Meghan Kenny joins the family firm

SHARON — Meghan Kenny hates “Six Feet Under,” the HBO series about a family funeral home business. She thinks it’s a completely inaccurate portrayal of what it’s like to grow up in a funeral home. Having grown up in her family’s funeral home, she is uniquely qualified to have an opinion on this matter. “That show makes living in a funeral home seem so awful,” she said. “It was always fun for me and my siblings.”The 24-year-old Sharon native has spent her life among the dead, so to speak. Until she left home to attend Mount Ida College in Newtown, Mass., she had always lived at the Kenny Funeral Home in Sharon; now she lives at the branch in Norfolk. Growing up, Kenny watched her father, Brian, help grieving families plan memorial services for their loved ones. He always made an effort to develop a personal relationship with the family, to understand what was so special about the person who had passed away. But most of all, Kenny admired her father’s ability to make people feel comfortable.“I remember seeing him bring out the best in a family in the worst situations,” she said. And then she would also watch her father embalm the bodies. But Kenny grew to understand embalming as an art, giving her an appreciation for the meticulous work that goes into preparing a body for display in an open casket. “My dad says that you have to pretend that the person is sleeping, and you just tell yourself that you’re performing surgery,” she said. “And the goal is always to make people look like they did when they were alive — nothing overly made-up.”Kenny had never exactly planned on getting involved in the family business; in fact, she applied to several fashion institutes after high school, unsure of what she wanted to do for a career. But at some point, it hit her that none of her siblings were going to step in and take over after her father retired, and she knew that she didn’t want to see the business sold to a big corporation. “This business has been in our family for four generations, over 100 years,” she said. “In each generation, there’s always one person that carries it on. My great-grandfather started it, and then my grandfather took it after him, and then my father took it from his father. None of my grandfather’s siblings, my father’s siblings or my siblings had any interest. So it seemed like I was going to be the one from my generation to step in. No one ever put any pressure on me.” Once Kenny decided that she would be the one to continue the family tradition, she went to Mount Ida College to pursue a degree in mortuary science. Along the way, she discovered that she truly enjoyed the work, and she even picked up a major in early childhood development to balance things out. And she also met the young man who is now her fiancé, Nick Plouffe. The way Kenny describes the beginning of their relationship, it wasn’t exactly a smooth start. “My decision to become a funeral home director was a huge challenge for our relationship at first,” she said. “He’s probably more afraid of death than anyone I’ve ever met. He couldn’t fall asleep at my house because he could only think about the bodies in the basement.” Gradually, he became acclimated to the life of a funeral home director, and he got over his fear of bodies in the basement. Now, Kenny says that he would even want to be a funeral home director himself, if it weren’t for the embalming thing. Currently, Kenny is working toward her own embalming license, which she plans to have completed by the beginning of 2014, and she is working part-time at The Hotchkiss School’s preschool. She hopes to someday co-own the funeral home with her father for a few years before taking it over outright when he retires. But as competent and experienced as she is at the tender age of 24, she still has moments when the reality of the job sets in. “I’m always scared and a little emotional when we meet a family who lost someone young unexpectedly,” she said. “But I can tell that as soon as we start talking to them, learning about the person, helping them decide how best to commemorate that person’s life, they start to get comfortable. And then I become more comfortable, too.”Perhaps it’s partly her innate maturity and partly her upbringing. “I definitely got my old soul from growing up in the funeral home business,” she said. But Kenny is not afraid of death. “A lot of people don’t like the subject of death, and they don’t want to talk about it,” she said. “But it’s just another part of life, and helping people grieve and heal is what this job is all about. That’s one of the most important things you can do for someone.”

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