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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1992)
Grief Continued from Page 7 Williams said. While it is easy to feel that the death of a loved one is overwhelm ing, he said, dwelling on it won’t help. “Definitely getting out and doing something will be more helpful to you,” he said. “If you aren’t doing what you used to do, you need to force yourself to get back into your regular activities.” Friends of those who have ex perienced a loss can help in several ways, Williams said. One impor tant one, he said, is physical con tact, which he described as being very important to most people at the time or a deatn or a loveo one. Another way to help is to con tinue to express an interest in the person who has died. Williams said most people dislike talking about the subject, which deprives the grieving person of the opportunity to express his or her feelings. “Ifyou are willing to be suppor tive of that person, you need to let them know that it is still OK to talk about it even weeks and months later,” he said. Friends should even go as far as bringing the subject up with the grieving person, because many who are grieving don’t want to feel they are burdening others by talking about it, Williams said. “If you’re a friend, you will bring it up.” Wyuka Continued from Page 8 propeller prop to mark his grave stone. Six Nebraska governors are buried there, also. The woman who answered the phone at Wyuka’s office said she nadn’t seen any ghosts, and she knew of no one wno’d been killed while in Wyuka. I felt a little com forted, but I was still outside the cemetery. I felt a little on the edge, as if I was saying to the grand grim reaper, “Hey, w’sup? I’ll be sneaking through your village of the dead for a while, trying not to recognize your poten tial power or my own fears.” 1 ilCgi anugi mi ico.pti oaiuuwui ing. I arrived at the gate and brought the bicycle inside. I left my bicycle at the curb and began walking across the lightly snow-covered ground. I couldn’t read many of the plaques in the cemetery, until I found an unused pack of matches in my pocket from a restaurant in Madison, Wis. A wave ot fear shot through my spine as I looked around and thought about all the dead people I was walking on, so I tried to picture where they were lying and to avoid them. Many of the tombstones were grouped together by families. “There lies my brother Tom," I said to my self, play-acting, “and my sister Mary, and my brother John." I felt a strange UNPREDICTABLE eiko & koma ouaug^ aimiii/ iw* — graves I was standingjon. I remembered that there was a section in the cemetery for infants with a sign labeling it “Babyland.” Everything but the trees was dead, I thought; then I saw a dead tree. It was cut at eye level and had several protruding limbs cut at the base. It looked like a piece of art, and then I saw that it too was a tombstone. It sounds silly, but I felt every one there was trying to say some thing, to live one more moment, to kick his or her tombstone over, to say to the young: Enjoy life while you’re alive. Maybe we all have a dead person inside us that speaks to us while in ceme- Rl&fj teries. mtMl Funeral Continued from Page 6 disinfectant. Morticians use an embalming machine in the process, McQuiston said. It utilizes pressure to push the blood out of the body through the main artery. As the blood is pushed out, the embalming fluid is pumped into the body. After death, the eyes and mouth remain open, so cosmetic meas ures are taken to close them, * McQuiston said. The mouth is generally sutured shut; and morti cians employ a type of double sided adhesive contact lens to shut the eyes. As the arteries are pumped up, he said, the body begins to stiffen and settle, so the features must be set before embalming begins. If the family favors cremation over burial, two basic options remain: direct cremation or a com bination of embalming and crema lion. The direct-cremation process only includes sanitization and crema tion of the body. The ashes are then placed in a receptacle of the family’s choosing. In this case, the body is not embalmed. According to health department codes, the body cannot be refriger ated for more than 72 hours. After that time, it must be cremated or embalmed. The option of embalming and cremation allows the family to have a viewing before the body is cre mated, McQuiston said. Cremation is the burning of the 1_J.. _1__ 't'*I__»_ uuujr iiuw aai iiw viv/inaiwi j u housed in the basement of the mortuary and basically is a giant furnace designed specifically for that purpose, McQuiston said. To be cremated, the body must be contained in a receptacle of some kind, such as a box or a canvas bag. When the burial option is cho sen, the family has more choices to make. The deceased must be dressed; and a casket must be chosen. The family may bring any clothes it deems appropriate for burial. Roper and Sons has no requirements regarding dress, McQuiston said. "We’ve had pets cremated and buried with the person," McQuis ton said. J Casket choices are numerous. The casket’s bedding covers an adjustable frame that can be adapted to the size of the person. “Generally, everyone can fit in the same (size) cas ket," McQuiston said. 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Bond, Metromail Corporation Drive-Up ATMs t* * 10th and 0 Streets * 11th and Comhusker, Belmont Shopping Center * 14th and Superior, Northridge Shopping Center * 48th and Leighton Streets * 5845 Fremont, NBC Havelock Branch * 1230 North Cotner * 66th and 0, NBC East Park Branch * 40th and South, NBC Parkway Branch * 40th and Old Cheney, Williamsburg Branch Walk-Up ATMs * 48th and 0, Eastview Shopping Center * 70th and Vine, Meadowlane Shopping Center * 70th and Van Dorn, Holmes Lake Plaza * 48th and Highway 2, Briarhurst Shopping Center * 16th and South, South Street Plaza ’Available 24 hours a day. NBC National Bank of Commerce IJih * “O" Strati / Lincoln. NE 6*S0« / (402)4J4-4321 / MEMBER FtHC A 4First Commerce bank. i