Caring for You… A Caregiver’s Dinner
Tukios Websites • July 5, 2008
Tuesday, March 20th, we invite you to attend!
If you or someone you know has been caring for a friend or loved one, please join us for a couple hours with no program, just warm food, a relaxed mood and time away for yourself.
An evening is being planned for caregivers to gather, to relax, and to rejuvenate in a local community setting while enjoying the comfort foods from JL Richards Catering. A complimentary buffet meal will be served while you enjoy the company of other caregivers who share your role.
Hosted by: Cress Funeral & Cremation Service
Limited Space for 24 guests
Call 608-873-9244 to reserve your place at the table.


Yesterday, Jane was on duty as a tour guide at a lovely little pre-revolutionary war church in rural Virginia. It was late in the afternoon when a youngish woman wearing shorts and a Cubs ball hat stepped into the visitor’s center looking lost. Thinking that she might need directions, Jane quietly approached to offer her assistance. The seemingly lost young lady said she just wanted to go in the church.

When death is near or has just occurred, there are so many things to do and yet there is nothing you can do. You feel helpless. You can’t make the person well or bring them back. But you know you will, very soon, need to make many decisions about the service, the final resting place, the music, food, flowers, donations, clothing and much more. Your mind is racing and oddly enough, at the same time, at a complete standstill. On one hand it feels like it is too soon to do anything. You’re just not ready. But at the same time, you feel the weight of all that is coming.

According to a National Funeral Directors Association survey, more than half (62.5%) of us expect to participate in making our own funeral arrangements. And yet, less than a quarter of us have actually acted on that impulse. Not really so surprising since making funeral arrangements can literally be the very last thing we do. We can put it off right up to the end!

Are you considering going to a funeral? Will you be a guest or, are you the survivor in charge and deciding if there will even be a funeral? Either way, before you just skip the funeral perhaps you should consider how elephants behave when one of their species dies. Perhaps we have something to learn from Dumbo.