Lexington Planning to Offer Green Burials at Westview Cemetery By Joy Richard, Wicked Local Lexington The phrase ashes to ashes, dust to dust paints a portrait of death invokes one’s natural return to the Earth. But, as sensitivities around traditional
The Positive Death Movement Comes to Life
Death cafes, death doulas, “Ask a Mortician,” DeathLab — once the province of goth subculture, death is having a moment in the sun.
Three and a Half Feet Under: Cemeteries Are Wary of Green Burials
Three and a Half Feet Under: Cemeteries Are Wary of Green Burials Seven Days, July 19, 2017 Fred Cheyette plans to be buried in a hayfield next to his house in the town of Orange. His body will be wrapped
This Is How I Want to Be Dead
This Is How I Want to Be Dead The New York, Times July 7, 2017 Years ago, doing some research in England on moles — the burrowing kind — I paid a visit to the grave of Kenneth Grahame. As
With Green Caskets, A More Earth-Friendly End
With Green Caskets, A More Earth-Friendly End Boston Globe, December 09, 2016 As Arlington resident and suburban mom Ruth Faas leads a plumber down the stairs off her kitchen, she warns him he might find her basement a bit unusual,
Natural Burial: Bringing Death Back Down to Earth
Natural Burial: Bringing Death Back Down to Earth The Progressive, August 3, 2016 Shelia Champion wasn’t surprised when she got the call saying her father had died. Her father, “Buster” Stice, a one-time cattleman from Stockton, Kansas, was almost eighty-six
Dying Traditions, and New Life, in the Funeral Industry
Dying Traditions, and New Life, in the Funeral Industry Boston Globe, May 16, 2016 Death is inevitable, but, increasingly, traditional burials are not. From diamonds made from cremated remains to eco-friendly interments, the $20 billion funeral industry is being reshaped,
Green Burial Movement Advocates Alternative to Conventional Interment
Green Burial Movement Advocates Alternative to Conventional Interment Daily Hampshire Gazette, November 11, 2015 As green living continues to take a more prominent place in the United States, there is now a growing movement that is focusing on green dying.