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Started By
Message
KNOCK KNOCK. Who’s there? A live person in a coffin brought in to be cremated.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:07 am
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:07 am
quote:
A woman in Thailand shocked temple staff when she started moving in her coffin after being brought in for cremation. Wat Rat Prakhong Tham, a Buddhist temple in the province of Nonthaburi on the outskirts of Bangkok, posted a video on its Facebook page, showing a woman lying in a white coffin in the back of a pick-up truck, slightly moving her arms and head, leaving temple staff bewildered.
quote:
He said they heard a faint knock coming from the coffin. “I was a bit surprised, so I asked them to open the coffin, and everyone was startled,” he said. “I saw her opening her eyes slightly and knocking on the side of the coffin. She must have been knocking for quite some time.”
quote:
According to Pairat, the brother said his sister had been bedridden for about two years, when her health deteriorated and she became unresponsive, appearing to stop breathing two days ago. The brother then placed her in a coffin and made the 300-mile journey to a hospital in Bangkok, to which the woman had previously expressed a wish to donate her organs.
The hospital refused to accept the brother’s offer as he didn’t have an official death certificate, Pairat said. His temple offers a free cremation service, which is why the brother approached them on Sunday, but was also refused due to the missing document.
LINK
X Video
This post was edited on 11/24/25 at 9:20 am
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:08 am to LSUTANGERINE
Ho Lee Fuk
Shi Not Ded
Shi Not Ded
This post was edited on 11/24/25 at 9:09 am
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:11 am to LSUTANGERINE
That's nightmare fuel.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:19 am to SallysHuman
I found the video and linked it
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:28 am to LSUTANGERINE
literally a dead ringer
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:30 am to TigerintheNO
Not exactly a proper burial.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:30 am to LSUTANGERINE
quote:
I found the video and linked it
Thankfully that was not graphic.. was nervous to click on it.
I'm glad they noticed before cremating her. Although considering how near to happening it was, I do wonder how many other people weren't quite dead yet before getting burnt.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:34 am to LSUTANGERINE
This is part of the reason you have a coroner who signs a death certificate.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:35 am to LSUTANGERINE
quote:
KNOCK KNOCK. Who’s there? A live person in a coffin brought in to be cremated.
Fantastic job on the thread title, Tangerine.

Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:39 am to LSUTANGERINE
This was pretty common 200-300 years ago.
In fact our founding father George Washington was completely paranoid and freaked out about being buried alive because of the number of coffins that, when brought up, found scratching on the insides from people who were buried alive and were clawing to get out.
Link -
New England Historical Society
When Fears of Premature Burial Stalked the Land
George Washington famously feared premature burial. While on his deathbed in 1799, he instructed his personal secretary Tobias Lear to make sure he was dead before he was buried:
“Have me decently buried; and do not let my body be put into the vault in less than three days after I am dead.”
Washington ushered in an era of taphophobia, or fear of premature burial. During the 19th century, popular books and magazines promoted the idea that many people were buried alive. They reported tales of bloody shrouds, gnawed fingers and horribly contorted bodies inside their coffins.
During the 19th century a man named C.A. Read of Newton, Mass., left in his will $500 for his physician to cut off his head. The reason? To prevent the horror of a premature burial.
During the 1800s, doctors had few ways to certify death short of waiting for a body to decay. “Less than 150 years ago many medical practitioners freely admitted to being uncertain whether their patients were dead or alive,” wrote Jan Bondeson in Buried Alive: The Terrifying History of Our Most Primal Fear.
.’
The fear of premature burial peaked in the mid-19th century, wrote Bondesen. It centered in Massachusetts and New Jersey. In Boston, publishers churned out books and stories of children restored to life after apparently drowning, women giving birth in their coffins and bodies exhumed with signs of struggle to escape their graves.
People began to invent devices to counter their possible premature burial. Inventors won patents for safety or security coffins.
One inventor won a patent for a safety coffin that allowed the buried person to move feathers or ring a bell to notify above-grounders of his premature burial. Another patented coffin featured an air tube and a signal device that sent up a red flag when hit with the head of the prematurely buried victim.
In fact our founding father George Washington was completely paranoid and freaked out about being buried alive because of the number of coffins that, when brought up, found scratching on the insides from people who were buried alive and were clawing to get out.
Link -
New England Historical Society
When Fears of Premature Burial Stalked the Land
George Washington famously feared premature burial. While on his deathbed in 1799, he instructed his personal secretary Tobias Lear to make sure he was dead before he was buried:
“Have me decently buried; and do not let my body be put into the vault in less than three days after I am dead.”
Washington ushered in an era of taphophobia, or fear of premature burial. During the 19th century, popular books and magazines promoted the idea that many people were buried alive. They reported tales of bloody shrouds, gnawed fingers and horribly contorted bodies inside their coffins.
During the 19th century a man named C.A. Read of Newton, Mass., left in his will $500 for his physician to cut off his head. The reason? To prevent the horror of a premature burial.
During the 1800s, doctors had few ways to certify death short of waiting for a body to decay. “Less than 150 years ago many medical practitioners freely admitted to being uncertain whether their patients were dead or alive,” wrote Jan Bondeson in Buried Alive: The Terrifying History of Our Most Primal Fear.
.’
The fear of premature burial peaked in the mid-19th century, wrote Bondesen. It centered in Massachusetts and New Jersey. In Boston, publishers churned out books and stories of children restored to life after apparently drowning, women giving birth in their coffins and bodies exhumed with signs of struggle to escape their graves.
People began to invent devices to counter their possible premature burial. Inventors won patents for safety or security coffins.
One inventor won a patent for a safety coffin that allowed the buried person to move feathers or ring a bell to notify above-grounders of his premature burial. Another patented coffin featured an air tube and a signal device that sent up a red flag when hit with the head of the prematurely buried victim.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:42 am to LSUTANGERINE
Shut up, crybaby, she's practically dead. Stop being such nerd.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:42 am to SallysHuman
quote:
I do wonder how many other people weren't quite dead yet before getting burnt.
i can almost guarantee you that these types of things, along with people being buried alive, happens a lot in the non-Western world.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:48 am to VolsOut4Harambe
quote:
Ho Lee Fuk
Shi Not Ded
quote:
VolsOut4Harambe

Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:50 am to LSUTANGERINE
quote:
the brother said his sister had been bedridden for about two years, when her health deteriorated and she became unresponsive, appearing to stop breathing two days ago

Posted on 11/24/25 at 9:58 am to LSUTANGERINE
This used to happen a lot.
Before refrigeration, if you went into a coma when it was hot outside, they could easily mistakenly think you were dead. (Change in body temperature was the surest way to know) There was an uproar when a cemetery was relocated and they were finding fingernail scratches on the inside lid of coffins.
The solution was to run a string down to the coffin during burial. One side was for you to pull on if you woke up. The other side was attached to a bell.
Before refrigeration, if you went into a coma when it was hot outside, they could easily mistakenly think you were dead. (Change in body temperature was the surest way to know) There was an uproar when a cemetery was relocated and they were finding fingernail scratches on the inside lid of coffins.
The solution was to run a string down to the coffin during burial. One side was for you to pull on if you woke up. The other side was attached to a bell.
Posted on 11/24/25 at 10:28 am to LSUTANGERINE
Monty Python jokes incoming
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