Erin, your dad should look into "green" funerals -- there is such a thing. The body is minimally prepared (no embalming) and the casket is simple wood which will decompose rapidly and return the contents to the earth. There is also cremation!
Natter 46: The FIGHTIN' 46
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I come from trash. No heirlooms. My grandmother let a stranger steal them and was too embarrassed to file a police report.
Rings that protrude are a no-no for me - too liable to hurt myself. Unlikely to buy bling for myself - I'd rather travel.
Anyone has my erikaj stacked up with the trash has a mighty smack enroute!
Being an only child, I'm going to inherit everything my parents own except a few keepsakes for other relatives. Family photos and my mom's recliner are about the only things that I foresee keeping. (Well, the house too, although I regard that as something of a white elephant with a fair amount of equity.)
There is a beautiful piece of furniture that has been in my family for generations that I so want. However, it always gets passed to the oldest boy. So my brother will get it one day. No fair!
Erin, your dad should look into "green" funerals -- there is such a thing. The body is minimally prepared (no embalming) and the casket is simple wood which will decompose rapidly and return the contents to the earth. There is also cremation!
Daddy is more into "cheap" than "green." He's offended by the notion that you have to pay to be dead.
In my family, the women inherit. It pisses them off that they have to have a document in the States that says so.
BTW, Gloomcookie, likely on behalf your brother ... you want the old furniture? Get up in that.
I'm not entirely sure how this happened, but my mother ended up with custody of fully half a dozen sets of various ancestors' wedding china, not to mention a fair bit of silverware. She's already said she plans to divvy it up among my sisters and our female cousins when we start getting married.
As for jewelry, last year my mom took a ring of my great-grandmother's and had the stones resest into three necklaces. The ring was a big tear-shaped opal surrounded by little diamonds-- I got the opal and one diamond on a pendant, my sister got a couple of the little diamonds plus a bigger one from an old earring, and my mom got the rest of the diamonds in a necklace for herself. Everybody wins!
Plus, I like having a piece of jewelry with history to it, and no guilt over where the stones might come from.
You boys are watching, right? Give all your material crap to the ladies. It will impress them and you can just standby to receive stud-credits. Plus, they have to keep track of it all.