ramble81@lemmy.zip to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world · vor 11 MonatenWhat's going to be the final way that boomers pull up the ladder behind them?message-squaremessage-square88fedilinkarrow-up1134arrow-down117
arrow-up1117arrow-down1message-squareWhat's going to be the final way that boomers pull up the ladder behind them?ramble81@lemmy.zip to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world · vor 11 Monatenmessage-square88fedilink
minus-squarejordanlund@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up27·vor 11 MonatenGravesites. There will be no room to bury Gen X and down.
minus-squareblargh513@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up13·vor 11 MonatenJokes on them, we will never be able to stop working long enough to have a proper funeral. They’ll just bury us where we drop. Not like most of us care anyway. Just throw my rotten corpse in a dumpster, ain’t nobody wanna smell it anyway.
minus-squarestoy@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkarrow-up11·vor 11 MonatenEh, here in Sweden it is normal to reuse grave sites, you normally get a grave site for 25 years, but it can be extended. The relatives of the person buried can extend the time that the gravesite is yours, but it costs money. Sooner or later the gravesite is returned to the church to be reused.
minus-squarebreecher@sh.itjust.workscakelinkfedilinkarrow-up10·vor 11 MonatenThat’s the way it is in a lot of European countries. Every single acre of land would be a gravesite if not for this system.
minus-squareglitch1985@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up7·vor 11 MonatenIs everything broken down in 25 years or do they do something with the remains?
minus-squarestoy@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkarrow-up4·vor 11 MonatenMost people here are cremated, I also remember the urn my grandfather was buried in was biodegradable so after 25 years there is nothing really left. I don’t know if everything is broken into 25 years, or so, that is just what I read on the Chruch of Sweden’s website.
minus-squareZiggurat@jlai.lulinkfedilinkarrow-up3·vor 11 MonatenHave you heard about Paris catacombs?
minus-square𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.publinkfedilinkarrow-up2·vor 11 MonatenWhat happens to the bodies already buried within?
minus-squarestoy@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkarrow-up2·vor 11 MonatenThey are first cremated, and at leat when my grandad died, the ash was placed in a biodegradable urn, so I’ll assume it just biodegrade when the next guy is going in.
minus-squareAmbiguousProps@lemmy.todaylinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up10·vor 11 MonatenGood thing more and more people are choosing cremation these days.
Gravesites. There will be no room to bury Gen X and down.
Jokes on them, we will never be able to stop working long enough to have a proper funeral. They’ll just bury us where we drop.
Not like most of us care anyway. Just throw my rotten corpse in a dumpster, ain’t nobody wanna smell it anyway.
Eh, here in Sweden it is normal to reuse grave sites, you normally get a grave site for 25 years, but it can be extended.
The relatives of the person buried can extend the time that the gravesite is yours, but it costs money.
Sooner or later the gravesite is returned to the church to be reused.
That’s the way it is in a lot of European countries. Every single acre of land would be a gravesite if not for this system.
Is everything broken down in 25 years or do they do something with the remains?
Most people here are cremated, I also remember the urn my grandfather was buried in was biodegradable so after 25 years there is nothing really left.
I don’t know if everything is broken into 25 years, or so, that is just what I read on the Chruch of Sweden’s website.
Have you heard about Paris catacombs?
What happens to the bodies already buried within?
They are first cremated, and at leat when my grandad died, the ash was placed in a biodegradable urn, so I’ll assume it just biodegrade when the next guy is going in.
Good thing more and more people are choosing cremation these days.