A Story of The Newly Dead Game at Frozen Dead Guy Days

Mar 31, 2011 | 0 comments

While conducting “The Newly-Dead Game” at Frozen Dead Guy Days on Sunday, March 6, I didn’t realize that one of the participants was a journalist! Richard Carriero and his wife Carrie were great sports when they played the game. Here’s how he opened his story on Associated Content from Yahoo! about Frozen Dead Guy Days:

It’s 3:00 on a snowy afternoon in the Rocky Mountains. My wife and I are under a tent in the freezing cold, standing onstage with two other couples. We’re about to play the Newly Dead Game. It’s not a particularly grand affair, with an audience of perhaps 50, but it’s the content that is unique.

The host, Gail Rubin, author of A Good Goodbye: Funeral Planning for Those Who Don’t Plan to Die, asks a series of questions, to which we secretively write our answers on large pads with magic marker. Unlike the usual Dating Game queries, these questions deal with how well each spouse knows the other’s final wishes.

My wife and I get the first one right—we know our mothers’ maiden names (a vital piece of knowledge on a death certificate). We get the second—we know that we both want to be cremated. At the third—What is your spouse’s most prized possession and who would he/she want to have it after death?—we balk. My wife partially guesses correctly (my typewriter) but with my literal bent of mind, I fail to guess hers: her memories. As runners up we receive a signed copy of Gail’s book, which I later read in morbid fascination.

A Good Goodbye