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phoenixnestcoffins · 9 months ago
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coffin festival
The Chinese #Spring Festival holiday will be held after the shipment is completed #seagrass coffin China good #wholesaler #biodegradable coffins Chinese best #supplier #handmade coffins China best #factory #phoenixnestcoffins ;how does seagrass survive,seagrass coffins UK for sale #Green willow coffin #greenburial #caskets #urns #natural coffins ##china factory #funeral #naturalburial @followers
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everecoffin · 9 months ago
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The Year of the Dragon in China(2024), the dragon travels and brings good luck to the world, and the future is bright and health #woven #everecoffin #caskets #coffins #carrier #urns #shrouds #cross #flowerbands #burial #cremation #willow #bamoo #seagrass #cornleaf #green #natural #factory@followers
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greenburials · 1 year ago
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Eco Coffins for Cremation: Sustainable Farewells for a Greener Future
As the world embraces sustainability in every aspect of life, the funeral industry is no exception. Eco coffin for cremation have emerged as a thoughtful and eco-friendly choice for individuals who wish to leave a lighter footprint on the planet, even in their final moments. In this comprehensive blog, we will explore the world of eco coffins designed for cremation, shedding light on their environmental benefits, types, customization options, and why they are becoming the preferred choice for those seeking greener and more meaningful farewells.
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Chapter 1: The Eco-Conscious Revolution in Funeral Traditions
The shift towards environmentally friendly funeral practices.
Eco coffins as a symbol of sustainability in the farewell process.
The importance of making eco-conscious choices in end-of-life planning.
Chapter 2: Benefits of Eco Coffins for Cremation
Biodegradability: A gentle return to nature without harming the environment.
Reduced Carbon Footprint: Lower emissions associated with cremation.
Sustainable Materials: Harvesting practices that support ecological balance.
Customizable: Tailoring the coffin to reflect the individuality of the departed.
Chapter 3: Types of Eco Coffins for Cremation
Natural Fiber Coffins: Crafted from materials like bamboo, willow, or seagrass.
Cardboard Coffins: Lightweight and eco-friendly options that are both biodegradable and customizable.
Pine and Wood Coffins: Made from sustainably sourced timber, often suitable for cremation.
Recycled Material Coffins: Innovative options created from reclaimed or recycled materials.
Chapter 4: The Making of Eco Coffins
Sustainable materials and responsible manufacturing practices.
Unique and personalized designs to celebrate the life of the departed.
Reducing the environmental impact of traditional coffin production.
Chapter 5: The Cremation Process and Environmental Impact
Explaining the cremation process and its ecological footprint.
How eco coffins contribute to reducing emissions and energy consumption.
Compatibility with modern cremation practices.
Chapter 6: Customization and Personalization
The freedom to personalize eco coffins with designs, artwork, or messages.
How customization adds a deeply personal touch to the farewell ceremony.
Chapter 7: Religious Traditions and Eco Coffins
Eco coffins' compatibility with diverse religious beliefs and burial practices.
The role of green coffins in facilitating respectful religious ceremonies.
Chapter 8: Where to Find Eco Coffins for Cremation
Funeral homes and providers offering eco-friendly coffin options.
How to plan a sustainable and meaningful farewell using an eco coffin.
Chapter 9: Real-Life Stories and Testimonials
Heartfelt accounts from families who have chosen eco coffins for cremation, and how it brought them solace and closure.
Chapter 10: The Future of Green Farewells
The growing popularity of sustainable and eco-conscious funeral choices.
Innovations in eco-friendly funeral practices and options.
Conclusion: Sustainable Goodbyes with Eco Coffins for Cremation
Summarizing the eco-friendly qualities, benefits, and personal significance of eco coffins.
Encouraging individuals and families to embrace sustainable and heartfelt farewells that honor both the departed and the planet.
Eco coffins for cremation offer a compassionate and sustainable way to bid farewell to loved ones, ensuring a meaningful and environmentally responsible goodbye. This blog aims to guide readers through the world of eco coffins, emphasizing their eco-friendly attributes and the growing appeal of green funeral options. As the world seeks more sustainable ways of living and leaving a legacy, eco coffins have become a fitting choice for those who wish to create a more harmonious and eco-conscious farewell.
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normal-horoscopes · 5 years ago
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The Burial Signs II:
Aries: The palace courtyard. The dead given to the earth, no coffin, no headstone. Above their grave, a marble statue depicting the dead in their prime. Generations of royal dead, frozen in polite conversation.
Taurus:  Stuffed with resin and bathed in holy oils. A kiln in the desert, where the smoke can reach the clear and starry sky. The stench of fire and death overridden by cedarwood and juniper.
Gemini: The totems of iron and carved birch placed above the mass graves. At their peak, an iron effigy of an eagle, intended to draw in lightning, allowing the souls beneath to pass over. What lies beneath turning to a grim fulgurite. 
Cancer: A body bound in painted seagrass, young coral placed in the mouth. A funeral regatta to the ancestral reef, where the body is scuttled beneath warm and gentle waves. 
Leo: No burial, no ritual. Body left where it fell for the scavengers to feed upon. Eventually the nomads will return in the warm season, and there they will mourn. Who are they to deny the dead to what gave them life?
Virgo: The dead given to priests and bound in holy red cord. A secretive ritual of sacred knotwork, wherein the dead are bound in ritual positions, suspended from the branches of leafless trees.
Libra: The place where the prophet died. Bodies given by the thousand, the veiled abbess in white who surveys them, selecting them by some unknown criteria. Only the chosen are stripped, bleached, and added to the cathedral of bone.
Scorpio: Empty battlefields. The holy men are too afraid to walk these fields. Some holy men they are. Prayers muttered as the dead are stripped for valuables, their bodies burned. In the right light, even God’s work turns a profit.
Ophiuchus: The poor dead, buried without silver for the ferrymen. Honest labor at the oars, helping other souls across. 
Sagittarius: The valley of the dead. Coffins hung from ropes meant to be cut a year at a time in a gesture of mourning. Dry wood and pulverized bone crashing into the canyon floor, representing the final and true death. 
Capricorn: Thrown to the hog pits! Strike up the band!
Aquarius: The stage of the dead. Plays in masks and pantomime as the kiln burns. The ashes pressed into concrete and made into bricks. Another stone seat for the great ampitheater.
Pisces: A small white stone, swallowed before death. Ten years passed in the mountaintop basin, open to the vultures and shrikes. Each year on the summer solstice, the priest walks the sacred ground, retrieving the stones, now deepest black.
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globalindeed · 2 years ago
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Top Inclusions of a Green Funeral Concept
In the past one decade, we have observed that people are getting more and more conscious towards the nature, environment and so on. This is getting reflected in every small step they are taking and even in the bigger of life-changing steps like funerals. In this, funeral homes have been really helpful because now they even have services related to green funerals or eco-friendly funerals. Here in this write-up, we will go through the details of this new concept and how funeral homes are helpful in this.
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What Is A Green Funeral?
According to the experts, the idea behind this kind of funeral homes services is to keep funerals as sustainable as possible and ensure that it leaves the least impact on nature. To make these things possible, funeral homes directors take the following steps that we have mentioned below.
Choose a biodegradable coffin, urn or shroud made from wicker, cardboard, seagrass, banana leaf, bamboo, water hyacinth, cotton, linen or wool.
They also ensure that the family select the coffin made from sustainably sourced wood rather than the mahogany itself.
They make sure that throughout the body-preparation process, as less chemical as possible is used before the burial.
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They also recommend that the body should be dressed or wrapped with a fast biodegradable fabric.
They also advocate using green vehicles that run on batteries.
They even encourage family members of the deceased to donate to local environmental charities in lieu of flowers.
In case of a prepaid funeral contract, you will find them recommending the client to leave an environmental legacy in the will.
The next recommendation is that you should prefer a natural burial ground.
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Rather than using a tombstone, funeral homes directors recommend a natural marker such as a tree or a location on a map.
Finally, they request guests to choose organic flowers and in terms of the feast, they recommend the catering company to be as organic and as sutainable as possible.
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stevenmitchell · 5 years ago
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Wicket Coffins are beautiful and notably affordable, it is 100 % biodegradable as it is made up of rattan, seagrass, etc which also makes it cheaper than traditional coffins. 
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meliwen · 8 years ago
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An Asgore Analysis
I wanted to get a better feel for Asgore’s character, so I began to write up my own interpretation of his character. In general, this is just an analysis of Asgore’s actions and why he did what he did, and less so of an argument on whether he was right or wrong, although I do talk about that a little bit.
TL;DR: Asgore did not believe that humans and monsters could peacefully coexist. This is the reason he chose to kill any human who fell and why he upheld his promise of war; because if they did ever go free, in his eyes war and the destruction of humanity would be the only way to save his people. He did not kill the humans because of a fear of revolt or because of a need to keep up hope. He did not kill the humans because he enjoyed it, but because his sense of duty overrides his own personal desires. It isn’t until he meets Frisk that he and his kingdom regain hope that humans and monsters could live together in peace.
There is no evidence in the game to say that Asgore absolutely killed all six humans or that all the humans were children. However, I think that what few hints we do get from the game all point to it being true; that Asgore killed six children before Frisk came.
ALL THE HUMANS WERE CHILDREN
A quote from Toby for Escapist Magazine:
“The story will be revealed when the full game is released. Though I think we know more than that. Here's some info from the demo, summarized (spoilers): A long time ago, monsters were sealed underground by the humans. Several human children have climbed the mountain, fallen down, left the RUINS, and were assumedly killed by monsters. One monster, "Asgore" is seeking the souls of these human children.”
This interview was done in 2013, so it would seem that Toby intended for there to be some children who fell when first developing the game. While things may have been changed since then, I think there are still clues from within the finished game that show that all the humans were children.
Toriel: "Pathetic, is it not? I cannot save even a single child."
Toriel makes a remark that can be read in two ways. The first is that she is only talking about saving Frisk, the other is that she is talking about being unable to save any of the ones who fell. Personally, I feel that it’s the latter, but of course this seems up to interpretation.
(A box of kids' shoes in a disparity of sizes.)
Not only do we see that the shoes that Toriel has are all kids shoes, but near the end of the game we can see all the coffins are the same size as the first one that was built to house the body of a human child. And with a toy knife and ribbon, we can at least say that the cyan soul was most definitely a child.
Frisk is noted in game to wear all the items they pick up, even when it wouldn’t make much sense for them to do so, as with the cloudy glasses. In order for Frisk to wear these items comfortably the original owners would have to have been children. While Frisk could definitely have worn items a few sizes too big, I think it makes sense for these items to have been intended to be for Frisk’s size. Mainly because I can’t imagine Frisk barely keeping large glasses from falling off their face, or for Frisk to awkwardly shuffle around in ballet shoes that threaten to fall off with each step.
At any rate, there doesn’t seem to be anything in the game that definitely hints towards one of the humans being a teen or adult. An argument could be made for the empty gun, but it isn’t at all impossible for a child to get their hands on one, either in the real world or in a world set in a rpg.
ASGORE KILLED ALL SIX HUMANS
I don’t think we can state that Asgore without a doubt canonically killed all the humans, (because there’s not quite enough hard evidence in the game for that) but based on what we can see from the game, I think that’s the most likely answer.
The last human fell into the Underground a long time ago.
Inn Keeper Bunny: “Hiya! Welcome to Snowdin! I can't remember the last time I saw a fresh face around here.”
Toriel: “I pass through this place every day to see if anyone has fallen down. You are the first human to come here in a long time.”
The last humans who fell predated Flowey, and seem to predate the main characters as well.
Undyne: “What the hell are humans made out of!?
Anyone else would be DEAD by now!
Alphys told me humans were determined...
I see now what she meant by that!”
From this, we can tell that Undyne at least, has never fought a human.
Undyne: “There's normally a pair of old shoes in that seagrass.
Strangely, they're made for someone without fins or claws.
What kind of monster is like that...?”
Another thing we can say about Undyne, is that she never even considers that a human may have died or left the ballet shoes behind, or that if a human died around these parts to put two and two together. It’s possible that she wasn’t even around when the blue soul died, or that the blue soul ever even died in Waterfall.
Undyne: “You see, Alphys showed me these animations about...
Uhhh, humans? So I can learn their weaknesses?”
All Undyne’s knowledge of humans comes from Alphys’ comic books and anime. Had a human fallen within Undyne’s life, or especially during her time in the Royal Guard, we could expect her knowledge of humans to at least be a bit more based in reality.
Opinions may vary, but I think the last human who fell predates Undyne entirely, and if that’s the case, then other characters like Sans, Papyrus, Alphys and Mettaton are unlikely to have met a human before either.
Do we know where the humans may have died? Do the placement of the human’s items mean anything? If so, does that mean that they never made it to Asgore?
Monsterkid: “We had a school project where we had to take care of a flower. The king - we had to call him "Mr. Dreemurr" - volunteered to donate his own flowers. He ended up coming to school and teaching the class about responsibility and stuff.”
It's a bureau. There's a Santa Claus outfit inside. (Implying Asgore goes around as Santa, specifically to Snowdin.)
Napstablook: “this place used to get a lot of business...
but our main customer disappeared one day...
now it's just some hairy guy that shows up once a month…”
Gerson: "King Fluffybuns? He's a friendly, happy-go-lucky kind of guy... If you keep walking around long enough, you'll probably meet him."
It’s entirely possible that if the humans died all over the Underground, Asgore still would have had the opportunity to kill them. But, the placement of their items doesn’t mean that they died at that specific place, although it’s very possible some did.
The items that were left behind, that despite being part of a set, were all dropped in different places (eg. The ribbon and toy knife were found in separate areas), suggesting that the humans have either thrown them away, lost them, or that over time monsters themselves moved them about. If it’s possible for the humans to leave behind one item, it’s also possible that they could have left behind both and continued on with other, better ones; the same thing that we do in the game.
The order in which the items are found may indicate the order in which the children fell, and perhaps that’s how Toby intended for us to read it, but we have no real way of knowing. They could have fallen in any order. The yellow soul, for instance, may have been the last to fall if we look at how their items were the last ones we come across. If we look at the check on their gun however:
An antique revolver. It has no ammo. Must be used precisely, or damage will be low.
It’s antique. While they may have set out with an old gun to begin with, they could just as well have set out with a gun that was modern for their time. In this case, they could be one of the first humans to fall, as we would then need a good amount of time to pass for their gun to be seen as antique to Frisk.
Perhaps the children fell in the order the coffins are laid out in Asgore’s basement. Although considering how the colours of the souls are all arranged as if in a rainbow, it may also just be a design choice.
At any rate, I don’t think the Cyan Soul, even if they did die in the Ruins, would just stop there. The game indicates that all, or some of the humans, were able to reset like Frisk. Toriel mentions a familiar feeling with the humans.
Toriel: "When humans fall down here, strangely... I...
I often feel like I already know them.
Truthfully, when I first saw you, I felt...
...like I was seeing an old friend for the first time."
Asgore is not at all surprised to realize that he’s already killed you.
You tell ASGORE that he's killed you.
He nods sadly.
So it’s extremely likely that they all were able to make their way until they hit something they could just not defeat, regardless of how many times they tried, which in this case would be the strongest monster in the Underground: Asgore.
So I think that all the children were able to survive in the Underground long enough to either meet him along the way to his castle, or make it to the castle itself. The game itself gives us at least one clue that Asgore has definitely killed at least one human.
Undyne: “But even if you could beat me... / But even if I spared YOU...
No human has EVER made it past ASGORE!
Honestly, killing you now is an act of mercy...! / Honestly, I'm doing you a favor...”
Undyne says that no human that met Asgore made it past him, although it doesn’t specify the number. Undyne’s statement makes no sense if no human ever actually met Asgore, so we know at least one has.
You could argue that Undyne is trying to say that even if a human died before meeting Asgore, that their body and soul were collected by him and went no farther. But I believe that Undyne is mentioning Asgore’s name here as a threat, not as some passive barrier that no other children had encountered. I think this makes sense considering how she mentions that even if we were to beat her, there would still be another obstacle for us to face, Asgore, and that killing us now would be mercy compared to him. This would imply that he is a force to be reckoned with and the reason that we should have no hope of escaping.
Undyne is in the middle of trying to kill us, to intimidate us, to make us lose hope. Mentioning a monster who had no part in the deaths of any other humans, but was the last point their already dead bodies reached so technically speaking none made it past him, isn’t really the type of boast she’ll be making in this situation.
Another point in the game we can tell that Asgore did indeed meet at least one human...
You stare deep into the eyes of the Lost Soul.
He remembers the gaze of humans past...
Here it’s implied that he’s met humans before, and with the wording and the situation this is taking place (lost soul), it seems it’s referring to other humans that were in the same situation as Frisk.
Sans: “the human souls the king gathered... seem to have disappeared. so, uh, that plan ain't happening any time soon.”
Although to be fair with what Sans says, we don’t know for sure if gathering means that he killed them, or just collected them from the Royal Guard.
Outside of the game however, there is a tweet made by Toby regarding the issue.
Toby: “past asgore not to asgore”
undhell: “oooohhhhh rip”
Toby: “rip six times”
And another soon after...
undhell: “OK FINE I love the m u r d e r e r
Toby: “That’s the ticket.”
I don’t want to cite this as definite proof, not because his tweets aren’t canon, but because this tweet has been deleted. However, this just shows that at one point after the game came out, Toby considered Asgore to have been the one to kill them all.
ASGORE NEVER WANTED TO FREE THE UNDERGROUND
Gerson and Asgore, prior to Chara’s fall, both agreed on how to handle their circumstances.
Gerson: "Long ago, ASGORE and I agreed that escaping would be pointless...
Since once we left, humans would just kill us.
I felt a little betrayed when he eventually changed his mind.
But now, I think... Maybe he was right to.
'Cause after all, even though we never escaped...
A human's killing us anyway, ain't that right?"
Which, of course, makes sense with what Toriel accused Asgore of when they reunited.
Toriel: "You pathetic whelp.
If you really wanted to free our kind...
You could have gone through the barrier after you got ONE SOUL...
...taken six SOULs from the humans, then come back and freed everyone peacefully.
But instead, you made everyone live in despair...
Because you would rather wait here, meekly hoping another human never comes."
And we can see that Asgore never truly changed his mind about leaving the Underground. Or rather, he did when he was filled with the need for vengeance, but as that fell away so did his desire to return to the surface, and he agrees with Toriel’s viewpoint of him.
Asgore declared war in a fit of rage. As his rage subsided and stopped clouding his judgment, Asgore was left with four choices.
Go through the barrier with one soul, absorb six others, and lead a war.
Retract his declaration of war, take one soul when it becomes available through peaceful means, and attempt peace with humanity.
Kill all humans who fell, and then break the barrier and lead a war.
Befriend all humans who fall, and whenever time comes that enough souls have been collected through peaceful means, break the barrier and make peace with humanity.
There are four different outcomes for four different options. One has war as soon as it becomes available, another has attempting peace as soon as the option becomes available, and the other two are stall tactics, albeit with widely different outcomes.
If Asgore was serious about freeing his people, he would have chosen option one or option two. As it stands, Asgore changed his mind about changing his mind from his earlier agreement with Gerson. He did not want to free the Underground.
ALPHYS AND HER EXPERIMENTS
You might ask: what about Alphys? Asgore told her to find a way to break the barrier, so isn’t he actively trying to free everyone here, rather than hoping the barrier never needs to break? I think that Asgore never thought or hoped that Alphys would actually succeed in her research and experiments.
Asgore did not go out and search for alternative ways to break the barrier of his own accord. Once again he was content to wait until it came to him and he could not ignore it. Alphys came to him with her robot with a soul, and since even Bratty and Catty knew how important this would have been to Asgore personally, he had no option to turn it down without raising suspicion.Though of course, after Gaster’s disappearance, Asgore may very well have been waiting for someone to be near the same level of brilliance of Gaster.
But what really leads me to believe that he never truly hoped Alphys would succeed is how he handled it compared to how Toriel does in one of the endings.
Alphys: "I'm trying to figure a way for us to get out of here!
B-but I kinda have no idea what I'm doing.
I'll figure it out eventually, though.
The queen is a lot different from ASGORE...
She actually checks to see if I'm doing anything.
She's really turned this whole place around!"
Toriel is not only keeping tabs on things and showing an active interest in the process, but she is trying to make things work. In contrast, Asgore never once makes an attempt to look in on Alphys, and in fact leaves the position of Royal Scientist unfilled for a long length of time. Even Alphys herself notes how unhelpful Asgore is.
ENTRY NUMBER 20
ASGORE left me five messages today.
four about everyone being angry
one about this cute teacup he found that looks like me
thanks asgore.
Not out of malice, since of course he doesn’t want Alphys to suffer in any way, but because he doesn’t want to help improve conditions because he doesn’t want it to succeed. If Asgore really wanted to free everyone without having to kill more humans than necessary, he would have definitely taken a bigger interest in Alphys and her experiments, especially once he knew that people were starting to get angry at her and that she may be having some issues. But he didn’t.
WHY DIDN’T TORIEL CROSS THE BARRIER?
But what about Toriel? Why didn’t she cross the barrier with only one soul and then attempt to make peace with humanity that way? If she was unwilling to do that, yet accuses Asgore of not doing the same thing, is she not hypocritical?
If Toriel was serious about her plan, she wasn't suggesting that they kill for those six other souls. That would go against everything she has stood for and against everything she had said only moments earlier.
Toriel: “It is not right to sacrifice someone simply to let someone leave here. Is that not what I have been trying to prevent this whole time?”
Toriel: "You could have gone through the barrier after you got ONE SOUL...
...taken six SOULs from the humans, then come back and freed everyone peacefully.”
She mentions that Asgore could have done it peacefully, so I find it very doubtful that she was suggesting that Asgore should have killed in order to collect the other souls.
I don’t think Toriel was even serious to begin with.
Toriel: “If you really wanted to free our kind... “
“If” being the keyword here.
Toriel is saying that if Asgore truly wanted to free everyone, he would have done this and this. Since he didn’t, Asgore’s statements that he wanted to free everyone was a lie. Toriel is only pointing out Asgore’s own hypocrisy, and not making a serious suggestion for a plan.
At any rate, Toriel cannot cross the barrier if Asgore doesn’t allow it. Not only does he seem to be the only one with access to the souls, but if he doesn’t change his mind about freeing everyone Toriel’s only option would be to get it by force, and would not only have to go against Asgore, but the whole Underground as well. And if she did have to go against everyone, destroying the barrier would be counterproductive to stopping the war, since this would allow the monsters the ability truly begin the war with humanity.
Of course, then the question becomes whether or not Toriel could slowly convince Asgore to stop the war if she had just stayed. Toriel only stayed after Asgore’s declaration of war for the amount of time it took for the golden flower to bloom that the children had brought back from the surface.
ENTRY NUMBER 8
I've chosen a candidate.
I haven't told ASGORE yet, because I want to surprise him with it...
In the center of his garden, there's something special.
The first golden flower, that grew before all the others.
The flower from the outside world.
It appeared just before the queen left.
While we don’t know how long it takes for a golden flower to sprout, we can tell that Toriel did not leave as soon as Asgore made his speech (assuming his speech was made very soon after Asriel’s death), but she also did not stay very long either.
Asgore himself is even more vague on the timeline around Toriel’s departure.
Asgore: “In a fit of anger, I declared war.
I said that I would destroy any human that came here.
I would use their souls to become godlike...
...and free us from this terrible prison.
Then, I would destroy humanity...
And let monsters rule the surface, in peace.
Soon, the people's hopes returned.
My wife, however, became disgusted with my actions.
She left this place, never to be seen again.”
Could she have changed his mind if she had stayed longer? Did she stay away out of pure stubbornness? Did she truly believe that she wouldn’t be able to change Asgore’s mind? Did she truly believe that finding the humans first was the best option? Was her anger at Asgore clouding her judgement? Did she do her best to convince him to stop his plan before she gave up and left or did she leave without confronting him on his new plan? Was her leaving and staying away meant to be an ultimatum to Asgore, that it was either her or his plan?  Would she even be able to change Asgore’s mind without the burden of what he’s done being as heavy as it is in the game’s ending? We can’t say for certain, and whether or not she would be successful in changing Asgore’s mind would be up to interpretation as the game doesn’t give us an answer on what could have been.
All I can say is that while her decision was probably made under extreme emotions as Asgore was when he made his promise, Toriel, like him, did not end up changing her mind. Toriel only left the Ruins to return when she realized that the human would have to kill in order to leave, and she didn’t want that. (Which also to me, suggests that Frisk was the first human Toriel allowed to pass into the rest of the Underground, whereas the other humans would have snuck out.)
While Asgore seems like he feels safer staying in the Underground forever, if the ability to break the barrier came to him he cannot refuse to free everyone. They will eventually have to leave, and while Asgore is content to stay in the Underground, I’m sure he knows this as well. His choices are whether this exodus is in peace, or in war.
IS ASGORE AFRAID OF REVOLT?
Asgore chooses to remain with his plan of murder and eventually war. We know that by the end he does not truly want to hurt anyone, so why does he decide to stay with war rather than peace?  
Is Asgore afraid of revolt? He has a kingdom excited for war, so is he afraid that they’ll turn on him like they’ve turned on Toriel in some of the neutral endings?
While this does happen in some of the neutral routes, it’s also important to notice that some neutral routes continue on just fine.
Toriel is able to bring peace to the Underground and stop the war mentality even if she hasn’t been seen in a hundred years, if the king is killed, if freedom ripped from their very grasps, if hope is lost, and if up to nine monsters are killed (not Papyrus or Undyne). Undyne will be very clearly angered by this, but she will not overthrow the queen.
Even in endings where Papyrus, Alphys, or Mettaton take over and the goal of killing humans and preparing for war is dropped, the monsters do not revolt.
If it is possible to bring peace to the Underground in those situations, is it too farfetched to think that Asgore could eventuality convince the monsters to abandon war in a case where two royal children are killed and hope is lost, in a place where they still have their original monarch that they respect?
When we finally reach Asgore, he gives us many chances to turn back, but at no point does he seems worried about what the kingdom would think when they find out that he’s giving the human a chance to live instead of killing them. Nor does he seem to be concerned with what his kingdom may think when he offers Frisk a home after Frisk spares him. And yet despite this he still attempts to kill Frisk, which is one reason why I think his reasons for following through on killing the humans is not related to a fear of revolt.
Never once does Asgore, or anyone else, allude to revolt or mass unrest as a reason for his choices, so while it may not be easy and may take time to calm down the people, I don’t believe that this is a factor into why Asgore chooses to keep the war mentality alive.
DOES ASGORE NEED HOPE FOR THE KINGDOM?
Did Asgore kill them because he needed hope? Was he too afraid to take back what he said in fear that his kingdom would lose hope? Asgore does allude to this.
Asgore: "Truthfully...
I do not want power. I do not want to hurt anyone.
I just wanted everyone to have hope...
I cannot take this any longer."
He says he wanted everyone to have hope. And sometimes the foundation of this theory relies on the headcanon that without hope, monsters will die, because HP itself means hope. But I disagree with this theory.
(It's a book labelled Monster History Part 6.) Read it Do not
Unfortunately, monsters are not experienced with illness.
However, when monsters are about to expire of age, they lie down, immobile.
We call this state "Fallen Down."
A person who has Fallen Down will soon perish.
In a way, this confusing situation was all too familiar.
Monsters fall down because of old age according to a text that doesn’t make it into the final game. This can’t be considered canon because of that, but this is the closest explanation to what causes monsters to fall down anywhere in or outside the game.
Love, hope, compassion... This is what people say monster SOULs are made of.
But the absolute nature of "SOUL" is unknown.
After all, humans have proven their SOULs don't need these things to exist.
Here it lists hope as being a thing for monster souls, and from there we can guess that that’s where the explanation for HP lies. But look at the wording used here.
‘This is what people say’ and ‘the absolute nature of SOUL is unknown.’ This sounds more like a dig at humans rather than a reliable source of information about souls. And even if this was to be taken at face value, (which it might, after all, Asriel talks about compassion and love during and after his escapades without a soul) it does not state that HP specifically stands for hope. I don’t think this theory has any evidence beyond the fact that hope has the letters ‘h’ and ‘p’ in it.
Hope does not seem to be anymore vital to monster survival than it would be for a human.
Asgore says that he just wanted everyone to have hope, but is war the only way to achieve that? In the neutral endings, it’s true that everyone seems to struggle in order to hold on to hope.
Toriel is Queen
Sans: "but even though people are heartbroken over the king...
...and things are looking grim for our freedom...
the queen's trying her best not to let us give up hope.
so, uh, hey...
if we're not giving up down here...
don't give up wherever you are, ok?
who knows how long it will take...
but we will get out of here.
that's a promise."
Toriel Overthrown
Sans: "everyone's trying to live life like they always have...
but it's not really easy, you know?
when all of your hope has pretty much been thrown away..."
Papyrus is King
Papyrus: "DON'T TELL MY BROTHER, BUT...
DESPITE THE IMPROVEMENTS WE'VE MADE...
SOMETIMES THIS JOB IS KIND OF HARD.
SINCE THE KING WENT AWAY...
LOTS OF PEOPLE JUST WANT TO GIVE UP.
SOMETIMES, EVEN MY BEST ENCOURAGEMENT...
DOESN'T WORK."
Sans: "everyone considered a leader disappeared overnight.
it's gotten so quiet.
there's a bad feeling hanging over everyone.
like everyone's just going to die here, trapped in the dark..."
While they do struggle, at no point do they sound in danger of imminent death because of a direct loss of hope, nor does it sound like the above couldn’t also apply to humans in the same scenario. Things are tough, sometimes very tough, but with a good leader they are able to move onward. In the end, I don’t think hope was the core reason he chose to kill the humans. It was just a benefit that arose from it.  
But why would Asgore choose to give his people hope through killing? It would be more in character for him, since of course he does not want to kill, if he could find hope in a different way. If Chara could give hope, why not another child?
It wouldn’t be easy, of course, but is staying with an easy way to bring hope to his people enough justification to murder seven children rather than attempting a different way, even if it’s more difficult? This really makes Asgore comes across as weak and cruel, as even in the best possible Neutral ending with Toriel as queen, life is tough, but the kingdom still seems determined to try their best.
Asgore did not want to hurt anyone, and so he wouldn’t have done so unless he truly felt that he had no other choice. Since I don’t think revolt was an issue and a loss of hope is not a death sentence, these do not come across to me as good enough reasons to drive Asgore to do the unthinkable.
It was his fear of the surface and what he thought would be the eventual war and death that would come from breaking the barrier. Asgore killed the humans and upheld his proclamation of war because he believed in it.
I know plenty of people may say that Asgore couldn’t possibly actually want war, he’s too kind for that. He couldn’t possibly go through with it, it’s not in his nature. If he never actually intended to go through with the war, why not drop the whole thing, especially if revolt or hope aren’t the reasons he upholds it? What does he really gain from promising war if he never intended to go through with it?
WOULD ASGORE UPHOLD HIS PROMISE?
My answer is yes. Ultimately, I feel that the reason Asgore did not want to free everyone was because he was afraid of the humans. He remembers the war and both Gerson and he think that going to the surface is dangerous. But if he was given the ability to break the barrier, he cannot choose to keep everyone Underground. Asgore is too afraid to attempt peace, so if the time came, he would start a war.
Living in the Underground is not paradise.
Asgore: "After everything I have done to hurt you...
You would rather stay down here and suffer...
Than live happily on the surface?"
Scarf Mouse: "Everyone is always laughing and cracking jokes, trying to forget our modern crises...
Dreariness. Crowding. Lack of sunlight."
What makes him keep everyone down there is that the reality of an open barrier scares him more than what they go through down there. What terrible things that could happen on the surface is what drives him to do things he hates. It would be safer for the Underground for them to meet any human who fell with peace, but Asgore would rather take the risk that comes with greeting the fallen humans with violence, despite knowing how much stronger they are than monsters, because of what he thinks the surface holds for them.
Gerson: "Long ago, ASGORE and I agreed that escaping would be pointless...
Since once we left, humans would just kill us."
Asgore does not truly want to hurt anyone, yet he’s killed six. What he wants is different from what he’ll do, and this leads to what I think is a key point to Asgore’s character. His sense of duty. Look at what he says as a lost soul:
Asgore: "Forgive me for this."
Asgore: "This is my duty."
Duty is what drives him. In Asgore’s mind, war is the best path for his kingdom, so regardless of his own personal feelings about it, for them that is what he’ll do. Even if it kills him inside, and even if he will have to bear the burden forever. For a king, this is an admirable quality.
We may think that Asgore would never destroy humanity based on what we’ve learned of him in the game. If that were true, then it’s a bit strange then that those who know Asgore better than anyone else are convinced he’ll follow through with his promise.
No one should know Asgore better than Toriel, but despite all the time she has spent in the ruins to think things over, she seems to truly believe that he will do as he says.
Toriel: "ASGORE... Do not let ASGORE take your soul.
His plan cannot be allowed to succeed."
Undyne, who spends a lot of time with Asgore, notes that he probably doesn’t want to fight you, which is true.
Undyne: "It seems that you and ASGORE are fated to fight.
But knowing him...
He probably doesn't want to.
Talk to him.
I'm sure you can persuade him to let you go home."
Even though she knows that Asgore isn’t having fun with all the killing and may let you go, she still initially believes that he’ll go through with his plan.
Undyne: "With the power of seven human souls, our king...
King ASGORE Dreemurr...
...will become a god.
With that power, ASGORE can finally shatter the barrier.
He will finally take the surface back from humanity...
And give them back the suffering and pain that we have endured."
Mettaton is pretty straight forward with his views.
Mettaton: "LISTEN, DARLING. I'VE SEEN YOU FIGHT.
YOU'RE WEAK.
IF YOU CONTINUE FORWARD, ASGORE WILL TAKE YOUR SOUL.
AND WITH YOUR SOUL, ASGORE WILL DESTROY HUMANITY.
BUT IF I GET YOUR SOUL, I CAN STOP ASGORE'S PLAN!
I CAN SAVE HUMANITY FROM DESTRUCTION!"
Mettaton: "Are YOU the star?
Can you really protect humanity!?"
Mettaton: "YOU'VE PROVEN TO BE VERY STRONG.
PERHAPS... EVEN STRONG ENOUGH TO GET PAST ASGORE.
I'M SURE YOU'LL BE ABLE TO PROTECT HUMANITY."
And Sans, one of the most intuitive characters, believes that Asgore would destroy humanity.
Sans: "your actions here...
will determine the fate of the entire world.
if you refuse to fight...
asgore will take your soul and destroy humanity."
Quite frankly, Sans’ final speech here and our upcoming choice lose their punch if we go on the assumption that Asgore would never dream of actually destroying humanity. All of Toriel’s efforts and her personal exile was all for naught.  Asgore essentially paints himself into a corner and suffers for no reason. The humans are killed for no reason if the ultimate goal for their deaths was a lie all along.
After we beat Asgore, he tells us that he is through with the war. In the end it became too much for him.
Asgore: "I cannot take this any longer.
I just want to see my wife.
I just want to see my child.
Please... Young one...
This war has gone on long enough.
You have the power...
Take my soul, and leave this cursed place."
And of course, if we choose mercy he immediately tells us that he will take care of us, which is a big contrast to his actions thus far. Is this evidence that he never would have gone through with the war? I think that no, it’s not evidence for that, but instead it’s evidence that it was Frisk themselves who ended up changing his mind.
Giving him hope again that humans and monsters could live with each other, that change of mind could not have happened without Frisk. Frisk has helped the other monsters with their problems, and this was Asgore’s problem that he needed help with from Frisk.
Asgore as a lost soul is a good example of this. All the lost souls provide a look into the characters psyche before they met Frisk, and after their memories flood back it shows how Frisk has been able to help them. Undyne was against all humans until Frisk showed them that not all were bad, Sans had given up until Frisk gave him hope, Alphys thought she was on her own and that everyone would hate her until Frisk showed her that she could lean on her friends for support, and Asgore thought he was bound to his role...
Asgore: “Forgive me for this.” Asgore: “This is my duty.”  Asgore: “... “
...until Frisk gave him hope for a possible future again.
Asgore: “You are our future!”
When Asgore talks to Frisk before he kills himself he mentions it too.
Asgore: "I'm reminded of the human that fell here long ago...
You have the same feeling of hope in your eyes.
There is an ancient prophecy among our people...
One day, a savior will come from the heavens.
...I believe the one that was prophecied was you.
Somewhere in the world outside...
There must be a way to free us from our prison.
It pains me to give you this responsiblity, but...
Please. Take my soul... and seek the truth.
Ha... ha...
I'm sorry...
I couldn't give you a simple, happy ending...
But I believe your freedom...
...is what my son...
...what ASRIEL would have wanted."
Without Frisk, Asgore doesn’t gain the confidence that peace is possible, and if he doesn’t think peace is possible and would only lead to getting them killed, then war is the only answer for him.
You may ask about the Pacifist ending. Here Asgore meets Frisk for only a few seconds, never fights them and is interrupted by Toriel instead. I don’t think that ultimately it was Toriel who, in this instance, made him stop and change his mind. Toriel, and everyone else, not the least of whom included the captain of the Royal Guard, didn’t change his mind, they only supported the idea that peace was the answer, which was the idea Asgore had come to by himself because of Frisk and the past humans..
In the Lost Soul battle, Asgore believes he is bound to his duties. His memories come back because of Frisk. You tell him that you’ll save everyone, that you won’t hurt him no matter what. Your gaze reminds him of humans past. He remembers you by this, his aggression fades, and the familiarity comes rushing back. Only because of the promise and hope that Frisk and the other humans gave him, does Asgore have hope for the future, and it’s this hope that allows him to drop the war.
Was he right in fearing the surface? In the pacifist ending monsters seem to have found peace with the humans, even if Frisk is not their ambassador, so it seems that his fears were in some way unfounded. That being said, his hesitancy was not a bad thing, considering the strength of humans and how allowing time for both sides to calm down was a good thing, but his fears would have led to an unnecessary war.
Asgore compromised his morals, while Toriel could not see hers bend. Toriel ultimately failed in trying to stop the humans before they reached Asgore and accomplished nothing in the Ruins, and while the six souls Asgore collected were useful, in the end his dogma of war wasn’t actually needed.
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phooll123 · 7 years ago
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Taking Green to the Grave
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1. Family Ances-tree? - Honor your loved one by growing a tree in his or her memory in a plant-able urn. This green option includes an urn made from recycled plant materials, a soil additive designed to counterbalance the natural properties of cremated remains to make the planting environment suitable for tree growth, aged wood chips and a tree seedling of choice. Photo Credit: The Living Urn
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2.Turn Over a New Leaf - Similar to the tree urns, these planters are available with a variety of indoor plants like flowers and bonsai trees. Once cremated remains are placed in the planter, the bonsai plant becomes a peaceful reminder of the legacy left by your loved one. Photo Credit: Bonsai Urn
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3. Go with the Flow - Himalayan salt urns are a biodegradable way to honor a loved one. These urns float and dissolve within four hours of being placed in the water. All urns are handcrafted, and because they are made of natural materials, each one is unique in color and finish. Photo Credit: Passages International
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4. All-Natural - Interring a body in a green cemetery is perhaps the most eco-friendly option available. People who choose this method are not embalmed (or if they are, it is with a natural, formaldehyde-free fluid). Their bodies are either wrapped in a shroud or placed in a biodegradable casket made of wood or other sustainable materials, such as willow, seagrass or bamboo. Photo Credit: Passages International
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5. Water Works - An environmentally-friendly alternative to flame-based cremation, alkaline hydrolysis is a water-based process that is gaining popularity in the states that allow it. The process uses water and potassium hydroxide to reduce the body to its basic element of bone ash, which is then returned to the family much like cremated remains following cremation. Photo Credit: Bio-Response Solutions
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6. Rebuilding Reefs - More than just an everlasting memorial, these reef domes help rebuild damaged and dying coral reefs around the world. Cremated remains are incorporated into an environmentally-safe cement mixture to create an artificial reef formation. Reef domes can be personalized during the casting process. Photo Credit: Memorial Reefs International
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7. Sprout a New Life - The Infinity Burial Suit is embroidered with thread infused with mushroom spores. These spores sprout after burial and aid with decomposition by actively breaking down and expelling toxins from the soil. They are also available in pod form for animals.
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8. Gently Down the Stream - Representing good health and a long life, these paper mache turtle urns hold cremated remains. The urns are designed to float in water until they break down, gently scattering a loved one's cremated remains in the water. Best of all, the turtle urns are constructed by hand of recycled paper and non-toxic glues, giving them a one-of-a-kind appearance. Photo Credit: Passages International
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9. Up, Up and Away - Avoid the burial process completely and set your loved one's cremated remains adrift in the stratosphere. Cremated remains are sent up into the air in high-altitude balloons and released. Eventually, the remains will return slowly to earth in the form of snow or rain. Photo Credit: Mesoloft
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10. Fit for a Queen (or King) - Whether or not you are royalty, wool coffins are a way to go out in style. Choose a coffin crafted from the same 100-percent British wool that British royalty and military have worn for more than 230 years. Photo Credit: Natural Legacy
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(BPT) - As Americans become increasingly dedicated to reducing their carbon footprint, people are exploring ways to be green in life, as well as after death. Last year, the National Funeral Directors Association (NFDA) reported in its Consumer Preferences and Awareness Study that more than 50 percent of Americans are interested in exploring green funeral options. When it comes to taking green to the grave, funeral directors are memorialization experts and can help loved ones find natural funeral and burial options to fit any budget and preference, whether it be placing cremated remains in a biodegradable urn or burying a loved one in a wicker casket in a natural cemetery. The sky is the limit when it comes to being environmentally friendly, but here are 10 popular green burial options. For more information on green funeral options, visit RememebringALife.com.This new website provides resources for funeral pre-planning, information on green burial options and a useful tool to help locate a nearby funeral professional.
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nepal123 · 8 years ago
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Asian funerals go green, high-tech at Hong Kong trade fair
Asian funerals go green, high-tech at Hong Kong trade fair
Wicker and seagrass coffins are displayed at the Asia Funeral and Cemetery Expo & Conference in Hong Kong, on Thursday, May 18, 2017. Photo: AP HONG KONG: Death is inevitable but it doesn’t have to be bad for the environment. Caskets made of paper and wicker coffins on display at a recent Hong Kong funeral industry trade highlighted a trend toward “green burials” in an industry booming as Asia’s…
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phoenixnestcoffins · 10 months ago
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