As cremations have become more and more
popular in recent years, people have devised a number of unusual ways to
commemorate the dearly departed. If you’re looking for a unique way to
be remembered, here are 12 strange things you can do with your cremated
remains.
1. You Can Be Shot Into Space
Celestis made headlines in 1997 when
they launched the cremated remains of 60’s icon Timothy Leary and Star
Trek creator Gene Roddenberry into space. For a fairly reasonable fee
(starting at $695), you can send a “symbolic portion” of yourself on the
next available mission, riding alongside a commercial or scientific
satellite.
You can come back to Earth after the
flight, or pay more to remain in orbit. You’ll stay there for an
estimated 10 to 240 years before reentering the atmosphere in a blaze of
fire. In the future, Celestis plans to launch cremated remains into the
moon’s orbit, to the surface of the moon, and possibly into deep space.
2. You Can Be Exploded With Fireworks
Yes, you can literally “go out with a
bang.”
Companies like Heaven’s Above Fireworks
can pack a small portion of your ashes into professional-grade fireworks
and stage a memorial display for your survivors. You can choose a big,
noisy, colorful display or a quieter, more understated event.
For a smaller fee, you can have your
ashes stuffed into small, self-fired rockets, so your family can have
their own private fireworks ceremony at home.
3. You Can Be Mixed Into a Coral Reef
Environmentalist? Ocean lover? You can
create your own “living legacy” by having your ashes turned into an
artificial coral reef. Your remains will help restore damaged reefs and
create a nurturing marine environment for fish and other forms of sea
life.
Starting around $4,000, Eternal Reefs
will mix your cremated remains into concrete, shape the artificial reef
and place the reef out on the sea floor. Larger personal reefs can hold
up to four people and include pets. If that’s too pricey, you can have
your remains mixed together with others and as part of a complete reef
system.
4. You Can Be Crushed Into a Diamond
Jewelry from human remains? It sounds
ghoulish, but we’re not talking about necklaces made from bones or
teeth.
With companies like LifeGem, your carbon
remains (or a lock of your hair) can be crushed into a gemstone that is
identical to a natural diamond on a molecular level. Using modern
technology, this process only takes a few months instead of millions of
years.
It’s not cheap, though. Expect to shell
out a few grand for the smallest gems, and that doesn’t include the cost
of the setting.
5. You Can Be Fired In Hand-Blown Glass
Can’t shell out a small fortune to be
crushed into a diamond? For a fraction of the price, you can still be
turned into bling at Memory Glass.
Starting around $150, the artists at
Memory Glass take a small portion of cremated remains and infuse them
into hand-blown glass keepsakes and jewelry. Each member of your family
can get their own colorful glass pendant to wear on a chain or leather
cord.
6. You Can Be Painted Into a Work of Art
The professional artist at Ashes to
Portraits creates oil paintings of the deceased with traces of cremated
ashes mixed in. If you like this idea, make sure you leave behind a
large, close-up photograph to work from (at minimum, 4? x 6?, but the
bigger the better). They’ll also do portraits of your cremated pet.
If you prefer something less literal,
you can send a bit of your ashes to Art in Ashes. Their staff painter
creates colorful modern abstract art mixed with cremated remains. You
can choose one of their pre-made compositions or let them know what
colors you want to see.
7. You Can Be Launched in a Helium Balloon
Scattering cremated remains by airplane
is fairly common these days, but it can be expensive and difficult for
family members to participate. The Eternal Ascent Society makes aerial
ash scattering more accessible and affordable by placing the ashes
inside a large helium balloon and launching it into the clouds.
The balloon itself is 5 feet wide and
comes in red, green, blue and yellow. About 6 miles up into the sky, the
atmosphere gets so cold that the balloon will freeze and shatter, and
your ashes will disperse into the clouds. It’s biodegradable, so you
don’t have to worry about damaging the environment.
8. You Can Be Stuffed Into a Teddy Bear
Huggable Urns are stuffed animals with a
lined velvet compartment inside to hold a person’s cremated remains.
You can choose from a number of teddy bears, plush dogs and cats or just
a simple, soft pillow.
You can send in a loved one’s clothing
or special blanket to have a small outfit or accessory made for your
Huggable Urn. They also make customized stuffed animals, if you’d like
one that looks just like a deceased pet.
9. You Can Be Mounted to a Vehicle
Some people are happiest when they’re
behind the wheel, and now you can be there permanently after your
demise. A Mobile Cremation Urn can be mounted on a motorcycle, motor
home, car, truck, police cruiser, cruise ship or pretty much anything
else that moves.
You can personalize your mobile
cremation urn with engraving, and add your picture to the mobile urn
with your name or a favorite quote. You can also choose a commemorative
disc for the end cap based on your religion, profession, military
service or social organization.
10. You Can Be the Sand in an Hourglass
An interesting twist on the typical urn
is the Hourglass Keepsake Urn. This hourglass is filled with cremated
ashes instead of sand, creating a lovely symbol of the passage of time
in every person’s life.
If you and your spouse or loved one
would like to share an hourglass, your ashes can be mixed into a single
urn.
11. You Can Be Turned Into a Box of Pencils
With this project, artist Nadine Jarvis
is exploring the idea of turning a deceased person from “ashes to
ashes.” She estimates that about 240 pencils could be made from the
carbon of human cremains.
The pencils would be stored inside a
specially designed box, with a sharpener in its side and a viewing
window on top. When the pencils are sharpened into the side of the box,
the pencil shavings turn into a new kind of ash, and the box becomes a
kind of urn.
12. You Can Be Built Into a Pyramid
In ancient Egypt, the pyramids were
built to hold the remains and worldly goods of the royal deceased.
Unfortunately, these “permanent” monuments have deteriorated under the
stresses of time, weather and incessant grave-robbing.
In modern times, a company called PYRA
Development wants to build pyramids out of a high-impact polymer that
would last over a million years. Each building block of the pyramid
would contain the remains and memorabilia of a deceased person.
There’s no evidence that this project
ever got off the ground, but it’s a fascinating idea nonetheless.







1 komentar:
Have you heard of DNA2Diamonds? Theyuse the personal carbon (a lock of hair or a small amount of cremated ashes) for the diamond seed. They create the diamonds as memorials to remember a loved one (or pet) that has passed…or to celebrate special occasions, like for a wedding engagement ring, the bride and groom can combine their hair. It’s such a unique idea and it creates such a precious keepsake. Here’s an article on them:
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/2684255/memorial_diamonds_from_death_to_diamonds.html?cat=5
And be sure to check out DNA2Diamonds website too! They are less expensive than the other company! http://www.dna2diamonds.com
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