My Dad worked for a funeral home for as long as I can remember. When I first started making my own money, I would join him at work and help out wherever I could and heād give me twenty bucks.Ā
I was fairly young when I would join him and Iām embarrassed to admit that I always felt a tinge of fear. It looked just like any ordinary office and during the day my sister and I would have a ball rifling through desk drawers and filling out forms for our imaginary deceased friends. Perhaps this is where my love of filling out forms started.Ā
The offices were a dream for a stationery lover like myself and I would sneak Post-It notes and brand new pens into my pockets.Ā
But then, when night fell, my imagination would run away with me. There would be doors that were always locked and I drove myself mad wondering what was behind them.Ā
One room I knew was the Viewing Room, but I didnāt always know if there would be a casket in there. Iād approach with my vacuum in tow and stand with my hand on the door knob for several minutes, psyching myself up to open the door. There was rarely a casket left in there and if there was, it was hardly ever left open. Yes, that means that sometimes Iād walk into a room with a casket and yes, sometimes it would be left open.Ā
If it wasnāt open, Iād go about my business vacuuming the room. Dad would saunter in and ask,Ā āHey, want to see whoās inside?ā Iād always make him open it and look first in case the body had changed in any gruesome way.Ā
I always vacuumed that room the quickest, leaving a wide berth between the vacuum and the casket. My fear was Iād knock the trolley holding it up and the whole thing would come crashing down, the body rolling across the floor to my feet.Ā
The funeral home I hated the most had a door that led to the morgue straight from the chapel. The door was a massive, imposing thing and there was a large mystery stain on the carpet at the base of the door. In my childish mind, in the days before I knew how a morgue worked, I assumed it was a massive stainless steel room where bodies were piled on top of one another, waiting to be buried or cremated. Therefore, the mystery stain could only be a result of the seeping bodily fluids of those corpses. I vacuumed that room pretty quick too.Ā
As I got older and learned more, I became less fearful of things like that that frankly didnāt make sense. Iād wander the casket room and urn displays and decide which one best suited me. Iād sit at desks and look at family photos and wonder just what kind of person would choose to work with grieving families on a daily basis.Ā
When I was in high school I was still occasionally working for my dad when a classmate of mine died in a car crash. I was meeting a friend to walk to school and I saw she was crying as she appeared over the crest of the hill to meet me.Ā
Weād both gone to school with this boy since primary school and while my friend cried, I felt strangely disconnected. Perhaps I was just stunned. Iād never known anyone to die who wasnāt a grandparent, and this was a peer. Just a kid.
My high school was grieving not just for him, but for the other teen who died in the crash and the for the injured friends who had survived and had to live with that traumatic event.Ā
That week, I went to work with my dad and started by emptying out all the rubbish bins around the offices. As was my habit, I checked out the whiteboard to see the weekās activities. It was divided into a grid that gave details of upcoming services and there at the top I saw his name.Ā
It seemed so odd to me that such a massive event was reduced to another name on someoneās to-do list. I felt like his death was somehow moreĀ āspecialā than the other ones and it wasnāt fair to just add his name with the others, only to be erased next week once his service was over. Looking back, Iām not sure what sort of fanfare I expected.Ā
One day, Iāll just be a notation on a whiteboard too.Ā
I wonder how peopleās perceptions of death change once they work in a funeral home. For me, I find it silly when people are grossed out by funeral homes. Iāll mention that my family worked at one for several years, and the inevitable reaction is shock and disgust. Perhaps they, like me as a child, picture rooms stacked with bodies on top of each other.Ā
Now, I just picture my dad in the hearse, casket in tow, snacking on a sandwich and navigating traffic while onlookers gape in horror. Pointing to his sandwich, heād say,Ā āDonāt worry, itās not that kind of cold meat.ā