How to Write a Kick Ass Obituary

HolyJuan
Most obituaries are really not all that good. The worst part about them is that you are usually never around to read your own and see what a great person you were. Here are some great ideas if you want an exciting obituary that everyone will enjoy reading. As a bonus, you can get even with the people that made fun of you in high school and make a few bucks on the side.

1. Write your own obituary
It is imperative that you write your own obituary or have a trusted friend do it BEFORE you die. If you do not, your Aunt (who has her own blog and fancies herself as a "writer") will type it up and it will suck and you'll be stuck with an awful obituary.

Once you do finishing writing your own obit, make sure you send a draft copy out to your family and friends so that they can miss you while you are still alive. They will also have the opportunity to pay to be included in the obituary (see section #5) or pay to be excluded from the obituary (see section #8.)

2. Don't give them the satisfaction
Most people will suggest you start off an obit with the person's name, the date they died and how they died. I suggest you start off with "You are not going to believe this!" or "Guess what that fat f*ck Bob did now" or "You were right." Don't include your age so that your friends don't get the satisfaction of outliving you.

3. Doug who?
No one knows you by your real name so why die by that name? Nicknames that were used independently of your name go in quotation marks in the middle of your real name.

Robert "Stacks" Gutfruend

Joan "Cookie Monster" McCreedy

Nicknames that were part of your job or the reason you went to jail go before your real name:

"Handsy" Jim Handland

"Luscious Diamond" Tina Ralph

"Tea-Bag" Bill Billingsworth

Or if you don't want anyone to know you died, just post a fake nickname.

John "Two-Sack" Christopher

If you didn't have a nickname in real life, make sure you make one up or tell your obit writer your suggestions before you die. And don't post your middle name. We're not monogramming a sweater here.

4. Rhyming and haikus make for great obituaries

I suggest trying them together.

You smoked like a fire
Now you're atop a pyre
No flowers please, Thanks!

5. No one cares
No one cares about who died before you or how many cousins you have that are still alive. If your relatives want in your obit, charge them $5 - $10 a mention.

No one cares where you went to school or where you didn't graduate from. List your favorite bars or hang outs. People are more likely to remember Johnny "Cantaloupes" Mullroy from the bowling alley, rather than a graduate of Lancaster High School class of 1990. (Go Gales!)

6. People like excitement
Don't die of cancer. Die of a space borne alien parasite.

Don't die in a car accident. Get hit by a meteorite.

Die a hero (stolen from Royal Tennebaums) "Died Tragically Rescuing his Family From the Wreckage of a Destroyed Sinking Battleship."

7. Get donations now
There are services that will "loan' you a lump sum of money now and get that money back when you die through the donation process as suggested in the obituary. The loan companies have names like, "The Amerikan Heart Foundation" and "The Redd Cross" and "Amway." At the bottom of your obit, have money sent to them in lieu of flowers. If you can't come up with enough donations to cover your loan, they will take your suit/dress, coffin and body parts to make up the difference.

8. Let those jerks have it
An Obituary is the perfect time to get back at all the people who have pissed you off your entire life. Being dead is the perfect cover for a lie or to let out a really stinky truth. Here are a few examples:

-I never loved you (insert family member's name here.)

Coach Rogers touched me on my pee pee after baseball practice.

-I had herpes. Now I have worms.

-Aunt Tina, I was and always will be a Red Sox fan.

-My G-mail and MySpace password is clicktowin34. Go ahead and read my e-mails, honey.

This is also a perfect opportunity for relatives to make "pre-donations" to be excluded from this portion of the obituary.

Here is my Obituary, just so you know:

Doug "Holyjuan" Messerschmit

Well, you can all stop placing your bets. Doug is dead. You won't see him at B-Hampton's or at Skully's anymore, but you can see him Ray's Funeral Home this Wednesday from 6 - 8pm. The parts of his body that were not destroyed when he dove on top the improvised nuclear device and thus saved the city will be on display. HolyJuan liked to dance poorly, drink quickly, tell the same stories and flirt with the ladies. He owned two bowling shirts and 12 pairs of Converse. He is survived by his parents ($20) and one sister ($5.) Donations can be made to the American Kancer Society and my brother used to stick Legos in my butt while I slept.

Published by HolyJuan

I write stuff. You read stuff. We should get together.  View profile

5 Comments

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  • Kim Daugherty4/16/2010

    Awesome :) And sorry about the legos.

  • Esther November4/30/2008

    Ha, now I can't wait to die!

  • proofking4/30/2008

    THIS is a beautiful thing.

    I always thought it would be a good idea to have a recorder rigged up at the funeral home, so when the visitors settle in on the kneeler, they very soon hear the voice of the dear departed giving a little valedictory, in which names are mentioned. Of course, I may wind up instead in the garage next to the tin containing our Yorkie who died in 1996, but I can hope.

    Great piece. If a nuclear device ever does go off in the city, at least I know I won't go barefoot if I can get to your place.

  • Rissa Watkins4/25/2008

    This was hilarious!

  • Ceetee Sheckels4/15/2008

    LOLOLOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! this is great!!! :)

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