this post was submitted on 30 Nov 2025
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People are so toxic that they want to be toxic after they die too.
I just want to be dumped off at the landfill or ground up and used for fertilizer after giving up any useful organs.
It’s surprisingly difficult to get that treatment.
Just compost me. Throw my body into the green cart. Why do I need to spend so much money?
Holy bourgeoise, batman! Just befriend a rancher. We are all compost in training, it's not that hard
e: fr tho, nothing illegal about just getting dropped in a hole as-is on private property most places
That’s not true for good reason- people who don’t know what they’re doing could contaminate groundwater/runoff very easily.
It shouldn’t be as expensive as it is, and I’d support dropping unembalmed corpses without certain diseases (an asymptomatic or undiagnosed prion disease could be incredibly dangerous) in a hole, as long as they are adequately buried. That would require an autopsy and either significant refrigeration costs or a rushed job without embalming though.
You seem to have linked to the entire wikipedia article on body disposal, possibly without reading it. Here's a map, some info from a funeral home, and legal advice state by state. Sorry if this is too US-centric, that's where I've been through the process five times.
This is the relevant section from the wiki:
From your link:
I’d be interested in how widespread the legality is practically, because (reasonably) everything I looked at said to check local laws, but I can understand why that’s not included exhaustively. My family tried to in a rural area of a non rural state where the sources say it’s allowed, but the setbacks made it practically impossible- watershed areas are larger than you would expect, even without visible bodies of water nearby.
Well, my original suggestion was to befriend a rancher... not an expert and can't speak as to exactly how widespread it is (or even if this was legal I guess), but anecdotally all it took was asking around a little. Nice spot on a hill, few people/critters already buried there, felt right, cost nothing. Two generations in and I'd like to be a third. If that's not widely accessible I wish it were, from this end I've never heard of a $7k human composting service and it sounds way crazier to me than just getting buried in a pasture