Falconer Funeral Homes

Falconer Funeral Homes Providing funeral, memorial, cremation and burial services to Goderich, Clinton, Blyth and surrounding communities since 1902.

The staff and their families of Falconer Funeral Homes sadly share the news of the death of our valued friend and former...
12/31/2025

The staff and their families of Falconer Funeral Homes sadly share the news of the death of our valued friend and former colleague, Kenneth Armstrong. Nobody drove the hearse like Ken, our retired OPP man!
Our condolences and thoughts are with Ken’s wife, Marlene and all of their family.

Share Memories of William & Support the Armstrong Family

The family announces a public Celebration of Life Service on Saturday, November 15th from 1:00 to 3:00 pm for the late J...
11/08/2025

The family announces a public Celebration of Life Service on Saturday, November 15th from 1:00 to 3:00 pm for the late Jerry Sabo. It will be beld at the Berea-by-the-Water Lutheran Church, 326 Gibbons Street in Goderich Jerry was a wonderful man. We at Falconer Funeral Homes had the great privilege to know and to work with Jerry. Condolences to his family.

View Jerry Sabo's complete obituary, share memories, and explore 9 tribute posts from the community.

07/03/2025

On July 3rd, we recognize National Bereaved Parents Day, a day to honour and hold space for all parents who have experienced the heartbreaking loss of a child, at any age or stage. Grief has no timeline, and the love for a child never fades. Today, and every day, we extend our compassion and solidarity to bereaved parents and caregivers. ❤️

06/28/2025
06/05/2025

With our condolences to the Van Edmond family and friends.

Grief is the price of love. The grief journey is different for each of us that walks it. Recently, in my work as both a ...
03/22/2025

Grief is the price of love. The grief journey is different for each of us that walks it. Recently, in my work as both a Funeral Director and as a Funeral Celebrant, I have had more than a number of conversations with those I’m working with, concerned that friends or family are telling them or expressing concern that they’re “not over their loss yet.”
So while I never like to frighten or discourage someone in grief, the truth, from the late great Elisabeth Kübler-Ross is this: (so go gently)

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18mVJKUTxc/?mibextid=wwXIfr
02/15/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18mVJKUTxc/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Thank you to Mark Rushton of Falconer Funeral Homes for dropping off a donation from Guaranteed Funeral Deposits of Canada. Mark filled in a questionnaire from GFD and won a donation to a charity of his choice. We are thankful that he chose Huron Hospice.
Thank you Mark and thank you Guaranteed Funeral Deposits of Canada.

It’s   and we wanted to share these timely pearls of wisdom from Donna Ashworth.This Christmas season, we remember all t...
12/03/2024

It’s and we wanted to share these timely pearls of wisdom from Donna Ashworth.
This Christmas season, we remember all those who grieve. Go easy on yourself and others, people are grieving here.

With the permission of Rosemary’s family, Falconer Funeral Homes shares her obituary. She was a wonderful person and val...
09/20/2024

With the permission of Rosemary’s family, Falconer Funeral Homes shares her obituary. She was a wonderful person and valued volunteer and member of Maple Leaf Chapter.

Share Memories of Rosemary & Support the Carson-Rees Family

“Grief Groceries” I’m a veteran funeral director. I’ve never heard it explained better. I’m not crying, you are. CRYING!...
08/21/2024

“Grief Groceries”
I’m a veteran funeral director. I’ve never heard it explained better. I’m not crying, you are.

CRYING! This hits hard! People don't realize how much this helps!

Grief Groceries!
I saw this letter today- as a funeral directors son, I have been around this for years. This is some of the best advice I have ever seen.

“Hey there, Thanks for writing. I’m really glad your friend has you in her life.

I get it. Grief is a funny thing. It’s the time in our life when we most need help, and also the time when asking for help is so hard. Not because we are ashamed to ask for help, although that happens sometimes too. But mostly because our brain just sort of shuts down.

When my Dad died, I looked functional. But I wasn’t OK. Not at all. And when the news got out, the ton of people flooding me with calls, texts, and DM’s was overwhelming. I really couldn’t function. I sat on the swing in our yard and just stared into space. People called and asked what they could do to help. I had no idea.

“Well, anything you need at all, let me know, OK?”

“OK”.

They hung up. I stared into space some more.

I had no idea what to do. What I needed. I didn’t even know what to ask for.

Then a friend sent a text. This friend had met Dad once but didn’t really know him. But still, she knew I was hurting. I saw who it was and almost put the phone down without reading the text, but I saw the message and it stopped me:

Will you be home at 8:30 tonight?

What’s weird is this friend lives 12 hours away from me.

Yes, I replied.

“K.”

10 minutes later, she said, “Instacart will be there at 8:30. Open the door for them.”

“What?”

“Grief Groceries.!!”

When Instacart showed up, they put two large bags of groceries on my porch. Frozen pizzas. Ice cream. Oreo cookies. Tinned soup. Stouffer’s lasagna. A gallon of milk. Like that. Things I could heat up if I needed a meal, or pig out on if I needed fat and sugar. Sometimes, you just need to eat half a box of Oreos.

Notice she didn’t ask if I needed any food. I would have said no. She just asked if I would be home.

Grief groceries.

Another friend, who lives out of town, asked Renee to name a restaurant near our house where we like to eat. There is a local chain near our house that is sort of a deli. When we eat supper there, we spend about $25. Renee told her the name of the place.

An hour later, there was a gift card in my inbox for $250. Yes, that is a lot of money, and I understand not everyone can do that. But the wonderful thing was that because it was enough for multiple meals, we didn’t try to save it for “the right time”. We ate there that night, and take out from there several times a week for the next month on nights when I just didn’t have the spoons to cook.

Both of those gift-givers knew something I didn’t know – that when you are grieving, you don’t want to make decisions. No, that’s not quite it: You can’t make decisions. You hit decision fatigue really fast.

So, I guess what I’m saying is, don’t ask grieving people to make big choices or decisions. “How can I help” is a big choice. But “Can I take the kids this afternoon so you can have some time to yourself” is a much smaller one. “Will you be home tonight?” is a small choice. “What restaurant do you like” is a small decision. Just showing up to cut their grass because you noticed it needed cutting is loads better than asking, “Do you want me to cut the grass?” Or, “I’m going to Target. What can I get you while I’m there?” is better than “Can I run any errands for you?”

It won’t always be like this. If you stick around, eventually they will surface and ways to be helpful will make themselves known. But in the first few days, especially, it helps to remove as many decisions from their plate as you can!”

Original Words from: Hugh Hollowell Jr.

Writing a service for an upcoming celebration of life and I am always researching and looking for writings, verses and t...
05/18/2024

Writing a service for an upcoming celebration of life and I am always researching and looking for writings, verses and thoughts to aid, comfort, share and even inform grieving families and friends. Just came across this gem from the great Joan Didion that made me stop and ponder. This one is too poignant, too good not to share. Everyone who’s ever experienced it, knows when it comes to the grief of loss, there are no truer words.

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