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Burial Vaults
Charitable Organizations
How Children Cope With Grief
Explaining Cremation to a Child
Consider Family in Cremation
Questions About Estate Planning
How to Write a Eulogy
Frequently Asked Questions
Disposition Options With Cremation
Understanding Cremation Options
Cremation FAQs
Helping Children Understand Death
Helping Parents Cope With Losing a Spouse
Helping Others Experiencing Grief
Why Pre-Plan Funeral Services
The Grieving Process
Losing a Child
Losing Your Spouse
Mourning the Death of Your Pet
Coping Through the Holidays After Losing a Loved One
Decisions You'll Make in Pre-Need Planning
Make a Resolution to Complete Estate and Funeral Planning
Personalizing a Funeral Service
To Remember Me - a poem by Robert N. Test
Give Thanks on Veterans Day
What to Do When Someone Dies
Value of Funeral Service
Tips on Wills


Disposition Options with Cremation


With cremation, you actually have more choices for a final resting place than with a typical earth burial.


Interment


With interment, you can choose burial in the family plot, church garden, or other memorial site. You can also choose a columbarium, which is an arrangement of niches, indoor or outdoor, with memorial identity plaques. This is also sometimes referred to as an urn garden.


Graveside Services


You can choose to have memorial prayers and religious rites performed at the graveside with cremation, just as you can with a typical earth burial. You can also choose to have a marker or monument as a permanent testimony to the life and the history of the deceased, and as a place of pilgrimage for loved ones to visit.


With cremation, you also have other options that aren't available with a typical earth burial.


Scattering the Cremated Remains


Options with scattering remains include scattering within a memorial garden or cemetery; with the comfort of identifying marker, plaque, or memorial book entry to memorialize the loved one; or over water or in some other site loved by the deceased.


You can also do partial scattering, in which some of the cremated remains are scattered and the rest are retained in an urn for interment.


Multiple Urns


Cremated remains can also be placed in two or more urns. This offers the comfort of interment near more than one family member when families are divided by great distances.


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