Why does leaving a funeral home feel like walking out of a liquor store? What do dead bodies feel like? What do you do when you find yourself bawling at a roller rink on a blind date? What do you do when you have to scratch your dying father's balls because he's hallucinating and lost feeling in his hands?
With a new guest every other week, Brice Klein (haver of dead parents) tries to demystify death just a little more. Ideally in a way that makes you laugh and not just feel super depressed.
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Why does leaving a funeral home feel like walking out of a liquor store? What do dead bodies feel like? What do you do when you find yourself bawling at a roller rink on a blind date? What do you do when you have to scratch your dying father's balls because he's hallucinating and lost feeling in his hands?
With a new guest every other week, Brice Klein (haver of dead parents) tries to demystify death just a little more. Ideally in a way that makes you laugh and not just feel super depressed.
Heather was 23 and living in London when her dad suddenly died in New York. Two days later she was home in America for his funeral.
In this episode we talk with Heather about:
how at 10PM in London she learned her dad died by intimidating a hospital across the ocean in America,
her family's group funeral plots,
what dead bodies feel like,
and what she misses most about her dad.
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Plastic Urns
Why does leaving a funeral home feel like walking out of a liquor store? What do dead bodies feel like? What do you do when you find yourself bawling at a roller rink on a blind date? What do you do when you have to scratch your dying father's balls because he's hallucinating and lost feeling in his hands?
With a new guest every other week, Brice Klein (haver of dead parents) tries to demystify death just a little more. Ideally in a way that makes you laugh and not just feel super depressed.