T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1896.1 | | DWOVAX::STARK | Hire the Head Case | Tue Nov 02 1993 14:45 | 1 |
| What a novel idea. :-)
|
1896.2 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | a Citizen of The European Union | Wed Nov 03 1993 03:49 | 4 |
| I wonder what a funeral home would be like with this guy hiring the
staff.
Jamie.
|
1896.3 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | The Seasons in between | Wed Nov 03 1993 07:50 | 8 |
| Jamie, only you would wonder that. ;-)
I'll take it as your attempt at humor. :-)
.0 makes a lot of sense to me! 'Course, it could be cuz it
describes me ;-) and who knows, I cud be lookin' for a job
someday. :-\
Jay
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1896.4 | | ZOLA::AHACHE | Men are from Mars, women Venus | Wed Nov 03 1993 13:00 | 5 |
|
Jamie, it would probably be like the movie "Little shop of horrors"..
Adele
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1896.5 | pass the champagne! | TNPUBS::PAINTER | remembering Amber | Wed Nov 03 1993 13:30 | 6 |
|
It could also be Mardi Gras. *<(8%) Naw O'leans French Quarter style!
Funerals are generally far too somber here anyway...
Cindy
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1896.6 | An answer to Jamie's question | DELNI::LAMONT | | Wed Nov 03 1993 13:59 | 16 |
| I'll introduce myself and also try to answer Jamie's question at the
same time. My name is Rick Lamont, I work and live in Massachusetts.
In answering Jamie's question: I took a college course a few years
back called "Death and Dying". It's a wonderful course and I think
everyone should have something like it in school to better deal with
the subject. We went on a "field trip" one night to a crematorium and
then to a Funeral Parlor. The head of the funeral parlor took us on a
tour and during our walk through the place he had a great sense of
humor bordering a bit on the nutty!
I really believe that people in a business like that need to be a tad
nutty on the inside to be able to handle what they go through. Don't
judge a book by it cover :^)
Peace
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1896.7 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | a Citizen of The European Union | Thu Nov 04 1993 03:26 | 10 |
| I do know one person who worked in a funeral home and he is quite a fun
guy. He did show us round the funeral home, in Atlanta and most of the
people there were quite cheerful. However when there were any grieving
relatives around they were quite somber.
I just have this tendency to push an idea to the extreme limits and see
what happens. The idea of a funeral home staffed entirely by wacky
people made me smile.
Jamie.
|
1896.8 | Hey, don't knock morticians... | GLDOA::TREBILCOTT | I can't believe it's only Wednesday | Thu Nov 04 1993 09:13 | 3 |
| My cousin is a mortician and he has a terrific sense of humor! Then
again, I think one would have to...
|
1896.9 | Well done!!! | TNPUBS::PAINTER | remembering Amber | Thu Nov 04 1993 11:39 | 6 |
|
I do believe they were referring to you as well in .0, Jamie.
With ideas like that, you fit the description completely.
Cindy
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1896.10 | raised by the dead | WHRAMI::BARKER | | Thu Nov 04 1993 11:59 | 6 |
| might explain my family (Dad's side were caretakers for a cemetary -
they lived IN the cemetary). We learned to respect the dead, but it
didnt stop us from playing hide-n-seek or other twilit games among the
tombstones and such.
Beth
|
1896.11 | .02 | ABACUS::MCCLELLAN_W | | Mon Nov 08 1993 11:53 | 19 |
| Bit behind, but anyway:
RE: .0
Nice idea, but in today's economy, good luck in trying to get the
concept initiated. In this organization, we know bullets #2, 4, 5,
and 6 are out (not a slam, just a statement). Maybe when we get
profitable enough again, there will be excess to allow for some
craziness. But, until then, it's "mature", "adult" business-first,
blah, blah, blah.
RE: Morticians, etc.
I've had the privilege of knowing three in my time so far. Two
were totally opposite the stereotyped somber, no-fun person,
except during and around bereived (sic?). The other, well, he fit
the stereotyped somber, macabre image perfectly.
-Bill
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1896.12 | Slumber party anyone? | STUDIO::COLAIANNI | I have PMS and a handgun ;-) | Mon Nov 08 1993 14:59 | 15 |
| I've known one mortician well. He was a girlfriend's dad when I was in
high school. He used to let us have pajama parties in the viewing room
when he had no, er, custumers.
We loved it because he was wacky, and always did something bizarre when
we were there to scare the stuffing out of us! He was not stereotypical
at all. (of course we also loved it for telling ghost storeis, and
because the carpet was so thick in there, you could sleep on the floor
VERY comfortably! Assuming you slept At all that is!)
Of course if someone died, the party would either be moved into the
living quarters, to another house, or cancelled. Made things
interesting for sure.
Y
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1896.13 | Synchronicity. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Nov 08 1993 15:16 | 17 |
| By pure coincidence, I met an ex-mortician this weekend (it was at,
by a further coincidence, a small conference on the theme of
Parapsychology and Thanatology -- thanatology being the study of death;
though her attendance had almost nothing to do with her previous
employment). She agreed strongly that morticians tend to have an
intense and active sense of humor. She compared it to the syndrome
which formed the basis of the M*A*S*H movie and TV show -- bizzare
humor as a defense against the stress of the job.
She thought that that was particularly true where she worked -- they
got a lot of "indigents" as "clients". Frequently the signs of their
pitiful life were all to evident, and not infrequently, it was a long
time before their bodies, despite their exposure, would be found. Very
stressful -- and she said you never really did become used to it at
those extremes, though you learned to cope (including with humor).
Topher
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