Guardian Funeralcare

Guardian Funeralcare We've served families over the generations, providing comfort and care to families need it the most When it matters most. It is never easy.

Guardian Funerals is an independent family run funeral service, based in Shipley, serving families in Shipley, Bradford, Leeds and Harrogate. We provide a friendly, caring and professional service for bereaved families. Losing a loved one is one of the most difficult situations that we will face in our lives. Here at Guardian we will guide you through step by step. Our promise is that we will make

it as simple as possible. All you need to do is call. We also believe that Funerals don’t have to be expensive. Guardian operates an Ethical Pricing Policy, which means we can give your loved one the Funeral that you want, for a price that is affordable. Unlike some funeral directors, we are proud to be totally independent, meaning we can tailor our
services exactly to your requirements, whatever they may be. Traditional Church service to completely non-religious, cremation, burial or green burial we are able to advise on all aspects of your loved one’s service and make all the necessary arrangements. We are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to provide help or advice when it is needed, without obligation. Whenever you call, day or night, you will speak directly to a member of our family who will be happy to assist you.


- Service with class
- Traditional Funeral Services
- Cremation Services
- Affordable Prices
- Pre-paid Funerals
- Available 24 hours a day

It's about the people we love, the memories we make, and the moments we often don't realise are precious until they beco...
11/06/2026

It's about the people we love, the memories we make, and the moments we often don't realise are precious until they become memories themselves.
Working so closely with mortality has taught me that life moves in circles. We arrive, we grow, we love, we lose, and one day we leave. The question is not how long we are here, but how well we have lived while we were.
Take the photo. Make the call. Watch the sunset. Forgive where you can. Love deeply.
One day, all that will remain of us is the love we left behind.
I think that last line has the quiet weight that would make people stop scrolling and think for a moment. ❤️

Eeck exciting new change for Guardian, a massive thank you to Angie for all her hard work it looks beautiful .
10/06/2026

Eeck exciting new change for Guardian, a massive thank you to Angie for all her hard work it looks beautiful .

Today marks the beginning of a new chapter for Guardian Funeralcare.Over the coming days, our in-house chapel will be re...
09/06/2026

Today marks the beginning of a new chapter for Guardian Funeralcare.

Over the coming days, our in-house chapel will be receiving a fresh new look. For many, it will simply be a refurbishment, but for me, it means much more than paint, furnishings and decoration.

The last time this chapel was redesigned, my son Bruce stood beside me. Together we poured our hearts into creating a peaceful place where families could say goodbye to those they love.

Life has changed enormously since then.

Like so many of the families we care for, I have learned that loss changes us forever. We don't leave our grief behind, but somehow we learn to carry it differently as we move forward.

This new chapel represents exactly that. A fresh beginning. A new season. A place that will continue to offer warmth, comfort, dignity and peace to the families who walk through our doors.

Our chapel seats up to 40 people and has always been at the heart of Guardian. It allows families to hold intimate, meaningful services surrounded by people who genuinely care.

As we begin this next chapter, I want to thank every family who has trusted us over the years. Your support, kindness and faith in us has carried Guardian through some of life's most difficult moments.

Here's to new beginnings, while never forgetting those who helped us build them.

Bruce, you'll always be part of this place.

With love,

Alison ❤️
Guardian Funeralcare

Sometimes I step outside my own headAnd watch the world drift quietly by.People rushing, people laughing,Some looking do...
03/06/2026

Sometimes I step outside my own head
And watch the world drift quietly by.
People rushing, people laughing,
Some looking down, some watching the sky.
And I find myself wondering what life is really about.
Not the money, the titles, or the things we leave behind,
But the moments we almost miss—
A hand to hold, a friend who calls,
A sunset, a memory, a kind word at the right time.
Life feels fragile when you've seen enough of it.
One day we're making plans, the next we're holding memories.
So perhaps the secret is simply this:
To love deeply.
To forgive often.
To notice the little things.
To stop long enough to feel the sunshine on your face and the wind in your hair.
Because in the end, it may not be the years we remember,
But the moments that reminded us we were truly alive.
— Alison Barrington

Thank you Angie for this beautiful window display ❤️. Im so blessed to have so much support ❤️ and love
20/05/2026

Thank you Angie for this beautiful window display ❤️. Im so blessed to have so much support ❤️ and love

🙏
19/05/2026

🙏

"They pried open the coffin thirty years after her death, and what they found inside defied every law of nature.
On a quiet day in 1909, a group of doctors, priests, and local officials gathered in a small cemetery in Nevers, France. They were there for the first exhumation of Bernadette Soubirous. Bernadette was the humble girl who, decades earlier, claimed to see the Virgin Mary in a damp cave in Lourdes.
She had died in 1879 at the young age of 35, her body broken by years of painful illness and bone decay.
Everyone standing around that grave expected the worst. They prepared themselves for the sight of white bones and the smell of old dust. But when the heavy lid finally moved, the air didn't fill with the scent of decay. Instead, a stunned silence fell over the crowd.
Bernadette looked like she was just taking a nap.
“The body is intact,” one of the examining doctors whispered, his hands shaking as he held his medical tools. He couldn't believe what he was seeing. Even though her metal rosary had turned to rust and her habit was damp with mold, Bernadette herself was perfectly preserved.
Her skin was soft, her nails were still there, and her face looked peaceful.
This wasn't supposed to happen. Science tells us that the human body begins to break down almost immediately after the heart stops. In a damp underground vault, thirty years is more than enough time for a body to return to the earth. Yet, Bernadette remained.
Ten years later, in 1919, they opened the coffin for a second time. If the first time was a fluke, surely time would have caught up with her by now. But it hadn't. Dr. Talon, one of the surgeons present, was left speechless by the state of her internal organs.
“What strikes me most is the state of the liver,” he told the witnesses. “After forty years, it should be gone, but it is preserved and soft in consistency.” He noted that her muscles were still firm and her limbs could still be moved. It was as if death had simply forgotten to finish its work.
A third exhumation took place in 1925. Once again, the results were the same. To prepare her for public viewing, experts placed a very thin, light layer of wax over her face and hands. They did this because they feared her skin would darken now that it was finally exposed to the open air.
Some people today look at that wax and claim it’s a fake, but they ignore the dozens of medical reports written by skeptical doctors years before the wax was ever used.
Scientists have spent a century trying to find a logical explanation. Some talk about a process called adipocere, where body fat turns into a waxy substance that prevents rot. Others suggest the lack of oxygen in the lead-lined coffin played a role.
But even these experts struggle to explain why other people buried in the exact same conditions in the same cemetery were reduced to skeletons in just a few years.
Today, Bernadette rests in a beautiful crystal case in the Chapel of Saint-Gildard. Millions of people walk past her every year. She doesn't look like a relic of the past; she looks like a young woman waiting for someone to wake her up.
Whether you see this as a biological mystery or a divine miracle, Bernadette’s story remains one of the most fascinating ""cold cases"" in history. She was a girl who had nothing in life, yet she left the world with a puzzle that the smartest minds still can't fully solve.
There are things in this world that go far beyond what we can see or measure. It reminds us that even the most humble and overlooked among us can leave behind a legacy that is truly incorruptible.
Bernadette was a sickly, poor, and uneducated girl who suffered every day, yet her body achieved a ""perfection"" in death that the wealthiest kings never could.
Whether you see her as a miracle or a rare natural event, her appearance is undeniable. She was a poor, uneducated girl who suffered, yet she left a mystery that even the greatest minds of the 20th century could not solve.
We Are Human Angels
Authors
Awakening the Human Spirit
We are the authors of 'We Are Human Angels,' the book that has spread a new vision of the human experience and has been spontaneously translated into 14 languages by the readers.
We hope our writing sparks something in you!"

Today is Mental Health Awareness Day, and I honestly do not think words will ever truly explain what su***de leaves behi...
14/05/2026

Today is Mental Health Awareness Day, and I honestly do not think words will ever truly explain what su***de leaves behind in the hearts of the people who loved them most.
My son Bruce and my only baby sister Angie both took their own lives.
Two of the most intelligent, charismatic, caring people you could ever meet. The sort of people who could light up a room without even trying. The life and soul of everything. The strong ones. The people everybody thought would be alright.
Angie was a highly respected nurse within the NHS, caring for people every single day whilst quietly carrying struggles many of us never truly saw.
Bruce worked as a prison officer, dealing with su***de and mental health constantly. He spent his days trying to help men who could not cope with prison life, men who were broken, frightened and struggling deeply. Yet somehow, whilst helping others survive their darkest moments, he was hiding his own pain.
That is the frightening reality of mental health.
It does not always look how people think it should look.
Sometimes the people struggling the most are still laughing, still going to work, still checking on everybody else whilst quietly falling apart themselves.
I am an intelligent woman. I have spent my whole life around people, grief and trauma through my work. I truly believed I knew my son. I believed I knew my sister. I believed I would see the signs.
I did not.
And that truth is something I will carry for the rest of my life.
After su***de, you replay everything back with different eyes. Conversations. Silences. Little changes in behaviour. Moments that did not seem important at the time. The red flags suddenly become clearer afterwards, when it is far too late to reach them.
The guilt left behind for mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers and families is life-changing, because you live with one unbearable thought every single day:
“Could I have stopped this?”
Su***de does not just take one life. It shatters entire families.
So today, please be kind. Check on the people who always say they are “fine”. Listen properly. And if you are struggling yourself, please do not suffer in silence. You matter more than you will ever know.
For Bruce. For Angie. And for every family living with the silent devastation su***de leaves behind.
If anyone is struggling reach out to us or anyone .

Please share if you think this will help anyone .

🤍

Please share, surely someone knows this gentleman who has passed away 😢
02/05/2026

Please share, surely someone knows this gentleman who has passed away 😢

An appeal to find his relatives has been issued

Lately, I’ve found myself pausing more… just taking a moment to reflect on the incredible impact this work has had on my...
02/05/2026

Lately, I’ve found myself pausing more… just taking a moment to reflect on the incredible impact this work has had on my life over the years. The families who have placed their trust in us… the stories shared, the quiet moments, the small gestures that speak volumes and transcend words. This work has never just been about funerals for me. It’s about people. It always has been. Being a steady presence when someone feels lost… guiding them through life’s toughest challenges with care, dignity, and the same love I would give my own family. I think when things feel a little still, it can make you question yourself… but then I remind myself, this isn’t a business built on noise. It’s built on trust, on word of mouth, and on the way we uplift people when they need us most. So we’ll just keep doing what we’ve always done… quietly, steadily, and with heart. And if you ever find yourself needing us, please know, we’re here. Day or night, always at the end of the phone. Alison 🤍 Guardian Funeralcare 01274 595906

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23 Market Street
Shipley
BD183QD

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