THIS IS US

The Stunning Ordinariness of Death

I went to a funeral, and I couldn’t stop focusing on the mundane

Adeline Dimond
Human Parts
Published in
8 min readFeb 28, 2023

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People at the Fulton Street Subway Station in New York
Photo by Martin Adams on Unsplash

My cousin Sam died on Thursday. On Sunday I flew to Virginia to attend his funeral, because Jews waste no time getting people into the ground. Someone asked me why we do it that way, and I had no idea.

I thought that flying to a funeral would somehow make the airport different but it was the same. I was annoyed at the ticketing kiosks that replaced humans. I was convinced that I’m guilty of something at the TSA checkpoint. I was thrilled to buy gossip magazines for $40 at the newsstand, relieved when I got to the gate, and convinced I was going to die on takeoff and landing.

A young, joyful kid with bleached blonde hair and many earrings was at the hotel check-in desk. He did not look like someone who would enjoy wearing a name tag, but he smiled the whole time while I awkwardly explained to him that I didn’t want to Uber to the funeral, I wanted a taxi. I liked this moment. Unlike all the other moments of the trip so far, it fit into the little movie in my head about how a funeral should go: There should be a scene when a perfect stranger looks at you with kindness, even if he’s paid to be kind.

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