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Ghost story 4U: "I’ll eat Mum for Christmas": Grieving daughter plans to sprinkle her mother’s ASHES on her turkey dinner ‘to feel closer to her’ months after her death
Sunday, December 17, 2017
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Debra Parson, 41, mother of two kids, is eating spoonfuls of her mom Doreen's ashes with fried turkey dinner to celebrate Christmas 2017 and Holiday season. |
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5187635/Kent-woman-eat-mothers-ashes-Xmas-dinner.html?ito=social-facebook
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‘I’ll eat Mum for Christmas’: Grieving daughter plans to sprinkle her mother’s ASHES on her turkey dinner ‘to feel closer to her’ months after her death
- Debra Parsons, 41, will season Christmas dinner with mother Doreen's ashes
- Mother-of-two, from Folkestone, Kent, eats spoonfuls of her remains every day
- She said: 'People might think I'm mad...I feel she can live on by being inside me'
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5187635/Kent-woman-eat-mothers-ashes-Xmas-dinner.html#ixzz51Xyn9AnI
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PUBLISHED: 11:01 EST, 17 December 2017 | UPDATED: 12:11 EST, 17 December 2017
A grieving woman plans to eat her mother for Christmas dinner this year - by seasoning the meal with her ashes.
Debra Parsons, 41, will sprinkle the remains of mother Doreen Brown on the turkey and Christmas pudding before enjoying the festive feast.
The mother-of-two, from Folkestone, Kent, has felt the urge to consume the ashes since Doreen died in May and has been eating small spoonfuls of the dust each day to 'help her cope'.
Debra Parsons, 41, will sprinkle the remains of mother Doreen Brown, who died suddenly last December, on the turkey and Christmas pudding before enjoying the festive feast
The mother-of-two, from Folkestone, Kent, has felt the urge to consume the ashes since Doreen died in May and has been eating small spoonfuls of the dust each day to 'help her cope'
Doreen's ashes won't be scattered at a sentimental location... instead they'll be sprinkled on Debra's Christmas dinner
She was left distraught when she died earlier in the year, and the festive period also marks the anniversary of the death of her son who was born prematurely in 1996.
Debra says as Christmas gets closer the cravings to eat the ashes become stronger.
'It is the only thing that will get me through my first Christmas without mum,' Debra told the Mirror.
'People might think I'm mad or that it's not a very respectful thing to do but I just can't stop myself.
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Hạnh Dương
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