Caleb Wilde

Caleb Wilde

(218 comments, 980 posts)

I'm a sixth generation funeral director. I have a grad degree in Missional Theology and a Certification in Thanatology.

And I like to read and write.

Connect with my writing and book plans by "liking" me on facebook. And keep tabs with my blog via subscription or twitter.

Posts by Caleb Wilde

Death Facts: Part 67

35Pacemaker

03People2

07Ice-Cream-Truck2

08HitMan2

10Golf-Club2

1598-Ghana-1997-Riots

1608-The-Avengers

1606-Benjamin-Guggenheim

1632-Frances-Oldham-Kelsey

1644-Nuclear-Launch-Codes

1654-Clipperton-Island

1700-Margraten-Cemetary

1698-Axeman-Jazz-Music

Death Facts: Part 66

1708-Forward-Pass

1713-Robert-Charles-GLEASON

1720-Cats

1726-Inmates-save-Officer

1727-Russian-Vodka-Habits

1728-Ulysses-S.-Grant

1733-Rajasthani-Gypsy

1744-Oklahoma-School-Drama

1746-Dorangel-Vargas

1756-Eugene-Lazowski

1765-Honey-Bee

1772-Empire-State-Building-Suicide

1779-Daryl-Davis

The Skeleton that Imitates Every Girl On Instagram

This Instagram account makes fun of all the things girls (and some boys) post on Instagram … and it mocks with the use of a skeleton named “Skellie”.

One.  download (12) Two.  download (11) Three.  download (10) Four. download (9) Five.download (8) Six.  download (7) Seven. download (6) Eight.  download (5) Nine. download (4) Ten.download (3)Eleven.
download (2) Twelve.download (1) Thirteen.

downloadIf you want to follow Skellie and her mockugram, click HERE.

Cremation of a Human Body

download

This YouTube video is a supercut from the documentary called, “A Certain Kind of Death”, which documents what happens to people who die with no next of kin.

Alabama Teen with Walking Corpse Syndrome

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“Walking Corpse Syndrome” or Cotard’s syndrome, is an extremely rare psychological condition where the victim believes he or she is actually dead.  Although Cotard’s syndrome isn’t fully understood, it’s often linked to bipolar disorder, depression or schizophrenia.

Here’s a case from 2012;

In 2012, Japanese doctors described a 69-year-old patient who declared to one of the doctors, “I guess I am dead. I’d like to ask for your opinion.” When the doctor asked him whether a dead man could speak, the patient recognized that his condition defied logic, but could not shake his conviction that he was deceased. After a year, his delusion passed, but he insisted on the truth of what happened during it. “Now I am alive. But I was once dead at that time,” he said. He also believed that Kim Jong-il was also a patient at the same hospital.  Via Mental Floss

There’s a new case in Alabama, a case which the teen believes was brought about by her parent’s divorce.

She says about the divorce, “I didn’t cope with it well.  Then one day when I was sitting in English class I had this really weird sensation that I was dead and I couldn’t shake it.”

She started to miss school, sleeping all day and staying away all night.

“I’d fantasize about having picnics in graveyards and I’d spend a lot of time watching horror films because seeing the zombies made me feel relaxed, like I was with family,” she said.

According to the Daily Mirror, she confided in one of her friends.

“I thought he’d think I was a freak but he just nodded and listened,” she said. “It gave me the confidence to tell my dad.”

Her father urged her to see a psychiatrist, who helped her on the road to recovery.

And this part of her story kind of reads like something from the Onion: she says that watching Disney films gave her a “warm, fuzzy feeling” and make her realize she isn’t dead.

“’The Little Mermaid,’ ‘Aladdin,’ ‘Sleeping Beauty,’ ‘Bambi’ — I watched them all,” Smith said. “Being a corpse was the most bizarre experience, but I’m so glad I managed to get out alive.”

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