone were to ctb with SN will it always be apparent that it was suicide? Will the cyanosis fade if they are not found for a few hours?
My health is bad enough that natural causes would be an acceptable explanation as long as there's no direct evidence otherwise
Yea hangings are the most common.Would you say hanging is what you see more of? For guns, more handguns than shotguns? Of the handguns, a 357 or 38?