6 Bizarre Things To Do With Your Body After Death

With Earth running out of burial grounds, it’s a great idea to have your lifeless body disposed of in some other way. Here are 6 things that you can do with your body even when you’ve departed plane of the living.

6 Ways To Dispose Your Body After Death

Glass Art

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Artful Ashes, a Seattle-based firm, have incepted an innovative way to keep you stay close to your loved ones, at least materially, after your death. Artists at Artful Ashes are more than capable of converting some of your ashes into custom-made mementos that your loved one can have. Orbs and pendants created in this way have attractive swirling shapes and are primarily made from glass.

Jhator

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Translating to giving alms to the birds, Jhator is a form of the last rite practiced by some people in Mongolia and Tibet. Also known as ‘Sky Burial,’ the corpse is left out in the open for birds to feast upon. To facilitate the process, for the birds, your lifeless body is first taken to pieces first.

Making Diamonds

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Diamonds can be created artificially. Yes, it’s possible to craft the hardest material found on Earth in laboratories. Illinois-based business LifeGem is obsessed with crafting beautiful diamonds from your cremains. The process makes use of your cremains or a lock of hair to forge diamonds. The resulted diamonds are molecularly indistinguishable from naturally-occurring ones and have all the good looks.

Marine Reef


Florida-based Eternal Reefs is a business specializing in converting your corpse into an environmental-friendly artificial reef formation. The size of the formation can vary anything ranging from 2 to 5 feet and is followed by a memorial service. If interested, your family and loved ones can also join in the process of marine reef transformation. During the memorial service, the reef is placed in a preselected underwater location for all eternity.

Plastination

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Developed in 1978 by Dr. Gunther von Hagens, Plastination involves stuffing a dead body with plastic such that it transforms into one plastic corpse that can be used as a learning tool for medical students. The process makes use of 5 sub-processes, namely fixation, dehydration, forced impregnation, posing, and hardening.

Promession


Devised by the Swedish company Promessa and baptized as Promession, the after-death body disposing process converts your lifeless corpse into effective compost. During the process, your lifeless body is soaked completely into liquid nitrogen and bringing to a freeze. Afterward, the corpse is knocked down to pieces, dried and finally, buried. The end result of the complete cryogenic process is the materialization of a super fertilizer.

Summary

So, these are some things that you can do with your body after you meet your demise. Which one will you prefer?

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