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Mom is the last one alive having survived both parents, a brother, a daughter and two husbands. I am the remaining child, she has a couple grand and greatgrand children. As we have moved her into a AL facility we are getting ready to clean and sell her condo. She has been pretty good about telling me what stays, goes, what the kids can have and the rest goes to a church charity. My problem is with certain religious (and to my mind morbid) articles that no one wants. And she doesn't really have room at her facility for them. Specifically she has saved the books people sign at funerals. My dads, her second husband, my sister, and both her parents. She has also saved the crucifixes from the caskets, plus some sort of Eternal enrollment for masses to be said after a persons death. To me they are hideous and my kids feel the same way. I don't want to ask her about them because she will want to drag all of that to the ALF. So far she hasn't remembered about them but I feel it's only a matter of time. Anyone have any thoughts of what I can do?

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Would the bookstore, or library at church want them? (History of members and guests who signed them).

Or maybe a guest who loved your Mom, signed all the books, and was a part of the family, as well as a part of the church?

Or keep them for names and addresses to invite for other events, Mom's birthday, or other.

If they have no keepsake or legacy value, can you destroy the books, entries made, signatures, and discard them privately instead of at the curb or nearest dumpster?

The reason I suggest that, is the dumpsters have contained some very personal information over the years, when family comes to empty their parent's homes in a hurry....the vehicle pink slip, personal letters, cremains, clothing, collector's items of monetary value, checkbooks, bank statements, family photos, cell phones, all sorts of things often gone through by dumpster divers, neighbors, or even someone just emptying their trash..

This has been a source of despair to me personally to see a neighbor's belongings, or evidence of their lives, just tossed in the trash without a thought given.

Once, some checkbooks were placed in anyone's view at the top of the dumpster.
When I tried to cover them, I was accused of dumpster diving! So no one was careful about identity theft.

One person's opinion, pls do not shoot the messenger.
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I’ll have that to deal with as well for my aunt.
However, I have used the memory books for some great comversation starters with her. Those and prayer cards.
It’s a trip down memory lane for her. Which neighbors they went to church with or school or was her mom’s special friends. She has tiny little prayer books that were her ancestors and I like to think about how precious they were to the owners. They are very worn and soft with age and tell stories all on their own.
Since I like genealogy I don’t see them as only religious artifacts. I’m not sure what’s appropriate. I wouldn’t want to dishonor anyone’s religion (although it’s possible I have already unwittingly done so). It’s the same to me with the ceremonial flags that are given to survivors of veterans.
Gloria Vanderbilt died today and Anderson Cooper was saying how much he enjoyed writing his book with his mom and getting to know more about her life. Once that stage is gone, I suspect I’ll pass on the books as the memories are aunts and not mine.
I think there are craft artist who might use some of the items in projects. So don’t just ask your own children. Check with the grands.
I know if someone said to me, here is your GGGF’s or GM’s “anything” I’d be interested to at least see it. They aren’t morbid to me but neither are they sacred to me. Just part of life that seems to be slipping away. I wasn’t any help. Sorry.
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anonymous533117 Jun 2019
I believe that your reply is so much more appropriate than all of the others. These WERE kept, not tossed; meaning she had respect for their contents. If biological family does not want them, I find the Church family always has options.
No disrespect intended to anyone. Just looking at my own demise, & who I would leave my items to, as my sons would never keep them, so my wishes are to donate them to my Parish Family.
Peace Be With You.
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Those are things commonly given to the bereaved by the funeral home, I have a box full of that kind of stuff from my parents and even my grandparents stuck away with various other bits and pieces of family heirlooms and trivia, and recently I've got my mother's funeral book added to the top of the pile. It is possible that your mother is not really any more attached to them than you are but she couldn't bring herself to discard them either, know what I mean?
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I hope someone can post with tips. I've encountered the same thing. It's very difficult to part with Bibles, pictures of Jesus, crucifixes, etc. I don't feel comfortable just throwing them away. Is it appropriate to donate? I don't know the answer. I would inquire if anyone wants the funeral attendant lists and if not, discard those though. If you aren't sure, you could scan them first. My parents like reading that kind of thing. lol
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If Bibles are involved, I would ask a minister how to get rid of them. Same with any of that stuff.
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When I cleaned out my moms house, I found tons of this stuff from my grandparents, great aunts, etc. I hauled it all to the curb. I kept my grandma's Medicare card ( she was part of the original enrollment group) and two of her date books.
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Dazed,

The Funeral Books. My Mom had so many. I didn’t know she had them. I kept them at my home in a rather large box for about a year. Then I went thru and ripped pages out of them that contained family history. I did not save pages that listed those attending the funerals.

All the pages fit in a small folder.

I am not Catholic. My husbands family are. You might check with your Mom’s Parish Office. If there is some use for the Rosaries and re using them is not prohibited I am sure they would be happy to have them or advise you where to donate them.
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If you have a family member that's interested in genealogy, then the family Bibles and visitation books could be very valuable sources. You might try looking up a great-grandparent's name on ancestry.com or familysearch.org to determine if there's a tree with their name in it so you can locate extended family with a genealogy interest. I think sending a message to an ancestry member requires a membership but you local library probably has a free subscription you can use to send a message requesting a reply to your email address.

If there's no family then I would contact the local genealogy group or a local museum, followed by state and regional organizations. When researching local history older than living memory, even unusual documentation can be helpful.
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You might even check with a local or home genealogy or historical organization. They may use them for some of their historical records. Even old pictures.
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Box them up. Keep them safe. Dispose of them after your mother has passed away.

The idea is to keep them out of sight and out of mind, so that they don't bother you and she's less likely to think of them; but to have an "in case" just in case she should ask to look through them.

I know this is dull, but alternatives such as decorating her new ALF room with the crucifixes really don't bear thinking about.

I'm a fine one to talk: I still have at least two crates of "family records" awaiting my attention. Ugh. Isn't it ridiculous how difficult this stuff is to dump?
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