You won’t be able to ignore it.
A mortuary technician has shocked many people by revealing what happens to your organs after you die.
“During a post-mortem examination, people think your organs are put back where nature intended,” says Hayley, a technician who goes there @themortuarytech on TikTokFound out online. “They’re not.”
Hayley’s job as a mortician involves preparing body parts and entire bodies for embalming, burial or cremation at the funeral home.
In a clip of his recent appearance podcast interviewParts Pro describes in depth what morticians do to you.
“They are all put into a clinical bag inside your torso, your chest cavity and your stomach/abdomen, and you are sewn back up. So your mind is not in your mind,” she added.
Hayley explained that organs are not put back in their original place because once a part is cut off, you cannot put it back.
The mortuary employee’s explanation puzzled the podcast hosts.
“Oh my god. [That] I was actually a little nervous,” Billie revealed. “Just thrown away like a goodie bag.”
This revelation left many people online horrified, wishing they had not known.
“I wish I didn’t know this,” one man admitted.
“Looks like I took a very wrong turn somewhere on my TikTok journey,” one viewer commented.
Another joked, “Whoever digs us up in 3,000 years will question everything.”
What actually happens to bodies after we die has been in the news recently, with a major NYC funeral home chain facing fines and possible license revocation following a New York State Health Department investigation. The Post first reported,
Bronx-based RG Ortiz Funeral Homes is also accused of improperly caring for a body that reportedly languished inside a viewing room for eight days, according to an attorney who sued the company on behalf of a devastated family .
“Eight days in the viewing room – unrefrigerated and without contamination,” attorney Phil Rizzuto told The Post. “I can’t imagine how. There must be body odor, no?”
And this week, the owners of a Colorado funeral home pleaded guilty to corpse abuse After being accused of storing 190 bodies inside a room temperature building and discarding dried concrete as ashes of loved ones, the Associated Press reported.