I recently landed in Santa Fe, looking forward to meeting the stones. Not the aging but somehow still performing “Rolling Stones,” but the rare gray and robin’s egg blue stones that were once the cremains of Mark Cessarich, a 6’1, 64-year-old 2nd grade teacher-turned-economist, who passed away in July from a heart attack and diabetes complications. His ashes were delivered by his daughter and son to Parting Stone, a company helping define the post-cremation space — a category in the funeral industry that’s become unexpectedly popular and plentiful.
A weather balloon from the company Mesoloft — which carries cremation remains out into Earth’s lower atmosphere. Mesoloft
Parting Stone’s 8,000-square-foot, open space warehouse is based in southern Santa Fe. When I visited, 520 deceased people and pets were waiting for a space to open up on the production floor. Over the next 10 to 14 weeks, they would go from ashes in a zippered plastic bag, housed in individualized cubbies, to, depending upon your bone density and skeletal size, 40-80 solidified, 1-to-3-inch, rounded, polished stones — all for $2,500. These claspable objects can easily fit in your pocket or bag, be divided out to family and friends, or purposely left in places that hold significant meaning to that person, or you.
Support authors and subscribe to content
This is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.