Clip description
Workers in the funeral industry describe their reactions the first time they saw a dead body.
Original classification rating: PG. This clip chosen to be PG
Workers in the funeral industry describe their reactions the first time they saw a dead body.
This clip shows people who work in the funeral industry talking about the first time they saw a dead body in the course of their work. The speakers mainly come from the funeral industry, but also include two pathologists and a police officer. All the speakers, who are interviewed in their respective workplaces, talk in a matter-of-fact manner about their experiences. Their reactions range from the funeral director who feared that she would be haunted by the first dead person she saw, to the police officer who found that the first post-mortem examination he attended was not as bad as he had expected.
This clip starts approximately 4 minutes into the documentary.
The clip shows a series of interviews with people working in the funeral industry. Two men are interviewed in hospital uniforms, their faceshields are up. They are in a hospital corridor with lockers behind them.
Man 1 The first time at – well, it was my father. But the first one in the industry was, we went for an interbranch removal and my mate opened up the fridge and there was a body, lying down, eyes open, mouth open – it wasn’t a pretty sight. But you always remember your first one.
Two women are interviewed in casual attire in an unoccupied mortuary.
Woman 1 What did I – my first time, I was 19 and it was a nun. ‘Cause we did a lot of nuns’ funerals where I first worked at, because we had a high affiliation with the Convent Church in Parramatta. So we did a lot of their funerals, and she was the first one I saw, and she just looked exactly the same as if I’d see her walking down the street.
Two women are interviewed in a pink and lace decorated living room.
Woman 2 I was very nervous. I was the sort of person that schoolfriends would read old epitaphs in a cemetery and I would wait on the roadside. I didn’t even want to do that. So when it came to actually seeing a body, I was very nervous and the first actual removal I did was more or less thrust on me through my circumstance in a nursing home, and I sort of agreed to go on the condition that the elderly lady would be completely covered up by a sheet and I wouldn’t be able to see her and therefore she wouldn’t come and haunt my dreams that night.
Man is interviewed in a dark room with candles and a cross, the curtains are drawn behind him.
Man 2 They took me into this room which had a terrible – terrible stench coming from, and on this particular table, there was a form of some description laying on there and I asked him what it was, and he said, 'That was human remains’. With that, he turned around and said, 'Well, you haven’t turned green’, he said, 'You can start tomorrow.’
Back to first two men in corridor.
Man 3 The first dead body I saw was that of a very small baby. It was from the hospital where I went to. Obviously I didn’t have much experience, so I was encouraged to visit another nearby hospital that we were affiliated with to watch an autopsy. Uh…to this day, I can remember the person’s name, I can remember the date. I just didn’t believe that the person was dead.
Women in pink and lace living room.
Woman 3 I just didn’t sleep all night. I was terrified. I was over 40 and I’d never seen a deceased person. But when we went to the hospital the next morning, and the mortuary attendant put the body out for us to take on to the stretcher, and I thought 'Whatever was I frightened of? The poor lady’s only looking as if she’s asleep’.
Police officer in shirt and tie is interviewed in a science classroom.
Police officer In the police force, of course, we all have to see dead bodies. We all have to see things that, uh, we’ve had no experience of. Here the coroner’s sergeant said to me one day – I’d been here a couple of days – 'Right, Cooling, you’re going to the mortuary and you’re going to see a post-mortem’. Cooling had to see a post-mortem, and I did. And I walked away from it afterwards thinking 'Gee, I’ve seen it, and it’s not as bad as I thought it was going to be’.
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