Pop and the Christless Crucifix

I make my way through a dimly lit hall of walkers, wheelchairs, and medical carts to find him where I always find him – in a threadbare recliner, lightly coated with dried skin cells and broken hair follicles – hunched over the New York Times crossword in his flannel robe, pee-stained underwear, and perfectly fitted Red Sox cap – his lips moving silently to the clues:

1 Across – Act of saving or being saved – 1 down – Environmentally friendly material.”

Dad never used to move his lips – they were always tightly creased, well-mannered, and coolly detached from the finely humming machine in his head as he attacked the puzzle on all fronts.

To Dad, the Times crossword was a trusted friend, a worthy opponent, and an intellectual fencing partner who, for years, prepared him mentally for the start of his day. It felt grossly unfair that Dad was aging so inelegantly while his opponent remained unscathed by time.

I stand invisible at the entrance of his room, just staring, not wanting to disrupt his endeavor.

When he finally looks up, he shoots me a broad smile and tips his cap in my direction before returning to the puzzle.

I enter the room, clear my throat, and get to the point of my visit.

“Dad, do you have a will?”

Without lifting his eyes or halting the motion of his pencil, he responds, “You can have it all. Just burn me down to a fine ash, then bury me in the desert. There – that’s my will. Cross it off your list.”

I sigh heavily.

With his head still bowed, he holds up his mechanical pencil and points it sharply in my direction before continuing.

“But not too deep. A few inches below the topsoil will do just fine. I want the rain to be able to get to me — muddy me up a bit.”

He lifts his head. A thin dusting of skin cells and hair follicles fall – it’s wintertime in Flannel Ville. He gives me a wink and a smile before returning to the puzzle.

“What about the family plot where Mom is?”

“What about it?”

He goes on, “In the words of the best Beatle by far, Let. It. Be. When she was alive, your mother nagged me about hogging the bed and disturbing her sleep. Trust me, she’d be fine with my desert plan.”

He returns to the puzzle, mumbling under his breath.

6 across – Breaking down organic matter” – 2 Down – To accept without protest”

“Is any of this written down, Dad?”

He slams the folded Times on his lap, and an unwelcome whiff of urine fills my nostrils.

“Why do I need to write it down? I just told you with actual words from my mouth – Put me in the goddamn desert, a few inches deep – Easy-Peasy.  You want to bring nurse Jackie in as a witness?”

There’s no Nurse Jackie, but Dad loved that show so much that he referred to all his nurses as Nurse Jackie—even the males.

“Sorry, Dad.”

He softens immediately and smiles.

“It’s OK. No worries from the weary.”

“The Times is kicking my ass today.” He tosses the newspaper onto his bed – a school of dad-DNA swims in a stream of sunlight above the bedding.

“How are things at home? How are Emma and the boys?”

“They’re good – I’ve been wanting to get the boys in for a visit – -they’ve been busy with basketball and homework.”

“Don’t worry about visits. Honestly, I don’t want them to see me like this.”

A silence settles in the room. I can hear the paint peeling and a clock ticking.

“Can you do me a favor?”

“Sure, Dad, whatever you need.”

He points to the wall behind his bed.

“Get rid of that goddamn cross. It’s from the poor soul who was here before me.”

I lift the lacquered black Christless cross from its nail. The unfaded paint beneath it leaves a crucifix shroud of Turin.

In a deadpan voice, Dad stares at the wall and quotes Luke 24:6-7, “He is not there; he has risen,” and smiles sarcastically.

“Thanks, son.”

I stand Pope-like in the middle of his room, holding the crucifix, “What should I do with this?”

“Burn and bury it in the desert – he chuckles and starts to cough – a mosh pit of Dad-dust bounces enthusiastically on his shuddering shoulders. I can almost hear Cobain screaming.

Suddenly, there’s a discharge of electricity around Dad’s recliner. I look up to an intense blueish-white light pushing through the crevices on his forehead—a halo of electrified dandruff swirls above his head. A look of relief falls upon him. He winks and says warmly, “I’m just saving you the effort. Goodbye, son.”

There’s a loud pop—like a fluorescent light bulb dropped from a great height—as Dad bursts into flames like a human Hindenburg. Thin flakes of ash float in the air. Their fiery orange edges burn bright for a few seconds before self-extinguishing into dissipating wisps of smoke and settling all around me.

I drop the crucifix in stunned silence.

A nurse (followed by an elderly gentleman with a Dustbuster) enters the room. The nurse tilts her head towards her left shoulder and speaks into a small black microphone, “Mr. Smith in 103 has transitioned.” She nods sharply to the gentleman, who retrieves the crucifix and vacuums up every remnant of my father. He even vacuums Dad from my shoulders and shoes. When he finishes, the nurse checks her watch and makes a notation on her clipboard.

She hands me a piece of paper. “Your father left us these coordinates. We’re sorry for your loss. Please collect your father’s remains at the nurse’s station.” She and the orderly exit the room along the same path they entered.

I unfold the paper. Scrawled in my dad’s handwriting are the coordinates 40°40′N 117°40′W.

After a few minutes, I head to the Nurse’s Station. Dad’s been packaged neatly in a small cardboard box with the Crestwood Nursing Home logo. Someone thoughtfully taped the crucifix onto it. I pull it off and toss it in the trash on my way out the door.

I place Dad in the glove compartment and drive west to the desert.


If you haven’t had a chance yet, please check out my first book, My Paper, My Words: Rantings from a Progressive Boomer and Peeved Parent, from Amazon. And if you feel moved to write a review of the book on Amazon or elsewhere, I’d be honored.

My Paper, My Words is a collection of essays, stories, and poems that reflect the challenges of a middle-class husband and father trying to navigate a rapidly changing political, religious, and technological landscape of post-9/11 America.

Mushroom Suit or Diamond Ring?

Death and burial used to be pretty straight forward:

You died.

They buried you (or maybe tossed your ashes to the wind).

They said a few words and got on with life.

The end.

Short and sweet.

Today there’s a plethora of creative ways to orchestrate your final exit.

Be One with the Earth

You can go with a “natural” burial, which involves being put directly in the soil in a way that promotes or even accelerates decomposition.

Here’s an interesting tidbit: Luke Perry of 90210 fame was buried in a mushroom burial suit containing mushroom spores that helped decompose his body and filter toxins from it.

The filtering and decomposition from a mushroom suit prevent surrounding plant life from being contaminated by the body. Not that Luke was any more contaminated than you or I.

I see natural burials as a form of human recycling, which I imagine is popular with the environmentally conscious – but I can also hear my conservative, non-environmentally conscious uncle quipping, “When I go, just put me out with the recyclables.”  

I suspect the squeamish might be put off by microbial decomposition, but I’m okay with it. It feels both altruistic and symbiotic.

People who choose this type of burial seem to be saying, “I’m no more important than the petunias” and “I don’t need to be memorialized with a headstone or plaque” – and as a humanist, that philosophy resonates with me. 

Be Above it All

Don’t want to be put in the ground? Then maybe a space burial is for you. 

Space burials launch your remains into space, where they orbit around the Earth or go to the Moon or somewhere further into space. Space burials even include cheaper “suborbital” excursions where the human remains are briefly transported into space before returning to Earth, where (hopefully) they can be recovered. 

To me, space burials seem braggadocios and sadly pathetic. 

“No, I’m not an astronaut – I’m an accountant. But I’m planning on being an astronaut after I die. So, yeah, I’m kinda like the Neil Armstrong of accounting.” 

I feel there’s an element of cowardice to space burials. It’s like being an astronaut without any of the risk. And from an ego perspective, space burials check all the boxes. They scream, “Look at me; I am one with the heavens! I AM A GOD!

Be Around Forever

The most fascinating alternative burial, at least to me, isn’t a burial at all.

The diamond growth process uses high-pressure technology to turn human ashes into diamonds for wearable “cremation jewelry.”

For anyone who isn’t religious but still wishes for eternal life, the diamond growth process puts a new spin on the old adage “diamonds are forever.” 

Personally, I have no delusions about an afterlife. As soon as I developed the ability to think critically, religion and eternal life registered as complete bullshit. I believe when you’re dead – you’re dead. Everything fades to black, and you cease to exist, except in the memories of loved ones – and even that is short-lived.

We’re all destined to fade away entirely, like the billions of ordinary people before us, who no one remembers – we will eventually be totally and irrevocably gone. And honestly, the thought of that doesn’t bother me in the least.

But something about an ashes to diamond after-life appeals to me. I like the idea of being an object amongst the living long after I’m dead – and even though I know I won’t be conscious or aware of this existence, the idea of it, as a living human being, interests me. 

Is that weird?

And being a ring on the finger or broach on the collar of a loved one might be a pretty cool icebreaker at a cocktail party.

What a lovely ring, where did you get it? Well, my dad gave it to me when he died – something to remember him by. And actually . . . 

I like the idea of being an heirloom passed down from generation to generation and remaining in the mix. And if someone in the future lineage of my family falls on hard times, and I end up in a pawn shop, that’s even better, because then the story of me goes in an entirely new direction.

To me, it’s all about the story; after all, what is life but a story.

When you’re a piece of jewelry, your destiny is fluid, unknown, and full of possibilities. Maybe you get lost at the beach, coming off your son’s finger as he body-surfs, only to be found a few weeks later by an elderly beachcomber who throws you in an old leather-bound jewelry box full of broken watches and faded polaroids and wears you every-now-and-then until the day he dies. At this point, you might end up as a mention in the final paragraph of the will of this total stranger and get passed along to the beachcomber’s favorite nephew, and off on new adventure you go.

The original story fades and gives way to another.

I’m aware that wanting to be turned into a diamond comes off as shallow. I can hear someone say, “Why can’t you die normal, like most people?” – and I guess I can see their point – but I don’t give a fuck.

And as an atheist, I like that we have this advanced scientific process that yells “Screw You” to the old Ashes to Ashes proverb from the Book of Common Prayer, which says that we’re made of dust and will return to ashes and dust after we die. 

No thanks, I’m returning as a diamond.

If you want to learn about the various burial options, check out Burial Alternatives – 23 Ultimate Ways To Check Out.