The Politics of Death in a Digital Age

I didn’t know Bub personally. I’d never spoken to him. I didn’t know his last name or where he lived or if he had a family. All I knew of this scruffy-bearded man in the Hoss Cartwright Stetson was the way his eyes crinkled when he smiled and tipped his brim when you drove by. The way he held the measuring rod in his hand, leaning on it like the staff of Moses, as he stood by the open manhole cover. Bub’s work brought him into the eyes of countless drivers over the years as we passed by the crew he worked with.

I was scrolling through Facebook yesterday and there was his picture in a post with the caption, “So Long, Santa Bub.” He’d been such a fixture of my forty years in the Glenwood Springs area, I guess I expected him to just always be there. Like the Hot Springs Pool and Doc Holiday’s Grave. Enduring and iconic. And now, he was gone like so many others we have lost in the last couple of years.

I think death is striking so much closer to home since the pandemic started two years ago. Even if it doesn’t hit our inner circle, it’s omnipresence has been overwhelming. We’ve kind of gotten numb to the weekly announcements, either on the national or local news or on our social media newsfeeds. Along with becoming numb, some have become somewhat complacent in the social mores surrounding acceptable ways of announcing someone’s death.

When we lost one of my dearest friends and fellow classmates last month, a well meaning person posted on our class page the “RIP, dear friend” post we have all become accustomed to seeing of late. I took issue with this because, I knew for a fact it hadn’t been more than a handful of hours since our friend was discovered unresponsive in her home and her only grandchild had not been informed. Since I am one of the administrators of our class page, I removed the post at once and made a post of my own. “Out of deference to the family, we aren’t talking about this till we are sure everyone is informed and the family has announced the loss themselves.”

When I lost Mr. Virgo, I can’t remember how long it took me to gather enough strength to write a post on FB telling our friends and more distant family that he was gone. I know it was at least one day…and it might have been two. I was in shock. I will tell you this, though…if I opened Facebook to make that horribly painful announcement and saw where one of his friends from high school had beat me to the punch, I would have been devastated. It isn’t anyone’s place but the family’s or their personal representative to make such a sensitive initial announcement.

I had every intention of going on the class page after a reasonable amount of time had passed after our friend died in December to write some guidelines on how and when to share with the group that we had lost another classmate. You know how time gets away from you after the holidays and especially after losing someone so close to you. I didn’t get around to writing it. Then we lost another classmate. And, just as had happened before, someone posted an announcement before the family could do so.

I removed the post and sent a private message to the person posting, explaining why. It’s stirred up some conversation, and as you may imagine, some controversy. I want to give people the benefit of the doubt. I don’t want to think that some folks just want to show everyone they are “in the know” by being the first to share news. I prefer to think they just aren’t aware of protocols or have become desensitized by the constant barrage of death we’ve been subjected to during the pandemic. 

We are “of a certain age”, my classmates and I. And, dare I say, many of you are as well. We must never be in a rush to share the news on social media of someone’s passing. Instead, we must always be respectful of the family’s privacy and be sensitive to their needs. No one…NO ONE wants to find out for the first time on social media that someone they love has died. There was a time when we didn’t really have to tell people this. Those who needed to know were called personally. Then, the circle went ever wider as the news spread to others further out from the inner circle. Only then did we read an obituary in the local newspaper. Now, we have this tool that can instantly spread news like wildfire and we have to remember….think twice. Do a little searching to see if the family has said anything on their social media pages. Check the online newspapers, the local news station, and the local mortuaries to see if there has been a formal announcement. If, after 36-48 hours have passed, you might share the news in private groups like our class page. But, please…don’t be that person who rushes to “be the first” to share such a sensitive and personal event as the death of your high school chum.

❄️?❄️

““Do to others whatever you would like them to do to you. This is the essence of all that is taught in the law and the prophets.”

Matthew 7:12 NLT

8 thoughts on “The Politics of Death in a Digital Age

  1. I never really shared until days after about my husband’s recent death. My kids did mostly posting pictures of their dad and family
    I had a good friend whose daughter in law posted about my friend’s father passing before my friend could contact her out of state sister due to phone problems. Can you imagine seeing that your father passed on Facebook?
    I never say anything on social media until I see the family had acknowledged a death and then I don’t share the obituary, for some reason I can’t do that.
    Thanks for the reminder

  2. When my husband passed last September it was several days before I posted anything on fb. We wanted to let close friends and family know with at least a phone call first.
    I have dear friends who lost their grown son in a accident. It was posted on fb by some of his friends before his family could call everyone. A terrible way for someone to find out.

  3. Well, I guess I’m guilty as charged but I receive notices from our local funeral home when they post new deaths. I have friends out of state that know some of these people & they’re always grateful to know about these deaths. I feel like if the funeral home has posted it on their website it should be safe to share it. I’m sure there’s always gonna be a chance that a distant relative might not have been notified. If that’s the case my thinking is that they were not that close to their family or someone would have notified them.

    1. I think it’s safe to share once the funeral home has posted or there is an obituary either online or in the newspaper. I think a good rule of thumb is to wait 36-48 hours after the death to share on social media. That still give people enough time to plan to attend the viewing and/or funeral while still protecting the family’s privacy. ?

  4. My niece found out on FB that her beloved grandma had died when my nephew posted it immediately after he heard (one sister had two kids to call, the other had 6) ? We hadn’t even thought of asking them not to post. When my dad died, we were ready with that “please do not post”, even for family, right away.

    1. That’s exactly what I’m talking about. I learned on the playground in grade school that my brother had been in a serious car accident. She had heard it when she was home for lunch. My parents hadn’t even come to school to get me yet. There are some stories that aren’t ours to tell till the right people know. We’ve lost some of these social norms in the digital age. ❤️‍?

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