A woman who met her now-fiancé in work after swapping a career in hairdressing for funeral care says “it’s quite a nice way of meeting somebody”.

Beth Gilkison, from Paisley, met her partner, Jordan Steele, in 2020 after she started working as a funeral service crew member at the same Co-op Funeralcare branch. The 23-year-old’s average day as a funeral worker now involves valeting, polishing, preparing and driving a hearse or family limousine for a service, as well as supporting people who have just lost a loved one by meeting with them and bringing them into their care.

Beth praised the “rewarding” job for leading her to her life partner after Jordan, 25, popped the question in October 2024 – and the pair now have plans to tie the knot in August 2026.

Despite working in the same funeral parlour, the couple try to leave their work at the door and if they were to have children in the future, Beth feels their experience in funeral care would help them to open up conversations around grief and death to make it less “taboo”.

Beth and Jordan plan to tie the knot in August 2026
Beth and Jordan plan to tie the knot in August 2026 (Image: PA)

“It’s quite a nice way of meeting somebody, it wasn’t meeting someone on a date deliberately and having to try and make things work – we were great friends who ended up falling in love,” Beth told PA Real Life. “We have so much in common, it was just natural. We keep our work life and our home life completely separate … we try our best to leave our work at the door and not bring it home.”

Beth looked for a career change at the age of 19 after she was furloughed during the Covid-19 pandemic from her job as a hairdresser. With both her parents working on the front line as key workers – her mother as a nurse in intensive care and her father as a police officer – Beth wanted to pursue a career helping people.

Landing her job at the Co-op Funeralcare branch in Paisley in June 2020, Beth said a few of her friends and family members were “a bit shocked” at her career change. She said: “A lot of people thought, ‘you’re very young’ and ‘this is very serious’ but as time has gone on, I think they all agree that I’ve fallen into my passion and I absolutely love it.”

Jordan proposed to Beth in October 2024
Jordan proposed to Beth in October 2024 (Image: PA)

Beth first met Jordan in 2020 at the branch where the pair both work as funeral service crew members. She said: “We worked together for a couple of years before we went out on any dates. We built a really, really good friendship and a good rapport. We are kind of the babies at the branch, the youngest, so it was inevitable that we were going to end up together.”

The pair began dating after Jordan invited her to a music concert, a string quartet by candlelight, but Beth said she assumed he was giving the tickets away. “Very quickly I realised, ‘oh this is actually a date’,” she said, adding they went on several more before making things official in July 2022.

Jordan proposed in October 2024 and the pair are looking to elope in August 2026, before having a “massive party” with their loved ones to celebrate. Beth said their work lives bring a new level of “understanding” to their relationship.

Beth and Jordan met in 2020 while working at the same funeral parlour
Beth and Jordan met in 2020 while working at the same funeral parlour (Image: PA)

“I think for a lot of people with a partner in the funeral sector, it’s quite difficult for them to understand what it’s like,” she said. “For us, it’s great to get to experience similar things, share similar stories and understand each other.”

Later down the line, Beth hopes their experience in funeral care will help them to open up conversations around death and grief with any future children, if they decide to become parents. She said: “If we ever go down that route (of children), it will be an open conversation in our home because it shouldn’t be a taboo subject. We want people to be more open and more able to talk about these things.”

Beth said she sees herself working within the funeral sector for the rest of her career. “If I can give back even a little bit of comfort to someone at the worst time of their life, then I go home at night thinking I’ve done a great job,” she said. “To be part of something so amazing has definitely changed my outlook on life and death.”

To find out more, visit: coop.co.uk/funeralcare.

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