Everybody’s read an obituary from time to time. They generally tell who died and what family the person left behind. Despite how unloving and fractious most families are, most death notices refer to “loving” spouses and children. They’re not the most honest accounts of life.
For one man in a suburb of Denver, that wasn’t good enough. When Michael Blanchard died, he wanted something a bit more truthful to leave behind, so he wrote his own death notice, saying, “Weary of reading obituaries noting someone’s courageous battle with death, Mike wanted it known that he died as a result of being stubborn, refusing to follow doctors’ orders and raising hell for more than six decades. He enjoyed booze, guns, cars and younger women until the day he died.”
The death notice — complete with a notation about which relative can “kiss his butt” — has become a viral sensation since it was published in the Denver Post nearly two weeks ago. (A Denver television station even did a story about the obit.) Here’s the complete text:

Preview of 2012? Voter landslide in Colorado against new school taxes
The Fourth Amendment? Hmmmm. No, we’ve never heard of that one
Knowing right choice years later is useless without time machine
Pearl Harbor: Simple sneak attack or culmination of FDR’s plan for war?
When voters insist on lies, politicians follow their incentives and lie
Conservatives don’t understand liberal groups — and vice versa
The Alien Observer: The blind are leading the blind
I’ll make fun of your Super Bowl, but you can’t make fun of my Spock ears