The Funeral.com Journal
Resources to help you create tributes as unique as the people (and pets) you love. Learn how engraving, photos, colors, and symbols add meaning; discover scattering rituals and at-home memorial ideas. We focus on the details that matter—because small choices can carry a lifetime of comfort.
Eternal Reef Balls: Turning Ashes Into Coral Habitat (How Memorial Reefs Work)
The first time a family asks about an ocean memorial, it often starts the same way: with a container on a kitchen table and a question that feels too big...
Sky Burials Explained: Understanding the Tibetan Tradition and Why It’s Rare Elsewhere
The first time most people hear the phrase sky burial, it can land with a mix of curiosity and discomfort. That reaction is understandable—especially if you were raised around cemeteries,...
Ghana’s Fantasy Coffins: Meaning, Craftsmanship, and Sustainability Questions
It can start with a single photo: an airplane-shaped coffin painted the bright blue of a clear sky, or a giant fish with shimmering scales, or a cocoa pod, or...
Grieving Without a Body: Coping When Someone Is Missing or No Remains Are Recovered
There are losses that arrive with a doorbell, a hospital room, a final phone call. And then there are losses that arrive like fog. Someone is here, and then they...
Faith and Grief: When Belief Comforts (and When It Becomes a Struggle) Description:
In the first hours after a death, faith can feel like a handrail. Sometimes it’s a familiar prayer spoken without thinking, or a hymn that rises in your chest before...
Grieving a Grandchild: The Double Heartbreak of Child Loss for Grandparents
There are losses we expect to face as we age—friends, siblings, even parents if we’re among the last living in a generation. A grandchild’s death shatters that quiet expectation. It...
Online vs In-Person Grief Support: Pros, Cons, and How to Choose What Fits You
In the first days after a death, the world can feel too loud and too quiet at the same time. Your phone keeps lighting up, yet the house can feel...
Traumatic Loss and PTSD: When Trauma Complicates Grief and What Kind of Help Works
Some losses break the world in two. A fatal accident. A homicide. An overdose. A sudden medical crisis that leaves you replaying the last minutes on a loop. Even when...
Planning a Memorial Walk/Run or Sports Tournament: An Annual Tribute That Builds Community
A memorial event starts the way so many meaningful things do: with a small group of people realizing they miss someone in the same place, on the same calendar day,...
Augmented Reality Memorials: Using AR to Share Life Stories at Gravesites (and What’s Next)
There are places that hold a kind of silence you can feel. A cemetery in late afternoon. A small family plot where the ground is still new. A veteran’s section...
Firearms in an Estate (2026): Legal Basics for Transferring or Selling Guns After Someone Dies
In the first days after someone dies, families are often trying to do two hard things at once: grieve and protect what needs protecting. A wallet, a set of keys,...
Autopsy Reports and Death Certificates: How to Request Them and What They Can Reveal
In the first days after a death, paperwork can feel like an added weight on top of grief. Families are often trying to do two things at once: make decisions...
Recruiting Millennials and Gen Z Into Funeral Careers: Modernizing the Image of Deathcare Work
On the surface, funeral service can look like an industry that never changes—quiet buildings, careful rituals, established roles. But if you work in deathcare, you know the truth: families have...
Shroud Burial: How Burial Without a Casket Works (and What to Know About Wrapping and Rules)
Most families don’t start funeral planning thinking, “Maybe we won’t use a casket.” They start with something simpler and more human: the wish to do right by someone they love....