Yes, there is gross stuff...the not so nice body stuff as explained by a funeral director.

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Kari the Mortician

Kari the Mortician

Күн бұрын

Answering the question of what a body expels after death and what gross stuff there really is. Do they sigh and gurgle?
Funeral director and embalmer, Kari Northey, talks about the icky and gross stuff.

Пікірлер: 765
@jeanneconnolly8769
@jeanneconnolly8769 4 жыл бұрын
I cleaned my husband before hospice got there then changed him again before funeral director came . My husband only urinated right after death . I even turned his head to the side and with towels let he yellow stuff empty out . Again washed him . He died very peacefully in my arms . Had cancer but was not in pain , asked me to hold him . I knew he was dying and did as he wanted . My soulmate .
@iamlennii6791
@iamlennii6791 4 жыл бұрын
He sounds truly loved. 💘 may you find peace in this difficult time xx
@veronicajackson2025
@veronicajackson2025 4 жыл бұрын
My condolences.
@karenswafford5757
@karenswafford5757 4 жыл бұрын
Jeanne Connolly so very sorry for your huge loss. Praying you too, are at peace
@raedarden9830
@raedarden9830 4 жыл бұрын
So sorry for your loss. God bless you.
@saundrac9
@saundrac9 4 жыл бұрын
Jeanne Connolly 💔😢
@shelleyg1836
@shelleyg1836 4 жыл бұрын
husband died in my arms in hospital while 11 paramedics, drs and nurses were taking turns doing cpr. he had had a heart attack at home but no one knew it. walked to the ambulance himself joking and saying he didn't need an ambulance and died just inside hospital doors. after 20 mins of cpr they got him back. was on a ventilator and doing well while dr was on phone with helicopter when he took another huge heart attack and though they fought another 45 mins there was no saving him. he had needed a heart transplant but wasn't approved but had been approved the night before for an artificial heart. he had just turned 47 9 days earlier much too young to be gone. dr's said a 2nd heart attack would kill him and he was to die by age 35. well he lasted til 47 and it took 4 attacks to end his life. my beloved husband of nearly 26 yrs died in my arms the same as we began our life together at the alter. RIP Rodger 1964-2011 u are loved and missed still.
@jillbecker8651
@jillbecker8651 4 жыл бұрын
Shelley G I’m so sorry for your loss..
@michaelesillsbury3488
@michaelesillsbury3488 4 жыл бұрын
Shelley G aaawweee💔🙏🏼💕so very sorry for your horrible loss!!😔😔I can guarantee he is now your guardian angel😇😘..I just will never understand Why??God takes all of them sooo early..I can relate to your story cause I just lost😞💔a close friend in March,due to a massive heart attack...she was 51 yrs old n in the prime of her life!!!..🤔Just will never understand ☹️??Please stay strong n faithful,You will be in my loving💜💜thoughts☺️☺️and prayers 🛐✝️...May God Watch Over You💖✝️💖✝️💖✝️💖
@shelleyg1836
@shelleyg1836 4 жыл бұрын
@@michaelesillsbury3488 thank u so much. i truly believe god is watching over me and i have felt hubby's presense many times when things were hard so i know he is doing what he can from the other side. yes too many good ones lost way too young yet so many evil in jail live to ripe old ages. hard to understand i agree. thank u for your prayers and loving comments. they are much appreciated. sorry for the loss of your dear friend also. hugs.
@MrsznewyawkRN
@MrsznewyawkRN 4 жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry 😞 my mother JUST HAD a successful heart transplant in 2018 - she too had a very bad heart / dealt with CHF - the heart she received was very weak when first put in but she pushed through and spent a year in the hospital after an she is now running laps around us and her grandkids. im so sorry to hear about your husband - from the sound of it he was a fighter and was VERY STRONG. Bless you.
@shelleyg1836
@shelleyg1836 4 жыл бұрын
@Jb 318 he was always underweight until about a year after we got married when between my good cooking, having enough food and dr's putting him on medication for unknown conditions that he started gaining weight. he was diagnosed diabetic at 27 and we suspect he had heart problems since small boy which just went unnoticed. so yeah by 27 he was a bit overweight but not obese or anything. they found out during his quad bypass at 32 that his arteries in his heart remained size of newborn babies. never grew. he was insulin resistant and backwards to all things typical for a diabetic so specialists couldn't figure out how to treat him. we would have to feed him sugar to get his levels to go down and stay down. proper diet they went up to like 32 and stayed there. dieticians diet he would gain like 14 lbs in 2 wks. eating whatever he wanted he would lose weight. nothing made sense with him. insulin made him worse and pills only worked short term then he became immune. he was very overweight by time he died and was only 5 ft 6.5 in. tall. he was on 42 pills a day and 6 shots of insulin and 3 puffers and 100% blind from eye hemorrhages. had had 6 or 7 eye surgeries by that time as well trying to keep his vision. at one point he was on 32 needles a day of insulin. dr said it wasn't working just making him fat so took him off all but a few shots. new specialist but by the time we found her and she was good it was too late.
@gregcrabb3497
@gregcrabb3497 4 жыл бұрын
I've been an RN for 22 years but I've considered going back to become a mortician. At least they don't talk back (and if they do, then my services are not needed).
@taylorgarton6983
@taylorgarton6983 4 жыл бұрын
Greg Crabb I work in customer service and this is my exact response when I’m asked why I would ever want to become a mortician. The dead don’t cop an attitude! 😂
@witchofthewildwoods3496
@witchofthewildwoods3496 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder how many of us nurses have contemplated becoming morticians. My dad was one before I was born and left to become a CHP officer. There seems to be a lot in common among these vocations.
@markthompson7111
@markthompson7111 3 жыл бұрын
But you may have family members that are not to respectful Just Pray.
@Michael-ti1gn
@Michael-ti1gn 6 ай бұрын
Hey Greg, you're gonna meet alot of rich,single women!! Go for it! Plus, dental gold is up to $19.00 an ounce!!
@DREDIVA2010
@DREDIVA2010 6 жыл бұрын
What a gift you are to families in their time of need.
@wilddaisies1067
@wilddaisies1067 4 жыл бұрын
Definitely
@yvonce7309
@yvonce7309 6 жыл бұрын
Just cremate me with out embalming and put my ashes in a tin coffee can. Let’s Wrap it up. Call it a day.😂
@dewittbrewer5306
@dewittbrewer5306 4 жыл бұрын
You desire to have your ashes placed into a tin coffee can? What is your last name, Maxwell House?
@dewittbrewer5306
@dewittbrewer5306 4 жыл бұрын
You desire to have your ashes placed into a tin coffee can? What is your last name, Maxwell House?
@davidpickett9133
@davidpickett9133 4 жыл бұрын
@@dewittbrewer5306 Folgers
@mi2ube
@mi2ube 4 жыл бұрын
That’s the way to go! My will states to bury my ashes beneath my lemon tree. My life will in turn give life.
@prettykitty3570
@prettykitty3570 4 жыл бұрын
😂😂
@secondhandwildflowers2315
@secondhandwildflowers2315 6 жыл бұрын
When i was a medic we kept wintergreen oil in the rig and hit our noses with it before going in
@jenns4229
@jenns4229 4 жыл бұрын
I love how kind and careful she is with her words. In a weird sort of way she is helping me cope with my mother's death and what happened to her body. I don't know why I have trouble letting go at the physical side but these videos have helped me a great deal
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!!
@doivs1979
@doivs1979 Жыл бұрын
Wow I feel the exact same way about my grandma‘s passing. I thought I was the only one and I too also thought it was weird. I’m glad I’m not alone.
@MariaAbrams
@MariaAbrams Жыл бұрын
Awww, I'm sorry for your loss. That's normal, how you feel. This is why we have funerals and memorials, they're for US, not the dead. WE need to be able to say goodbye and have that time to cope and grieve and process. Very normal, especially when it comes to a parent or child. Don't worry so much about why, just know that it's normal and it takes time, but it will get some easier in time. Losing my dad, my fiance and my daughter were the hardest things I've gone through in life and it was SO hard to let go of the physical and accept that I wouldn't be able to touch or feel or hear or smell them anymore, I felt like I was dying too. Idk how or exactly when that frantic feeling went away, but it eventually did... I still struggle 2yrs after losing my fiance, but it does keep getting a Lil easier. Same thing happened with my daughter 2010 and with my dad who passed in 2016. Some days are still HARD and always will be, I'm sure, but it dies become easier.
@MariaAbrams
@MariaAbrams Жыл бұрын
​@@doivs1979 ♥
@doivs1979
@doivs1979 Жыл бұрын
@@MariaAbrams Aww sorry for your losses, my heart goes out to you. My God you are a strong woman. I agree with everything you said wholeheartedly. I do have lots of videos of my grandmother to reflect back to see and hear her voice, with doing so that sort of keeps me grounded. However there are days when I wake up in a good mood feeling great and BOOM it hits me like a ton of bricks, tears just start flowing out of nowhere. But the good out ways the bad and I’m pushing myself and staying motivated as I know my grandmother would want me to be. I and think of all the good times we shared. Thanks for sharing your story. I will keep you in my thoughts and prayers.
@AndreaFooLOL
@AndreaFooLOL 6 жыл бұрын
Lately I find myself watching these kind of videos & I stress myself out with the thought of losing someone close to me. I think to myself that I’m watching these videos to “prepare” myself for the worst, but in reality, I’m just getting more paranoid about it. I’m scared to lose anyone, the feeling is unbearable. I lost my grandfather last year & he is basically the reason why I’m so scared of death. I miss him so much. I wouldn’t want to lose someone else.
@AndreaFooLOL
@AndreaFooLOL 6 жыл бұрын
I honestly don't know how you do it. I know death happens to everyone, it is inevitable, i just wish there was an easier way to handle it. My respects to you. (I'm real happy you replied. I'm a new subscriber & your channel is helping me cope, & I learn something new with every video I watch. Thank you!)
@josierivera951
@josierivera951 6 жыл бұрын
I started watching these videos a few months back. I had no idea why something told me to click the videos because the kept popping up in recommends A month ago my grandma was dying and passed a few days later. Nothing really prepares you because now I’m just still sort of lost and have so many questions.
@abbylane62
@abbylane62 5 жыл бұрын
I have worked my entire life as a CNA and such things have happened to me. I have even had a body sit straight up during the bathing process. A reaction to a nerve that haven’t died yet. Scared the bejueezus out of me!!!!
@sorchasam3252
@sorchasam3252 4 жыл бұрын
Oh my God I dont think I'd survive myself if that happened while I was bathing somebody 😱😱😭
@tammiewilliams6853
@tammiewilliams6853 4 жыл бұрын
I'm a CNA as well and have watched a lot of people actively die. I've done post mortem care on countless of people. I actually get an adrenaline rush having to clean up dead ppl.(kinda weird I know) but it excites me for some reason
@immaggiethesenilegoldenret7918
@immaggiethesenilegoldenret7918 4 жыл бұрын
abbylane62 Same here; I was an RN for thirty years, “retired “ from that, became a CNA. Ohhhh, the stories I/we could tell! It’s how we’ve made our living!
@immaggiethesenilegoldenret7918
@immaggiethesenilegoldenret7918 4 жыл бұрын
Tammie Williams You’re performing a great corporal work of mercy; I get the same buzz as well...it’s why we do what we do!
@abbylane62
@abbylane62 4 жыл бұрын
Subwaygirl NYC yes some of the stories I have would really freek most people out. Bet you have some good one too!
@EricFortuneJr.
@EricFortuneJr. 6 жыл бұрын
Thanks! It is natural and it going to happen to all of us as death is a part of life. It's nature.
@MelhorAinda
@MelhorAinda 6 жыл бұрын
I lost my dad in 2013 to a heart attack and had to sign the removal of life support papers as my parents weren't married. He was only 49. I am so lucky as I found an absolutely lovely funeral home in Atlanta. I think it was family owned or something small, they only charged me the bare minimum for the cremation and the urn. I got a chapel for an hour at no cost, and as I was barely able to pay it off over months after she let me take my dad home. I will never forget that woman and what she did for me. She lost her father young so I believe she understood more than most folks did at the time. The doctors and nurses at the hospital didn't really explain things to me as to what would happen as I watched him die. So as he was turning pale and grey it freaked me out for a minute. My mother had to tell me. I think the freakiest thing afterwards was the fact that his mouth fell open, and stayed open. Oh man that was tough. I held his hand and spoke to him but watching my mom hold him in her arms and cry as he died was SO hard. Thank god there are some honest good folk like yourself out there Kari. Makes the grieving process a lot easier. New subscriber and wanted to share my story.
@MelhorAinda
@MelhorAinda 6 жыл бұрын
It was hard, I don't know how you guys do it. I've always been fascinated with death but more from the medical aspect of things. You do an excellent job of explanation without going sensationalism on us. I could deal with a lot of things honestly but the smell would get me. Just the smell.
@pianosistah
@pianosistah 6 жыл бұрын
My dad died in 2013 as well. He was 52 and a mortician!! He started at 16!! I’ve heard about the calls he went on with my uncle (who passed a month ago)when they were younger!! It takes special people to be in this industry and boy did he have it!! Watching videos for familiarity!! Keep up the great work!!!
@TheAuntieBa
@TheAuntieBa 5 жыл бұрын
You do such a good job of depicting both the difficulty and the special grace of being present when a loved one dies. Thank you for sharing your story!
@debbieathy5204
@debbieathy5204 5 жыл бұрын
Wow I couldn’t do that when my dad passed away in the hospital to see him that day in a coma so yellow on tubes cannot even respond to anyone was enough of a shock for me My mom and my older sister was there after they took the tubes out of him. Took like eight hours for him to finally pass away no fuckin way I could do that I totally give you a shit load of credit to stay with your dad after he died right there and when he was turning grey color skin wise
@ronaldkehinde252
@ronaldkehinde252 4 жыл бұрын
May his soul rest in peace
@sisser72
@sisser72 5 жыл бұрын
I L💜VE how you explain these delicate issues. In a calm, soft way.
@michaelesillsbury3488
@michaelesillsbury3488 4 жыл бұрын
I am a loving💜💜 person as you are...You have a very gentle n soft demeanor about yourself that just shines!!!...Your Amazing 😇😉 n that’s why I follow😍😍 you n watch you constantly!!🙏🏼🙏🏼💖💖💖
@derrickbarber9958
@derrickbarber9958 4 жыл бұрын
Lol ok
@belindatangalakis902
@belindatangalakis902 4 жыл бұрын
Yes absolutely agree with you definitely one of the best
@Gansalf64
@Gansalf64 3 жыл бұрын
Might be a good idea to wear ppe just in case....
@scottsherfey1712
@scottsherfey1712 6 жыл бұрын
You are so caring and compassionate.
@crazychannel1478
@crazychannel1478 5 жыл бұрын
Yes she is
@markkelk6776
@markkelk6776 5 жыл бұрын
How on earth can anyone do this job? it's beyond belief that someone can actually have the stomach for it
@tinaneil6339
@tinaneil6339 4 жыл бұрын
It's a good job we have people that do !!!
@tinacampbell1302
@tinacampbell1302 3 жыл бұрын
Some of us do, and it’s our calling. Wouldn’t you want someone to take care of your family to be able to handle it? To treat your family member with respect and love? She is SPOT ON in her description of what it is like. It’s a person. And we love them.
@carmendaniel3734
@carmendaniel3734 3 жыл бұрын
Wouldn't be able to do it. I'm just very thankful that some people have the stomach for it.
@pearlware4388
@pearlware4388 2 жыл бұрын
I'd it that much different fro m being a medical doctor who learned human anatomy by working with cadavers and doing autopsies . I thought delivering babies involved dealing with gross things
@carletta874
@carletta874 2 жыл бұрын
I have to agree with you. I will never understand. You are all pretty amazing. I often wonder about Medical Examiners to. Now that has to be a very just unbelievably gross, sickening job. Can’t believe there are people that do that.
@brandiwestmoreland2415
@brandiwestmoreland2415 6 жыл бұрын
I'm starting school in a month to be a funeral director and mortician and am so excited to be in this field of work. I watch your videos all the time!
@joshuaackland8976
@joshuaackland8976 6 жыл бұрын
My grandmother died early this year,in her apartment and well......I learned that the smell of a dead body is one of the worst smells there is.
@pamk9333
@pamk9333 4 жыл бұрын
Sorry for your loss. Remember her for the good memories.
@msadrianne100
@msadrianne100 4 жыл бұрын
I'm sorry for your loss.
@sandyhill1392
@sandyhill1392 3 жыл бұрын
Just absolutely horrid, right???!!! Ugh..vomit inducing. Um, lady, you can be gagging!!!
@orbs1062
@orbs1062 3 жыл бұрын
This is why daily contact with the elderly is a good idea.
@captainkeyboard1007
@captainkeyboard1007 3 жыл бұрын
I am sorry that your grandmother died, even alone. When a corpse smells terrible, that is a sign of decomposition. The corpse has remained in the place for some time. I pray that Great God will take care of you through this mean time.
@cynthiahawkins2389
@cynthiahawkins2389 6 жыл бұрын
Mother died with dignity at home, in her sleep at 95, here in NYC. One police officer stayed and had coffee with us. He was part of the precinct group dispatched to come to the house after our 911 call. This officer shared a few stories with me, after the funeral directors had removed mom's body. Our mother was fortunate and.... 'died neat'. Throughout her home care by my sis and I (3 yrs or so) she was often bathed, dressed daily in clean clothing, manicured and had her hair done. She was also diapered, due to longtime incontinence, and by the time she passed, had not eaten for several days. We were also lucky that we had 'the conversation' most families dread. And we knew what to do, were able to carry out mother's wishes with no guilt or hesitation, since she had articulated them, early on. Still there is no avoiding the distasteful things that must be dealt with - when a dead human body begins to decay, especially if no one discovers remains of the person who has died, or some trauma happens. Experience helps, and the thought kept clearly in mind: this "smelly thing".. WAS actually once, not long ago - a beloved. Somebody's dad, someone's grandma, child, spouse...and they did not always look that way.
@NYCgirl927
@NYCgirl927 6 жыл бұрын
Cynthia Hawkins my son is NYPD AND has gone on those calls. What precinct did your mom live in. He works in Queens
@barbbunge892
@barbbunge892 6 жыл бұрын
Cynthia Hawkins huu
@linkidd9737
@linkidd9737 5 жыл бұрын
Cynthia Hawkin
@scharf74
@scharf74 5 жыл бұрын
Why did you call 911? Instead of a funeral home?
@johnathanjames6127
@johnathanjames6127 5 жыл бұрын
@@scharf74 That may be procedure. A doctor must certify that a person has died and I believe there are also police papers depending on your jurisdiction. If you feel stressed out dial 9!1 (9-9-9 in the UK). Tell them you believe someone has died in your home.
@jenniferkwapisz4694
@jenniferkwapisz4694 3 жыл бұрын
Kari, thank you. I lost my mom a month and a half ago and I was SO relieved to see the care, respect and dedication you give to decedants under your care. I know it's silly but I took care of mom for 5 years and in back of my mind I always hope she was treated with the same respect I would have given her and your video gave me great comfort. Thank you for being an exemplary mortician and showing how good, qualified professionals handle our loved ones. ❤
@meaganhiller3029
@meaganhiller3029 6 жыл бұрын
I never knew you made a video about this! ❤️ thank you for answering my questions.
@Sealust50
@Sealust50 3 жыл бұрын
I find it amazing, if not disgusting, when somebody says they don't mind the gurgling, snot flow, release of fecal and urine matter, mucus, or ANY other unpleasantry a baby can and DOES supply, BUT they can't tolerate or stomach when a deceased body does the same things when or after it passes away. When are people going to come to grips with the fact that life goes full circle in one's lifetime. You are a baby in the beginning, and you are in a big kind of way a baby when you die. The only difference in the two are that one represents the beginning, and the other represents the end.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@cynthiahawkins2389
@cynthiahawkins2389 6 жыл бұрын
Afterthought: Being a funeral director requires enormous sensitivity and understanding. Putting yourself in the family's place, addressing their concerns. Which, for all the facts and support you receive, can still provoke anxiety..For example, when the police signed off and released mother's body to be taken for cremation, I warmly remember the two men who arrived. They brought the van, parked it outside. They wheeled in a conveyance (the gurney). They were dressed in 'civvies', not medical white suits. And, instead of a 'body bag' they had what looked like a large, fuzzy, green soft blanket. They carefully wrapped mother in it, and the impression I was left with? Just like she was going away for a sleepover. Well, I suppose she WAS..an Eternal one!! :-)) Body bags are enough to terrify anyone - and I realize there are cases of course when they MUST be used. But I remember thinking how kind, and what a gentle gesture that simple thing was. Since mother had died only hours before, and was still diapered her corpse would not 'spill'. All the same, I thanked them later for their amazing degree of caring.
@gypsytreasures3856
@gypsytreasures3856 5 жыл бұрын
Ive also had first hand experience with rude, greedy, insensitive ones too
@Kate-fi8oh
@Kate-fi8oh 4 жыл бұрын
The body bag for my husband one year ago disturbed me very much. You’re lucky to have a good experience.
@maureenlewis4239
@maureenlewis4239 4 жыл бұрын
Gypsy Treasures u
@laranditooks9924
@laranditooks9924 4 жыл бұрын
Why would you want to burn up twice? Lol
@ashley1lovebaby770
@ashley1lovebaby770 4 жыл бұрын
@@gypsytreasures3856 me too. Completely ignored me as if I WAS DECEASED didn't acknowledge me. No eye contact. No verbal response. Blatantly LIED to my face. This was whoever the BUM was that was sent to pick up my DAUGHTER last year. Bad enough I was dealing with the skock and heartbreak of losing a child by myself,I was treated like total trash by the "pick up guy". I have nightmares of how I was treated!!!
@juliepeters6960
@juliepeters6960 6 жыл бұрын
I literally think I would die if I heard a corpse gurgle, sigh or see them suddenly jerk if I were alone in a room working on the deceased. I would be that person gagging and vomiting! I tip my hat to you and all who work in the mortuary field. You are special and amazing people!
@rayray-pd7fe
@rayray-pd7fe 3 жыл бұрын
God bless you. Definitely your loving calling
@captainkeyboard1007
@captainkeyboard1007 3 жыл бұрын
Funeral directors are my kind of people.
@suzymarshall4898
@suzymarshall4898 3 жыл бұрын
Uujbbjjj
@kathydavis2764
@kathydavis2764 Жыл бұрын
Your going to die so get used to the
@donnakawana
@donnakawana 6 жыл бұрын
Just found u.... Ur a doll I love how u explain an get across the truth of the job of death. Thank You for what u do. It's an honorable profession. Thank you
@jameshill2028
@jameshill2028 4 жыл бұрын
I worked for a good friend who owns a funeral home on and off for 20 years and I am still amazed at how much I learn from watching your videos. Thank you for your great work.
@kevinstill1069
@kevinstill1069 6 жыл бұрын
Happy my job is programming computers. Although, I appreciate the fact that I will require the services of a professional like you someday.
@francisjohnson665
@francisjohnson665 4 жыл бұрын
I thought everybody knew this . Maybe my being a nurse is why I know. Death is messy . I think it's the most undignified thing we do in our lives.
@witchofthewildwoods3496
@witchofthewildwoods3496 3 жыл бұрын
As nurses we might overlook that most people don’t know these things. Death can be messy but it doesn’t have to be undignified.
@courtney6126
@courtney6126 3 жыл бұрын
I’m a nurse also. I think the thing that’s most difficult for me is suctioning, and it’s the sound more than anything. I just try to quietly and calmly talk to my pt while I do it so I’m focusing on that and the task rather than the noise sticking out. But yes, death is messy. It absolutely must be kept as dignified as possible for the pt. I treat them as I would want my loved one treated.
@captainkeyboard1007
@captainkeyboard1007 3 жыл бұрын
Not everybody is taught about that fact of life which is what happens after a person dies. Death leaves a stench of a mess in homicide cases and decomposing in a single place.
@captainkeyboard1007
@captainkeyboard1007 3 жыл бұрын
@@courtney6126 May Gracious Great God bless you and your endeavors, for He knows that your mission would be at times difficult to manage, even by yourself.
@courtney6126
@courtney6126 3 жыл бұрын
@@captainkeyboard1007 as you hide behind your “keyboard” and profile w no actual photo or name, I’m well aware of both aspects and have seen both. Please don’t comment on something you have no experience coming from. Thanks and have a great day.
@maitland4u
@maitland4u 5 жыл бұрын
For as long as I can remember, my biggest fear is dying. I only think about it at night time but I can literally cry if I let myself think about it. I feel like I was born just to fear my death sometimes. Yeah it’s a serious issue for me. I am so jealous of those that are welcoming of death. Just being honest.
@loriadams7724
@loriadams7724 4 жыл бұрын
Sarah Maitland I fear it also. I know that I will be with Jesus when I leave this life. But I am terrified of how and when I will die. Sometimes it keeps me awake at night.
@kevinwiltshire4134
@kevinwiltshire4134 4 жыл бұрын
I feel the same way the thought of never seeing anything again final extinction really scares me
@cathyrobinson5959
@cathyrobinson5959 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Kari, I am a RN and mother has always wanted me to be a mortician. I chosed nursing instead. You are so informative. Had you been around 25 years ago I would have taken this path for sure.💕
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@carolwilliams7368
@carolwilliams7368 3 жыл бұрын
I’m a care assistant & seen many elderly people pass away over the 20 years of doing care work & yep I’ve seen all bodily fluids coming out of them, it’s gross at first but you get used to it
@garywaters1672
@garywaters1672 4 жыл бұрын
Is suicide bodies hard to prepare I know as a EMT those scenes are hard to deal with just wondering hopefully the question is ok
@MariaAbrams
@MariaAbrams Жыл бұрын
I have a friend who's worked in a funeral home for years and she said her 1st day was awful. She spent her breaks crying in the bathroom then went home and got raging drunk and never cried again she said. She somehow figured out how to get past that. She said she's come close a couple other times, once was after a school shooting (I can't imagine), but like she said, it's not her loss, she can't get that involved or she can't do her job. I'm so happy there are people like you guys who can do this, I couldn't. I cry too easily and I cry for everyone and the harder I try not to, the worse it gets lol. But I'm relieved to know there's some good people out there to take care of us when we pass. ♥
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician Жыл бұрын
Oh no!
@kayroberts4487
@kayroberts4487 Жыл бұрын
I think it’s sad to think they’d say not her loss..
@bettygreenhansen
@bettygreenhansen 5 жыл бұрын
LOL 😂 baby goo! But seriously thank you for addressing in such detail this difficult yet pertinent question! Just one point of view: If you think working with a dead body is really gross, you might want to choose another profession. As an RN I have had to care for many dying and dead people. If you’re considering a job in the healthcare or death care industry, it pretty much goes with the job that shit will fly, literally. I hope it would help you to know, I’m in a professional state of mind (this is actively acquired over time with experience), and, when faced with specific real-life situations where some body fluid or gas leaks, I don’t actually get too grossed-out, I just deal with it (and react later, in private, if I have to). Honestly, it just isn’t a big deal.
@robertemory3620
@robertemory3620 6 жыл бұрын
I know this is unrelated but i sure think kari is a very pretty woman..and very kind ..what a great catch for someone ..i really like her
@robertemory3620
@robertemory3620 6 жыл бұрын
Kari Northey ...yes he better..enjoy your channel😌
@Nan-59
@Nan-59 6 жыл бұрын
You truly seem so sweet and just down to earth real! I really like your channel and I’m glad I fell into it somehow! These are good things to know and the best thing about it is your channel is not frightening or scary in anyway!!! Death is not scary to me, but sometimes can be presented that way with the ghoulish things! And, I just don’t care for that! Which is what draws me to always watch your videos. They are high class and in such good taste! You are really appreciated! And, yes!!! Let the hubbs know!! We all tend to take spouses for granted every now and then, but it’s good to get that reminder, not to!!❤️😘
@ashleyprovence26
@ashleyprovence26 6 жыл бұрын
Kari is awesome. I'm a new subscriber but have been watching her for a while now. She definitely has the ideal nature and personality to do what she does. She's great and yes very beautiful. I love her hair hehe 😊
@cascaretthatsright9204
@cascaretthatsright9204 5 жыл бұрын
Swing and a miss.. lmao!
@guardiansanimalrescuestate7289
@guardiansanimalrescuestate7289 5 жыл бұрын
U r a jerk. She's married and has a real man I'm sure.
@BlueSkyCountry
@BlueSkyCountry 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your service. I have worked as a commercial/hazmat scene cleaner and I have responded to numerous suicide, crime, and unattended death scenes. People ask me why I smoke filter cigarillos and never inhale the smoke. It is a habit developed from using tobacco to relieve some of the odors of some scenes.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting thank you!
@staceyjones8201
@staceyjones8201 5 жыл бұрын
Stumbled on to your channel. Your incredible to be able to just handle the grossest things ever imagined. You do a great job just explaining the basic and natural way that it all happens. Unlocking the mystery of death.
@deannaharby5677
@deannaharby5677 6 жыл бұрын
You are so respectful, and show that death and what a body can go through is normal --- what kind of protective measures do you take so fluids do not come in contact with your skin ? Can you add protection--besides gloves--in front of family...? And what do you do for the smell ? thanks ahead of time !
@msfranklin2650
@msfranklin2650 Жыл бұрын
I'VE HEARD ALOT ABT THIS BEFORE ESPECIALLY IF A PERSON WAS ON LIFE SUPPORT THEN ONCE EVERYTHING IS REMOVED IT PUTS YOU IN MIND OF HEARD DRAIN PIPES THING SETTLING. I MOST DEFINITELY COULDN'T HAVE A JOB LIKE THIS BUT BLESS YOUR HEART
@BuckRogers2000
@BuckRogers2000 6 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your expression of caring. I think that's probably the most value a funeral director gives to the community. Thanks for making this video!
@philiphaines4478
@philiphaines4478 4 жыл бұрын
thanks for sharing, seriuosly. I was a paramedic 23 yrs of my life so I can relate. thanks for being there.
@Chelcee-NY
@Chelcee-NY 4 жыл бұрын
Great video explaining what happens to the deceased body. No one really tells you these things and when your bereaved not knowing these things can be especially upsetting when you lose a loved one.
@bethmorris3492
@bethmorris3492 3 жыл бұрын
Honestly if one of my family members is in decomp and someone gags I'll forgive them..no hard feelings lol I can only imagine the struggle is real. I'd only get upset if someone was being over the top about something small that they knew was part of their job.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
:)
@emanholmes2591
@emanholmes2591 4 жыл бұрын
When you strap a body on the cot and get on the road then hit a bump you will definitely hear air released.
@lindyjimmy
@lindyjimmy 6 жыл бұрын
I was told once that they plugged openings where fluid could leak out( ?).
@marieswackyfunfamilyalecia6963
@marieswackyfunfamilyalecia6963 6 жыл бұрын
When my father passed, I found him 15 hours after. Rigor had set in & he had expelled bodily fluids. He was a large man, & had diabetes . he had gone hypo & not reached his insulin fast enough, hence falling into a coma and passing from ketoacidosis. I wanted to look after him myself because I knew that would be the last time I would be with him. He was not a pretty sight after the autopsy, let alone when I found him. But I stayed with him & took care of his body. More families should know they are able to care for their loved ones themselves. It really helped my grieving.
@scharf74
@scharf74 6 жыл бұрын
Autopsy?
@lisalane7648
@lisalane7648 5 жыл бұрын
What is hypo? Is there more to that word?. I was wondering if it matches a word my doctor used and I cant remember the rest of the word and I forgot to ask him what the word meant?
@loriadams7724
@loriadams7724 4 жыл бұрын
Lisa Lane hypoglycemic possibly!
@Robert-xp4ii
@Robert-xp4ii 5 жыл бұрын
New to your page but want to tell you I think you're a sweetheart of a person.
@AM-xe4iq
@AM-xe4iq 6 жыл бұрын
This career sounds interesting and rewarding, but I opted out of this path because I just don’t have the stomach for this kind of stuff. I know that it’s normal, but sights and smells would get to me right away. God bless the people who can do this and do it well.
@jowillard2373
@jowillard2373 6 жыл бұрын
Hi another question and thank you. When my mother was buried we kept her rings on the body. I wondered if there is concern grave diggers remove valuables from bodies before they finish the burial?
@jowillard2373
@jowillard2373 6 жыл бұрын
Kari Northey thank you..makes me feel better
@paulaharrisbaca4851
@paulaharrisbaca4851 4 жыл бұрын
Ernest Hemingway wrote about the Spanish Flu of 1918 and I vividly recall his comment that he made in his famous bullfighting book “Death in the Afternoon” “You know how a you know a person with the flu has died? He sh*ts the bed full.” That struck me so hard as a 9 year old, when I read Hemingway, that it tormented me for ever....
@laurenjones8080
@laurenjones8080 6 жыл бұрын
After my aunt passed last spring the funeral home was wonderful they let us know that if we wished we could be as much a part of preparring her for her viewing as we wished, I was only able to go help dress her bc I couldn't handle seeing her before her embalming process just bc I didn't want to remember her that way. It does help the family so much when a funeral home is wonderful.
@alfanumeric397
@alfanumeric397 4 жыл бұрын
Always had to check’em for cigarettes and intell. Man nothing like that stink almost made quit smoking.
@midnitelitecompany
@midnitelitecompany 5 жыл бұрын
I personally would have to find another profession. Thank you to those who do this for a living. Pardon the pun.
@BonzoGal1980
@BonzoGal1980 2 жыл бұрын
I was a CNA and in my first year of nursing school when I helped hospice staff get a decedent ready for family viewing at the center. I had seen death before, but this body moaned and spewed out bile when we turned him. I nearly dropped from fright. The nurse I was helping talked me thru it- reminding me of his disease process and how the lungs still contain air at death. Now I'm the one calming families and CNAs.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 2 жыл бұрын
Very nice!
@amylapratt8964
@amylapratt8964 5 жыл бұрын
They make moaning type noises too. I have heard it and it's def disturbing.
@amylapratt8964
@amylapratt8964 3 жыл бұрын
@Laureen Connor yeah my understanding is it's bits of air that is in the lungs or body coming up and out a d because it passes thru the vocal cords it can sound like moans. Creepy
@sirpablo199
@sirpablo199 6 жыл бұрын
You are a saint. I could never deal with that. My wife is a nurse and she can't deal with flem at home.
@yvonnebarash9373
@yvonnebarash9373 4 жыл бұрын
Paul, I'm a nurse too and I think it may have something to do with dealing with gross stuff the whole work shift while having to suppress your natural response (so as not to hurt your patients' and their families' feelings). So then when you finally get home, the last thing you want to deal with is hearing a gross sound or seeing something gross.
@slsawrc
@slsawrc 4 жыл бұрын
Should be respect for the body. Not just the ones that loved that body. I’m sure it’s what you meant. Some of us have no one.
@robynclark1404
@robynclark1404 4 жыл бұрын
Kari, your videos are done professionally yet so compassionately. I discovered you toward the end of my husband’s life. Many nights when I couldn’t sleep I would watch them to start preparing myself for the inevitable. Thankfully he died peacefully at home, blew me a kiss and was gone. Nothing happened after. That was a blessing as funeral home didn’t get to leave with him for six hours. Immediate cremation. Easy as could be under the circumstances. I felt your videos helped me feel good about our/my decisions.
@carolcoates3750
@carolcoates3750 4 жыл бұрын
I like your style. When it comes to death I'm not sqeamish but if someone , alive, pukes near me, I'm outta there! Subbed!
@attygarland6909
@attygarland6909 6 жыл бұрын
I recently learned from a friend who witnessed a suicide in her home (shotgun blast to head) that apparently coroner's offices will not remove or clean up the residuary remains (e.g. body organs or parts of the body, spilled bodily fluids, etc.) that remain on private property when removing the body itself. This revelation just stunned me. So what's the family to do with "Johnny's" brain tissue pieces, skull fragments, blood stains, etc. scattered all over their living room carpeting and walls after the body itself and all the forensic detectives have left the scene? It's not like they can call in Merry Maids or even ServPro to handle such a task. The answer is: they had to clean it up THEMSELVES, b.i.o.n.. How insane and emotionally difficult to do! I think every county coroner's office should have a Special Services Team that goes in after the body has been removed in such cases to, with dignity and following HazMat protocols, finish the job. Please let your local county commissioners know of this idea and urge them to press the issue to your county coroner's office.
@scrapper900
@scrapper900 6 жыл бұрын
atty garland I can assure that is fact. My cousin committed suicide with a rifle and pretty much decapitated himself. My aunt and uncle got home from church to find him. After his body was removed, they were responsible to either clean it up or have a company do it. My aunt did it. She actually picked up hundreds of pieces of brain matter, etc. She then let a cleaning company come in and tear up carpeting, etc. I seriously still cannot imagine. This was after my oldest cousin died on her prom night in a car accident.
@Gizmologist1
@Gizmologist1 5 жыл бұрын
@@scrapper900 THere are numerous companies that handle ALL the cleanup even to the point of removing and replacing damaged floorboards carpeting etc. They completely disinfect all surfaces that had biological debris or fluids etc so the family does not have to see orsmell anything.
@bigbluegpr
@bigbluegpr 4 жыл бұрын
As has already been stated, there are professional companies that handle this for a fee. Expecting your County to have a special squad is ignorant. Do you want to pay higher taxes to support it? What about rural counties where the need for this is infrequent? Should we just pay taxes to pay the squad members to sit around between infrequent jobs?
@JustMe-gx6ul
@JustMe-gx6ul 4 жыл бұрын
Seriously? Why in the world would you think it is the coroner office's job to do this clean up? Sorry, it's your problem. Why should a county have such a "team" that would rarely be needed and taxpayers on the hook for. Maybe people helllbent on killing themselves should think beforehand and do it outside.
@dianecleary1054
@dianecleary1054 Жыл бұрын
Its also a dangerous bio hazard . Companys with special equipment do this for you . Huge mental health risk to do it your self . Heard of a man blew his brains out in the woods because his grandaughter had exposed him as a peodophile . Glad he choose the woods not the house . Ive listed a cleaning company incase I die at home and am not found until decayed . Big problem now a days .
@heathermauldin4951
@heathermauldin4951 2 жыл бұрын
Hi, Kari. I’m a new fan. I have a question. I have a friend who is a death worker, and they said that decomposing bodies smell similar to decomposing potatoes. It’s a curiosity for me because if I ever do decide to go into death work, it would make part of it easier to mentally process.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting now I have to go let some potatoes rot and see!!
@shannonissweet8009
@shannonissweet8009 6 жыл бұрын
I hate to be "the one" who thought to ask this next type of question, I figured while you just came out with this video answering some of these type of questions it would best best to ask now 😏... If you feel comfortable and it's not too graphic/respectful then I apologize in advance, I just know others are always wondering. What have been some of the "worse, tradgic,gruesome, sad,and or horrible" (all above however one would prevue it) things that you have seen/encountered/dealt with a deceased body etc.? I hope I asked this in the utmost respectful way esp. Towards someone's loved one. Thank you for everything you do. I truly mean that, I sure wish I was close to your area because I would make the arrangements in advance to be sure that you handled not only myself but my own loved ones when that time comes. Such a compassionate caring and professional loving person you are! 🤗
@briannotafan3368
@briannotafan3368 4 жыл бұрын
if a corpse ever made a noise i'd never be the same again
@teresahaw5454
@teresahaw5454 4 жыл бұрын
Brian notafan same here
@nancypetkovic6999
@nancypetkovic6999 2 жыл бұрын
When my husband was in the dying process he had white foam coming out of his nostril profusely..I had called hospice as I was awaken by the death rattle early that morning. The nurse told me to just keep wiping the foam away..which of course I did...I wanted to keep my husband at home...he died of pancreatic cancer that morning. But I was never told what was the cause of all of that white foam...I almost used a whole box of tissue.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 2 жыл бұрын
I am so sorry for those memories for you
@skye1263
@skye1263 3 жыл бұрын
I've been an RN for 31 years. I hope my death is like this- I die of a massive heart attack but around people so I don't die at home alone. Don't want my body leaking and getting rotten gross before someone finds me 🤮. Then I don't want to be in a hospital morgue 🤢 get me to someone like this lady⬆️. Don't embalm me, cremate me right away. If my death could be like that it would be fine. Unfortunately we don't get to choose🤷‍♀️ not that it matters really once we are dead I guess . Even after all these years of seeing deaths its still depressing. I have almost gotten a fear of a lingering death for myself. I would not want everything done to try and keep me alive until the bitter end like I have seen done. When our time is up, it's up. I'm glad we have decent, caring people like her to take care of the deceased.
@Ruffiansea
@Ruffiansea 5 жыл бұрын
I had a downstairs neighbour killed (she was raped and stabbed, nearly decapitated). The first Responders were literally running out the door, vomiting in the bushes. It was horrid.
@johnt.wolfbanger5731
@johnt.wolfbanger5731 6 жыл бұрын
Some Hindus burn the body ASAP after death. They even have indoor space for the gurney the person is on taking their last breaths. Then they take them outside and put em on the logs, cover with flowers, sandalwood, anoint the body and light em up. I think they believe evil spirits will try to inhabit the body, so they dispose of it with the utmost haste.
@johnt.wolfbanger5731
@johnt.wolfbanger5731 6 жыл бұрын
OTOH, my mother-in-law's funeral in Singapore was totally different. It was a Chinese Taoist affair. Kept here in the carport area for three days. The casket (with glass viewing window) was behind a very elaborate shrine with her photo portrait in the front. Lots of incense, paper objects to follow her in the afterlife (burned on the 3rd day). Freaked my kids out a little. Had to keep 24 hour watch for the three days (in laws were exhausted). The whole front of the street was set up with tent shelters and tables to feed guests. On the third day, casket was removed in a fancy hearse. We family members were required to face away from the casket as they carried it to the hearse. We then followed behind the hearse, in our stocking feet, to a large ac'd bus for us and guests. Took us to a huge mortuary complex with crematorium and a ostuary sthe size of an apartment building. Inside the crematory were 6 ovens with a conveyor belt in front. There was a brief ceremony, and off she went. We came back a few hours later after lunch, to get the cremains. Get this. We went into a back room. Her cremains were laid out on a mental tray! You could even see the metal back brace implant she had for several years! Each immediate family member had to take a pair of large tongs and pick up a piece of bones and place it into the ceramic urn. I think I got part of the pelvis. Then we were lead to the ossuary. We were met by a couple of bald Taoist monks who lead the procession (with beating drums and cymbals) to her niche. This place is HUGE!! The urn was carefully rotated and positioned in the prescribed manner. Quite an experience!!
@meeta1960
@meeta1960 5 жыл бұрын
you do not know why they do it,the real reason,but now a days it is not possible in every death,we Hindus believe in soul,and life after dead do not stop,soul can not die,the physical body dies only.and many thing i can explain.i am a Indian American.
@2-strokeracer531
@2-strokeracer531 4 жыл бұрын
@@johnt.wolfbanger5731 Waaaaaay too much work, and way too annoying... Throw me in the Fucking ocean - let the fish figure it out..
@zenobiawilliams7205
@zenobiawilliams7205 4 жыл бұрын
2 - Stroke Racer Do u have a heart? r u not willing 2 know, learn or understand different cultures, religions & beliefs. If u don't have sumthing nice 2 say, rather keep quiet. Please, @least respect other people
@meridien52681
@meridien52681 5 жыл бұрын
I might be okay with the sights, but I believe the smells might well do me in. Morticians are some incredible people all right.
@theresawilliams8528
@theresawilliams8528 6 жыл бұрын
Shew I would crap myself if I heard a sigh or gurggle lol
@janicejohnson7897
@janicejohnson7897 6 жыл бұрын
Kari Northey yikes! 😓....I always assumed the body is in rigormortis?? (I feel like that's not the right spelling). So a corpse is not stiff after some time??
@rhondamyers4292
@rhondamyers4292 6 жыл бұрын
Theresa Williams my mom died at home last month when we went in to say our goodbyes before they took her out her body let out what sounded like a snore it startled me a little i had heard of this happening though
@OneWayDesigns
@OneWayDesigns 6 жыл бұрын
And this is the only thing that gets me about going into the mortuary business (besides the embalming😱😱😱).
@OneWayDesigns
@OneWayDesigns 6 жыл бұрын
Kari Northey now see I wouldn't be no body's kinda good. I may just hit the floor myself. I can't deal!!!
@scrapper900
@scrapper900 6 жыл бұрын
Kari Northey When my dad died, they let us stay in the room with him (he died at the hospital). Of course, we were not rushing to leave. I laid with him, we took pictures of his hands and we were hysterical to put it mildly. After an hour, the hospital was trying to rush us. I thought it was because they wanted the room for someone else which, at the time, infuriated me. However, one nurse I got very close to, after spending 30 days and nights in the hospital with my dad, told me it’s because the body starts to “change” after an hour or so and it was “best” if we let them take him.
@garyallen8680
@garyallen8680 2 жыл бұрын
Kari friend used to and may still remove deceased and theyre not always recently deceased but can be weeks or months old. I asked him about it and he's replied "as soon as you get home strip and wash it, and you won't get the smell out if your clothes" Hot weather doesn't help things either as 1 might imagine. Called out to a job 1 afternoon . (Car accident) was someone her knew so they sent someone else.
@brandonroberts9827
@brandonroberts9827 6 жыл бұрын
If you have a gag reflex stay the hell out of the industry.I do bio hazard clean up and grama clean up and I found out fast the smell of decomp.I had to shave my beard off cuz the decomp was so strong it saturated my beard.
@ostaraeb4293
@ostaraeb4293 6 жыл бұрын
I hear you. It's a smell like none other and once you smell it, you never forget it!
@sweetandsour93
@sweetandsour93 6 жыл бұрын
Kari Northey I used to think being a CSI would be cool until I realized how sensitive I am to smells 😬 I'll stick to living people or embalmed cadavers lol Also, I've heard of a corpse flower which supposedly smella like something rotting but I'm not sure how accurate that smell is 🤔
@sugarjayne3348
@sugarjayne3348 6 жыл бұрын
Brandon Roberts I have never smelled it thank god,but I have heard that once you smell the odor of decomp, you will never,ever forget it
@SGRmoss
@SGRmoss 5 жыл бұрын
And with that, I'm out. I desperately wanted to get into this industry so I could truly care for those who have passed on and to care for their living family and friends during such a difficult time. However, I could absolutely not handle this kind of stuff. It pisses me off and makes me furious with myself for being "weak", but I now know I could not do it. Heartbreaking. 💔
@geedubb2005
@geedubb2005 5 жыл бұрын
Ostaraeb4, burn victims are the worst.
@deenawhiting9961
@deenawhiting9961 6 жыл бұрын
My father's sister had married a funeral director so she took my father under her wing and they tried to groom him into the business. When my mother met my father he told her he couldn't handle it because the bodies would sit up sometimes. Mind you this was back in the 1950's but as you explained that can't happen. Thank you
@juliannereineman568
@juliannereineman568 4 жыл бұрын
I love you and your videos so much. Wish I could talk to you because I would love to get into this career in a few years when my kids to to college. I'm a hair stylist now but this is my dream. Or so I think. I'm not sure how i will handle it in person but I am willing to try. I just appreciate all you do and your videos so much . 💗💗
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you :)
@biggyou8951
@biggyou8951 3 жыл бұрын
Glad someone told the truth about things we don’t understand.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
Always truthful!
@Pwg1985
@Pwg1985 3 жыл бұрын
I use to work at a funeral home. Ive had to move a person that's been dead for 11 years. Its not a great smell. Ive had to bring bodys to the freezer. Ect. You gotta have a strong stomach in that line of work.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
thank you
@donnakearse2503
@donnakearse2503 3 жыл бұрын
I hope no matter how long you have been in your business you still treat bodies with dignity when no one is watching. I have seen a funeral person pick up a body and stuff Clorox wipes up someone’s nose and stuff their mouth with them as well. To me that is disgusting and everyone should know about their post mortem practice and be shut down. That person still was loved by a family!
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
During Covid many new practices were happening to protect the living.
@armedanddangerous7588
@armedanddangerous7588 6 жыл бұрын
I don't mean any disrespect or if your married any disrespect to your husband but wow you could be my mortician anyday. I have a lot of experience with death I served in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. None of the death there was pretty some sick stories.
@armedanddangerous7588
@armedanddangerous7588 6 жыл бұрын
Kari Northey I appreciate that thank you.
@BostonSteve922
@BostonSteve922 6 жыл бұрын
In the movie Backdraft in the morgue scene of an investigation of a death by fire when the deceased is rolled back into a flat position there is a gurgling sound made. NOTE for those who are squeamish the body shown is badly burned. When I first had seen the movie I thought it was someone off camera goofing around I had no idea that sound(s) actually can happen
@rebekahbridges-tervydis5054
@rebekahbridges-tervydis5054 6 жыл бұрын
Love your attitude. I would get so tired of getting this question! "What's the grossest thing you've seen?"
@elijah-jamesmac2039
@elijah-jamesmac2039 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for explaining the... less fun parts of this process in such a respectful manner while still going into detail! Tonight is my first night on call at the local funeral home, and I definitely feel a little more prepared!
@vickiebyrd1731
@vickiebyrd1731 6 жыл бұрын
Hi Kari ☺ Since I was a small child I've always had a fear of dead people, funeral homes, and cemeteries. I've never had a bad experience with any. I'm not sure if the fear comes from being a big fan of horror movies. The Night of the Living Dead being one of my favorites. Lol. These types of movies don't scare me. I just love the adrenaline rush. I love roller coasters also. The fear of cemeteries has really lessened as an adult. But funeral homes and dead people still terrify me. Ugh! My grandmother used to tell me, "the dead people you don't need to worry about, it's the live ones that will hurt you." So, I just wanted to tell you that all of your videos about the funeral home procedures from beginning to end as well as cremation are educating me. And I'm praying they will lessen my fears. 🤔 Also, I don't have a fear of dying. As a Christian I know I don't need to fear this. So, thank you Kari for your time, patience, and education. I truly appreciate what you do. You have been a blessing to me.👌🏻😊
@JohnDoeRando
@JohnDoeRando 6 жыл бұрын
Vickie Byrd right there with ya. Keep getting educated, eventually the fear will subside.
@scharf74
@scharf74 5 жыл бұрын
Hi Kari, If decomposition has occurred to a degree, is embalming still done? I mean, can embalming fix this?
@brittanymorton831
@brittanymorton831 5 жыл бұрын
question... what do u do if a body is already in the decomposition stage or was in a bad accident and there face is messed up but family still wants an oen casket funeral can/do u say no?
@ameliareaganwright2758
@ameliareaganwright2758 5 жыл бұрын
ALWAYS WEAR GLOVES!
@dedriapettus9637
@dedriapettus9637 5 жыл бұрын
I'm an organ donor, I sure hope they make sure I'm really dead before they start cutting everything out! 😬
@dedriapettus9637
@dedriapettus9637 4 жыл бұрын
Bighorn44 None 🤣🤣🤣
@chrisnorrid4349
@chrisnorrid4349 4 жыл бұрын
Before organs are procured or removed, tests have to be run to insure a person is indeed dead. An EEG has to be run one or more times to insure somebody is indeed brain dead, not viable or going to live. With that said, certain things must be done to insure the organs remain alive and functioning. The heart is kept alive through the use of medications and artificial ventilation. That is to say blood must still go through the tissues to keep suppling them with oxygen and thereby prevent cell death.
@Decgyrrl
@Decgyrrl 3 жыл бұрын
My mother left me suddenly on a Sunday night. She had a massive heart attack. Ironically, she had just seen her doctor. Friday night, she seemed fine. Saturday evening was when she became sick. She said her stomach was hurting her, and she was going to bed. When Sunday morning came , she was still abed. I knew she didn't feel well, but I never thought heart attack. Long story short, tho it was 30 yrs ago it still hurts. I was 31, when she died. I'm 62 now. By 6pm Feb. 20. 1991, she transitioned. And she died 9yrs & 2days after my dad, who transitioned 2/8/82. He had long cancer. It wasn't the cancer that killed him. It was a blood clot. He was 66.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing about your loved ones.
@stevenordstedt2535
@stevenordstedt2535 3 жыл бұрын
Can you video some sounds coming from a corpse?
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
No
@sharonadams4424
@sharonadams4424 3 жыл бұрын
I was waiting for you to say it ( not in a good way ) but my mind went right to snot because I'm always come congested always blowing my nose from allergies and many sinus issues.....
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah its ucky
@attygarland6909
@attygarland6909 6 жыл бұрын
Amazed no mention of farting. This comes from the bowel contents decomposing before the embalming process has been completed.
@calibling
@calibling 4 жыл бұрын
atty garland I think she did, but she used the term about air expelling and didn’t use the actual word of fart ❤️
@parentsbasement7734
@parentsbasement7734 5 жыл бұрын
Crazy morgue story. My friends dad is a medical pathologist deals with blood born stuff anyway when he was in med school he worked at a funeral home picking up deceased from their homes hospitals wherever and would strip and tag them to have thwm ready for next step. He had a new kid from his class start one night and on their second pickup of the night they brought the man in transferd the fella to a prep bed and dave told the new guy to strip him down fold up whatever clothing and any jewellery and he would be right back. The new kid started with the guys shirt and moved his way down dave said just as he walked back into the room the kid pulled on the guus shoe and the man sat almost straight up and exhaled some air that was in his lungs with a kinda scary hoooooohhhh! Sound which he said was common but forgot to warn the kid. The new guy screamed passed out dave ran over to help wake him up evidently he had shit his pants while all this happened to him he came to didn't say a word ran out the side door and dave never saw him again. He even dropped med school it had scared him so bad. Dave said it a v strange thing to watch or hear a bidy you know is dead and the bidy will twitch move moan and groan. The people that choose to deal with the final processes of life are a special and important people.
@TinaVanderwerf-xd7hj
@TinaVanderwerf-xd7hj Жыл бұрын
Somebody has to do those awful jobs, I think you need to have a strong stomach, to handle all those smells, noises fluids etc. I wonder how or why a person chooses to be interested in a job like that!. Dead people don't bite, but I would be so scared to be alone in a room with a dead person!. My hat off for the great job they do, and take care of the people with dignity and respect!.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician Жыл бұрын
Many jobs for many skill sets I always say
@rev.jesseabelchristianlife6693
@rev.jesseabelchristianlife6693 6 жыл бұрын
A very strong and compassionate Christian Woman. 🕇✔💯
@dmquinta1140
@dmquinta1140 5 жыл бұрын
Your phrasing is always so thoughtful. It’s very professional and caring!
@GuyjKite
@GuyjKite Жыл бұрын
Makes me wonder. Some folks are blessed to live 95 years and some only 95 minutes. I believe in God. My condolences to the people who lost loved ones in this post. My father died young ad well with heart disease. He was 50.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician Жыл бұрын
thank you
@jrogervaughan
@jrogervaughan 2 жыл бұрын
When we arrived at the family residence, we would ask if any member wished to pay respects BEFORE we took any action. We would then request family to pop into other room so we could do the necessary. This allowed us to temporary pack mouth/ nose etc & place deceased on plastic to avoid leakage on floor. Then wrap deceased in a sheet to contain any leakage etc. This ensured families were not embarrassed or upset through liquids or worse. Must add that they were very appreciative of our actions. 🇬🇧…..
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 2 жыл бұрын
thank you for sharing
@rebekahbridges-tervydis5054
@rebekahbridges-tervydis5054 6 жыл бұрын
We have heard the stories of several people waking up in the morgue. Which leads me to believe, the only fool proof way to make sure you're dead is embalming? Or are there other ways, too?
@gordonwalker2344
@gordonwalker2344 5 жыл бұрын
I'd love to be a mortician or embalmer, I have worked as a first call removal service and for the Coroner office for removal of many types of deaths from natural to car accidents and homicides and suicides, not pretty at times, you are right decomposing are the worst especially when I worked in the DESERT alot...a week in 100 plus degrees before found... I don't need to tell you,
@lisap3344
@lisap3344 4 жыл бұрын
Have you ever had a person wake up, that was not truly dead? Narcolepsy ? Drug induced and mistakenly claimed to be dead ? My uncle was pronounced dead 2 times and was not. Thank God he wasnt embalmed alive, this story my dad told me really freaked me out about him.
@davendawg
@davendawg 6 жыл бұрын
I have alot of respect for people that work in the business of death bc I could never do it. I would freak out over snot alone!
@rominiyi1385
@rominiyi1385 Жыл бұрын
Very very professional. I know I couldn't do this. It would kill me ... . You are so brave and I'm a guy!
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician Жыл бұрын
thank you
@Greeley.d
@Greeley.d Жыл бұрын
After seeing old neglected cemeteries, I’m going to be cremated and my ashes will be placed on my wife’s grave. She’s been gone for 17 years.
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician Жыл бұрын
Great to have a plan!
@jamesmusisca7547
@jamesmusisca7547 3 жыл бұрын
i glad this stuff don't gross you out it grosses me out and babies gross me out too
@KaritheMortician
@KaritheMortician 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting
@Sealust50
@Sealust50 3 жыл бұрын
Me too, brother. The babies just may be worse.
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