I am 54 yrs old. I have always wondered what happened to a corpse after it has been buried for a long time. Now I know. Still kinda weird knowing this now.
This is generally not the state of a body after 18 years when a proper burial has taken place. Embalming the body, a proper casket, and placing the casket into a vault will preserve a body for decades.
Actually it shouldn't look like this, the water like fluid you saw is the embalming fluid. Natural decomposition without any embalming fluid won't make you look this messy.
Its crazy how that pile of rotten meat and bones used to be a whole human being back in the days. A person that had memories stored in his brain and was someone with a purpose in life
@@thunzie im only kidding dont get ya panties up in a bunch, they exhumed the body for a reason and obviously put it back into its grave so they can continue resting
Oh my gosh, dude is just standing there in Lolo soup. 😮 All jokes aside, though. I really am thankful for content like this. Death and decay are part of reality. Only in modern times has death came to be treated as taboo. In the past our family/friends would've cared for our body after our passing. They would wash and prepare our remains for burial right there in the home. Everything, right down to the digging of the grave was handled by the decedent's loved ones. Now death has become so...clinical. Especially, here in the U.S. The vast majorty of us have become completely detached from this natural, inevitable process. Content like this is needed in order to help demystify death and what happens to our remains afterwards.
Oh that’s pretty efficient. The liner of the casket is designed like a cheese cloth almost, so that the bones can be retained and most of the postmortem fluids and humectants are strained out. I know this is a common practice for most places in the world with leases graves but I always wondered how they did it. Grandfather Lolo must have been an awesome person to get this much attention still. ❤
@@crateer what nothing graphic? Try 3 5 10 years, of course ER is also graphic and im sure op knows this but in ER at least youre dealing with cells that are mostly living and the environment is being kept as sterile. Graves have decomposition fluid and rotten cells.
I thought I'd had some tough jobs, but this is wicked. Can't imagine having to get up in the morning and go stand in a hole, filled with cold human soup water. Nope.
In some places in Germany they do "natural burials". So the older remains are mostly all gone by the time room is needed for another family member. No coffin or embalming, I believe.
mmm... but at the end of the day.... a "live" cremation is probably a darn site worse thing to watch happen... thats literal blistering off the skin and gastric juices boiling and exploding.... Its all a fact of life... the collected bones are more than likely going to make their way to a crematorium from this point... I think "Lolo" got to decompose/bloat/become grotesque in the quiet dignity of the under ground.... and now that that done, its just bones... the family has accepted his loss.... the funeral and fancy trimmings associated aren't for the dead - they're all for the living who love and miss them.... Just another way of looking at it.... Death is not pretty.... but it can honestly still be a beautiful thing, if we all stopped trying to pretend that it is pretty. :)
And looking at it from the spiritual side: When burned he can visit all the places in the world he didnt visited. But when burried he will need to wait there until someone comes to take his bones out there again.
You must never seen a live cremation. It's not the prettiest thing. You don't just come out as all ash lol. They take your bones and grind them up into fine ash after, then you're just put in a container. What a way to go out, 50+ years in your body just to see it all burned in an hour or two. Yeah it's cheaper but there's a reason
I'm not going to argue with you but the only things that baffles me is why does RU-vid allow this to be on here but when someone swears in a video all of a sudden RU-vid is getting up in their face telling them to delete the video
@@MrMagicianJr Because death is just a part of where is life is going to go. It's part biology and part understanding. It is good to come to peace with that.
are you kidding? Talking about others lack of respect when this piece of dirt filmed the decaying corpse of his grandfather in order to post it on youtube? When did the grandfather get a say in this. You think he wanted that? You have a very warped sense of respect telling him to disregard anyone who thinks what he has done is disgusting. Hush.
RIP. Exhumations where the coffin area (vault) has flooded are absolutely vile. I can image the absolute stench. Also, I’m amazed that the workers walk right into the decomp and water mix in the grave. That’s a great way to get diseases. Not really adequate PPE there. 🤨
Imagine a doctor payed you to dig someone's grave to examine it then you end up with bones and corpse soup that smells worser than your friend who plays games 24 hours a day
I think America should do the same thing. Save space, make room for the new dead. Let's be real here. Overtime you're nothing but a stone on the ground. A waste of space.
@@shawnmoyer5789 With my family, My great grandma and great grandad are buried on top of eachother, with my grandad he is just waiting for my grandma to go on top and my mums mum is cremated so
For those who are not aware, this is more than likely from the Philippines. (I watched with no sound so I can not confirm the language). Most cemeteries in that country are done through a rental process and over time everyone will eventually become evicted from their resting place; as families may want to make room for Grandmother by removing the body of a great great aunt who no one alive remembers anyway. It is an accepted norm and there are no issues with this in Filipino culture.
Yes my fiance lives in Lipa City Philippines and she says that if a family member passes away and they can't afford a grave, they exhume a relative that has been in the ground for a while and dispose of the remains so the recently deceased can be buried. It's actually sad.
Do they cremate the remains and bury them together, then? Where I live in CA, they are starting to allow urns to be buried in the ground above the existing casket. It is sad to remove someone like this and not put them back.
@@bunnymomjulie6719 yes they creamate the remains. I live in S.C. and they have just started allowing 4 urns ⚱to be buried on top of a single grave. They sell urn vaults that are for burying. I have already purchased an urn for myself and have a plot already paid for. I don't want my kids to go through any problems when I pass.
I’m so glad that I’m Muslim, we do not burry with coffin. Our bodies get just wrapped and placed underneath. The decomposing happens extremely fast this way so there is no need to remove them later on
How is the tonb so perfect? The sides and where is all the dirt that should be on top of the casket, everything is perfectly clean like they just dug the hole a bit confused even on the sides of the casket are perfectly cleaned out of dirt.
This is in the Philippines. In a private burial land, we can put multiple corpes. Just like my Lolo (grandpa) died more than 20years ago and last 2007 my lola(grandma) died, they placed her in a same burial site but the bones of my lolo was placed in smaller casket for bones.
Normally it's a concrete cellar for 2 coffins, stacked on top of each other, with a concrete slab in the middle. That's the way it is in Belgium anyway. The plot can be licensed for 10 to 50 years and then keep being renewed. Ground water does get in there too, I've seen opened cellars with the bottom coffin floating... But there's no reason to purposefully disturb the oldest burial like in this video...
@@KidMillions Rest in Peace to both 🕊️ My Mother unfortunately passed away In Tijuana Mexico, unclaimed...and she is the second, from bottom to up..... They told me she had been buried w 6 others. Been 12 yrs since she passed... wonder how she will look like. I tried exhuming her back in 2010 to give her a Tombstone, but was unsuccessful. Lady only took my Money and Refused to give it back when it was unable to be completed. I didn't care in the End. What else could I have lost, losing my Mother. 805 CA
My first thought was why not remove the entire casket instead of the remains first but from seeing the water level in the casket it's likely the bottom is rotted out. It's sad you had to move your grandfather but the bright side is that his tomb is really empty. He has moved on and a tombstone is just a marker to remember him. God bless you.
@@Timewalker13 I've worked for cemeteries before and the answer is both. Youd be surprised how much water ends up underground, especially after digging the grave before the service happens. We generally as a rule dug the day before, and it saves us and the family a lot of head and heartache. Granted we put the casket in a concrete vault but water eventually like many things, finds it's way in there. We've even had to use a pump to remove water before services because water was damn near the top of the hole. But the cemetary was also on what used to be farm land and naturally holds a lot of water.
This is why people want to be cremated these days. Not only is sticking someone in a lined box in the ground expensive, a waste of materials and space, but you also turn into this as your body struggles against the casket to break down naturally.
thats why in Islam we bury in a simple wooden box no embalming, You will decompose within 6 months to a year and be nothing but bones. God will raise us again on the day of judgment.
Even in death you gotta pay the tax man or else be dug up and given back to the family. Well idk usually in their beliefs they keep the body within their homes, or maybe they discard them with cremation and if that can't happen... Welp discard it?
And me too. Definitely. I don’t want to occupy some land somewhere and someday to be dug up like this. Much environmentally friendly as well, cremation is the way to go.
This is why a good burial vault is so important, a steel air seal Vault is the best you can possibly get ensuring that the casket and remains of our loved. One will never be wet or disturbed for eternity. Clark burial vaults the only Vault to purchase!