Aerojoe
Practically Family
- Messages
- 587
- Location
- Basque Country
It's really, really unlikely that anything in a thrift store is an item someone died in. Logistically, in an emergency situation, most clothing is not removed gently- EMTs and other healthcare workers are taught to rip and cut clothing, not to waste time by undressing someone. If someone is hospitalized and passes on, they are unlikely to be wearing clothes, but instead a hospital gown.
Many places will destroy the clothes for the family members (as a kindness) but they ask you if you'd like them or not. All of the people I have known who have had clothes returned from a coroner or a funeral home after their loved one died either kept or destroyed the clothes- they didn't turn them into a thrift store. In almost all cases, the clothes were not usable because they'd been destroyed when being removed or they were in too bad shape to be given away due to the circumstances.
If you have an aversion to wearing clothes someone died in, imagine the aversion the family members would have to giving away clothes a loved one died in to be worn by someone else.
It makes sense but I still won't be comfortable in other guy's clothes
Maybe I'm too sensitive to this kind of things or maybe it's because in my country there isn't any tradition of second handing clothes. You know, in my town there isn't a single second hand clothes shop. Here, all used clothes usually goes to charity, that is to say, to the church.