Wherever she goes -- to a restaurant, to visit family and friends, or to court where her husband faces a murder trial in August -- Lori Lemons takes her dead daughter with her.
...Lemons chose a 14-inch-tall, plush white teddy bear from Huggable Urns. With a zipper in the back and a sturdy, plastic-lined velvet pouch inside, it is designed to hold the ashes of a loved one or cherished pet.
"My son has taken naps with her, and I dress her up for the holidays like she's still part of the family -- she's just in a bear form," Lemons said.
Sorry for the post frequency, but how can you not share a story like this?
...Lemons chose a 14-inch-tall, plush white teddy bear from Huggable Urns. With a zipper in the back and a sturdy, plastic-lined velvet pouch inside, it is designed to hold the ashes of a loved one or cherished pet.
"My son has taken naps with her, and I dress her up for the holidays like she's still part of the family -- she's just in a bear form," Lemons said.
Sorry for the post frequency, but how can you not share a story like this?
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That rates right up there with freeze-dried dogs kept in the living room.
And I shudder to think of how much therapy the little boy who sleeps with his dead sister's ashes is going to need in a few short years.
I have less problem with the fact that the ashes are in a teddy bear then with what the mother does with the bear.
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But, y'know, not in her shoes, so I can't really judge her. Just don't think it's something I'd do.
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But carrying little baby girl around and dressing her up and allowing little brother to develop what sounds like it could easily become an unhealthy attachment to the toy/memorial is what really, really not on.
I know people deal with their grief differently, but I think this woman needs some help.