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Back to the Land (Literally)
Frederick 鈥淔ritz鈥 Weresch planned on becoming a math teacher or a famous actor. He was empathetic and diplomatic, known to gently encourage the shy students to speak up in class. The high school senior loved music, learned the piano as a child, and had recently taught himself to play guitar.
He also, according to his friends, had talked about wanting to be composted after he died. His parents, Eileen and Wes Weresch, wanted this for themselves, too. They just never imagined they鈥檇 be carrying out Fritz鈥檚 wishes before their own.
Fritz, 18, was found unconscious on Nov. 30, 2022. He died six days later from unknown but natural causes, according to his family,
His parents are still wading through the thick of mourning. 鈥淕rief brain鈥 is making it hard to remember certain details about the months since Fritz鈥檚 death, Eileen says. But one thing she and her husband feel good and confident about was their decision to have Fritz鈥檚 body undergo human composting, also known as 鈥渘atural organic reduction鈥 or 鈥渢erramation.鈥
Human composting is the process of turning human remains into nutrient-rich soil. It鈥檚 an option that avoids the environmental pitfalls of more mainstream practices: Cremation releases carbon dioxide and , and casket burial typically involves hazardous embalming chemicals and nonbiodegradable materials.
It鈥檚 a practice some say could shift the United States鈥 industry. More than 52% of Americans are interested in 鈥済reen burial,鈥 according to a from the National Funeral Directors Association (NFDA).
Six states have human composting in the past four years. Washington state, where the Wereschs live, was the first, the process in 2019.
鈥淭here鈥檚 this romanticism to it,鈥 says Haley Morris, a spokesperson with , a human composting facility in Auburn, Washington. 鈥淪o many people want to turn into a tree.鈥 But at the root of this romantic idea is something that鈥檚 increasingly possible, Morris explains: 鈥淔or your final act to do good for the Earth.鈥
When Fritz died, Eileen and Wes approached Return Home, a Seattle-based company, to care for his remains and host a laying-in ceremony. His body was placed in a large, white, reusable vessel on a bed of organic materials鈥攕traw, alfalfa, and wood chips. Loved ones added flowers and notes to the mix. Fritz鈥檚 best friend cut off his long, curly black hair to lay with Fritz, prompting other attendees to leave locks of their hair as well.
鈥淲e got to be there and be part of the process,鈥 Eileen says. 鈥淥ur culture has made dead bodies icky or scary, and that鈥檚 not the case.鈥 She says something doesn鈥檛 feel right about seeing an embalmed body. 鈥淏ut [Fritz鈥檚] body felt so right. You could hold his hand, and it felt like holding his hand.鈥
With Eileen鈥檚 permission, Return Home captured and shared a video of the ceremony to , where it has more than 600,000 followers.
From a financial perspective, human composting typically costs less than casket burial and more than cremation.
鈥淭he first and most important thing we need to do is win over hearts and minds,鈥 says Micah Truman, the founder of Return Home. He says one way to do that has been to normalize and provide explanations on human composting via social media.
Human composting, or, as Return Home calls it, 鈥渢erramation,鈥 is typically an 8-to-12-week process, depending on the provider. Once a body has arrived at a human composting facility, they鈥檙e placed in a reusable vessel. Some providers, like Return Home, offer funeral services or a 鈥渓aying-in鈥 ceremony, after which the vessel is sealed and naturally occurring microbes begin to decompose the body. Rotating the vessel along with careful control of temperature and moisture levels also help the process along. Details vary across providers, including how bones are handled. At Return Home, they鈥檙e removed after one month, reduced to tiny shards, and returned to the vessel to continue decomposing.
The resulting soil, about 1 cubic yard, can be used to plant trees, spread in gardens, or saved however the family sees fit. Some families opt to donate soil to a nature preserve or land restoration project, Morris says, adding that Earth Funeral owns 5 acres on the Olympic Peninsula where it sends donated soil.
Until recently, most Americans in caskets. Casket burial typically involves embalming the body with chemicals, including formaldehyde, menthol, phenol, and glycerin. Every year in the U.S., go into the ground with embalmed bodies, according to the Green Burial Project. Formaldehyde is listed as a by the Environmental Protection Agency, and according to a study by the , morticians have a significantly higher rate of myeloid leukemia.
In addition to toxic chemicals, casket burial uses an abundance of materials鈥攃oncrete, wood, steel鈥攆or a single purpose, and they are then left in the ground. Land usage is another concern. Cemeteries use up land that might otherwise offer natural habitat to wild animals or housing for humans, covering those acres with monoculture lawns treated with petrochemicals. The space to do this, especially near population-dense cities, is becoming scarce. A traditional funeral with a casket burial is also expensive. The median cost in , according to NFDA.
Today, slightly more Americans opt for cremation, a cheaper and less land-intensive option than burial, but one with its own problems. The impact of burning corpses on air quality made headlines in 2020 when Los Angeles County was forced to on the number of cremations due to a backlog of bodies from the coronavirus pandemic. Those limits exist because cremation releases , including particulate matter. Most of these are filtered out by post-treatment systems, but cremation still emits about 573 pounds of carbon dioxide鈥攖he equivalent of a 500-mile car journey鈥攑er corpse.
From a financial perspective, human composting typically costs less than casket burial and more than cremation. Return Home鈥檚 standard pricing is .
Eileen Weresch first heard about human composting on an NPR segment back in 2019. She researched the process and, that night, brought it up over chicken fajitas with her family.
鈥淚 was fascinated,鈥 says Eileen. 鈥淲e talked about how it鈥檚 instead of carbon emitting; how it鈥檚 going back to our roots.鈥 And so it was decided: Eileen and Wes wished to undergo human composting when they died. Eileen recalls that Fritz 鈥渨as super into it, too.鈥
Fritz was an organ donor. While Wes and Eileen held vigil during their son鈥檚 final days on life support, they heard from several of Fritz鈥檚 friends. They wanted Fritz鈥檚 parents to know he had told them he wanted his body to be composted when he died. Those friends, along with hundreds of classmates and loved ones, lined the halls of the hospital for when Fritz was wheeled to the operating room where his organs were prepared for donation.
鈥淚 believe that in the future, medical science will prove that at least one aspect of what we call 鈥榣ove鈥 resides in our physical bodies and ourselves,鈥 Eileen told those who had gathered to say goodbye. After Fritz died, his body was transported to Return Home.
Truman, the founder of , was an investor when he first heard about human composting. He鈥檇 been looking for a new focus in life. 鈥淚鈥檇 come to the conclusion that infinite growth in a finite world is madness,鈥 he says. He wanted to build a company where 鈥渢he bigger it gets, the better the world gets.鈥
After first hearing about human composting, he couldn鈥檛 stop thinking about it. At first, it struck him as odd. But the more he talked to people who loved the idea of becoming soil after death, the better he understood the appeal. 鈥淟ove it or hate it,鈥 he says, 鈥渢his idea will live in your head rent-free. I just had to do it.鈥 He opened Return Home in June of 2021.
Rob Goff, executive director of the Washington State Funeral Directors Association, says they receive calls from all over the world, from people who want to know more about human composting, which is estimated to become a . Traditional funeral homes in Washington are responding to this demand, many of which have added human composting as a line item, working with providers to transport bodies to their facilities.
Human composting as practiced by startups like Return Home isn鈥檛 the only way to lessen the environmental burden of death care, says Carlton Basmajian, urban planner and author of . The terramation process is best understood as an alternative to cremation because the body is broken down in a facility and the family is given the remains at the end of the process. He says he sees more promise in so-called 鈥渘atural鈥 or 鈥済reen鈥 burials, which entails designating land for the burial of bodies without chemicals or coffins. (Many of these sites, including one Eileen approached, only allow for burials during warmer months when the soil is soft.)
鈥淸Natural burial] has the potential to allow us to preserve and rehabilitate larger areas of land,鈥 says Basmajian.
Truman says he believes the process at Return Home gives families more time to grieve, compared with the long-standing traditions of the funeral industry. With human composting, families can visit their loved one鈥檚 vessel throughout decomposition. They can call and check in on how the process is going. The traditional funeral industry, Truman says, has turned grieving into a 48-hour process, but many find that insufficient. 鈥淲e hurt, and we do it for a long time.鈥
In February, more than two months after Fritz died, Eileen received a call notifying her that Fritz鈥檚 body had completed its transformation into soil. She and her husband are now making plans to distribute his remains to loved ones and build a memorial garden in his honor.
This story was originally co-published by and , an editorially independent, nonprofit news service covering climate change. Follow .
Britany Robinson
is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Oregon. She covers climate change and solutions for a more sustainable future.
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