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Grant, an 8th grader helping out around his family’s funeral home, has a to give a presentation about the most interesting thing he did this summer. The only problem is, Grant didn’t do anything interesting.until this weekend.Imagine being 13 years old and having to move a dead body with a caved in face and 77 stabs wounds.
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Would YOU think it was a good idea to present it to your entire 8th grade class? Grant did.If you enjoyed this entry, be sure to subscribe and rate the podcast, thanks for listening! Follow Grant: @PomoAndKitsch.
Grant’s phone rings after several drinks on his night off, It’s Andy from the funeral home, there are two men shot to death and frozen solid inside the police station and Andy's partner is M.I.A. Looks like Grant has to go! Why are the bodies inside the police station? How many times were they shot? What’s frozen brain matter feel like? How bad does blood smell?
These questions don't matter when Grant almost kills Andy by accident with a very well concealed sawed-off shotgun frozen into a dead man’s hand!If you enjoyed this entry be sure to subscribe and rate the podcast, thanks for listening!Follow Grant on Social Media: @PomoAndKitsch. A man stabs his family to death and then accidentally lights himself on fire in the basement. There are some things that you can’t UNsee, this man’s face is one of them. In this episode, Grant writes about one of the most horrifying crime scenes he ever responded to as a funeral director’s assistant. What was going through his mind?
How much skin really peeled off that man’s arms? Listen and find out! If you enjoyed this entry, be sure to subscribe and rate the podcast, thanks for listening! Follow Grant on Social Media: @PomoAndKitsch.
Many clergy won't accept a tip for performing a funeral, but offering is good etiquette. This money is often called an honorarium that you present to a pastor or priest in honor of your deceased loved one.
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In some cases, the clergy use the money as personal funds and in others, the money goes into a church fund. Most honorariums range from $50 to $300.
Ministers who spend a lot of time with a dying person and the family or who take part in funeral arrangements typically get more than a clergy member who simply preaches a sermon, reads a few Bible verses or delivers a eulogy at the service. Most funerals have a variety of flower arrangements, some ordered by the family of the deceased and others delivered by well-wishers. People who deliver flowers most often work for tips, so offering each delivery person a small tip is appropriate. For small arrangements, $2 to $5 is fine, but up to $10 is customary for larger ones. Whether flowers are delivered straight to the church or funeral home, or they come to you at home, don't forget to thank the delivery person monetarily each time since each delivery may come from a different employee or florist. Funeral Home Employees.
Some of the staff at the funeral home receive tips for their services. These include the person who does hair and make-up on the body, the person who transports the coffin and the person who writes the program for you. If you choose to hire a limo to carry close family members to the burial, this tip might not be included in a funeral home's bill unless the establishment owns its own set of limos. In many cases, most of these tips are included in the final bill. To be sure, ask for an itemized breakdown of the charges so you can offer tips if they don't appear in your final bill. Good etiquette says that you don't tip a funeral director. His services are paid as a salary by the funeral home.