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“Nothing Left To Preserve”: Mom Wants To Freeze Son’s Body After He Took His Own Life
Mother and her young son smiling closely in a heartfelt moment, highlighting efforts to raise funds to freeze his body.
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“Nothing Left To Preserve”: Mom Wants To Freeze Son’s Body After He Took His Own Life

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An Australian mother faced with every parent’s worst nightmarethe passing of a child—is now turning to a science fiction-like hope for a second chance at the life of her son: cryogenic preservation.

Actress Clare McCann is desperately trying to raise $195,000 to freeze the body of her 13–year-old son, Atreyu, who tragically took his own life last Friday (May 23). According to the associated fundraiser page, the boy had been the target of “horrific bullying at his public school.”

Highlights
  • Australian actress Clare McCann is raising $195K to cryogenically preserve her 13-year-old son.
  • The child, Atreyu, tragically took his own life after being bullied at school.
  • McCann claims repeated warnings to school about Atreyu's bullying and PTSD were ignored.
  • Cryonics remains experimental with no successful human revival yet; hope lies in future tech repairing molecular damage.

While, to date, no one has been successfully revived after being cryogenically frozen, the hope of science advancing to the point where it is possible in the future has become McCann’s only refuge from her grief—and time is running out.

RELATED:

    An Australian actress is raising money to cryogenically preserve her son’s body after he took his own life

    Image credits: Don Arnold/Getty Images

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    “We only have one chance left to cryogenically preserve his body within the next 7 days,” she wrote.

    “If we miss this window, we lose the chance for any future revival that science may offer. This is about hope and justice. Refusing to let my son’s story end in silence.”

    Image credits: claremccannofficial

    Cryonics—the low-temperature preservation of a human body after passing with the hope of future revival—remains a controversial and largely experimental field. But for grieving parents like McCann, it offers a final, if slim, sliver of hope.

    Image credits: GoFundMe

    Addressing her critics, McCann said in an interview that her son had previously agreed to the procedure, and said that neither of them took the idea lightly.

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    “About six or seven years ago, we started talking about the afterlife and heaven and I talked to him a little about cryogenics, and he told me he would like to do that,” she said in an interview with local media.

    “Over the years we talked about that—that’s what we would want to do together, never separate. He deserves a second chance to live the life he wanted.”

    For McCann, Atreyu’s passing is the result of institutions actively ignoring her warnings about him being bullied

    Image credits: Svitlana/Adobe Stock

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    McCann’s desperation is compounded by a growing sense of impotence, as she says she tried everything in her power to notify the school of Atreyu’s declining mental health and bullying problems.

    “I have medical records, psychologist reports, a formal PTSD diagnosis from his doctor, and emails proving I raised the alarm repeatedly,” she wrote on her fundraising page.

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    “But nothing was done. No one stepped in. And now, my beautiful boy is gone.”

    Since it was launched, the campaign has raised just over $4,750 Australian dollars (approximately $3,080).

    Image credits: KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA

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    McCann assured donors that the money would go toward “immediate cryopreservation and legal transportation,” as well as necessary medical and legal services and a trust in Atreyu’s name “to protect his legacy.”

    Once the aforementioned process is complete, any leftover funds would go towards supporting anti-bullying education, as well as pursuing legal action against the institutions McCann said failed her son.

    The likelihood of a person being successfully revived after being frozen depends on technology that’s not yet available

    Image credits: BBC Global

    Cryonics, as practiced today, is based on preserving the body—particularly the brain—at extremely low temperatures in a process called vitrification, which freezes tissues without forming ice crystals that could damage them.

    Image credits: claremccannofficial

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    Companies offering the service argue that if enough of the brain’s structure can be preserved, future medical advancements may allow full revival. 

    One of such companies, Alcor, assures potential customers that “life can be stopped and restarted if its basic structure is preserved,” but recognizes that the likelihood of that happening depends entirely on nanotechnology being one day able to “repair damage at the molecular level.”

    Image credits: claremccannofficial

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    Critics argue that these claims stretch the boundaries of science and ethics, and are ultimately a gamble that seeks to prey on people’s fears, grief, and desire to prolong their existence. To date, no human has ever been revived after cryopreservation.

    Despite this, the service has turned into a profitable business.

    Image credits: claremccannofficial

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    According to tissue preservation company Cryonics Institute, to date, over 100 people have been cryopreserved, and more than 1,000 have signed up to be preserved in the future—many using life insurance policies to cover the cost.

    When asked about any mammal being successfully cryopreserved and revived, the company recognizes that only some organs have completed the process, and that “no whole mammal” has been revived.

    “We believe that the damage caused by current cryopreservation is limited and hopefully can someday be repaired in the future.”

    “Don’t judge her.” Methods aside, netizens sympathized with the mother’s grief

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    Abel Musa Miño

    Abel Musa Miño

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    Read more »

    Born in Santiago, Chile, with a background in communication and international relations, I bring a global perspective to entertainment reporting at Bored Panda. I cover celebrity news, Hollywood events, true crime, and viral stories that resonate across cultures. My reporting has been featured on Google News, connecting international audiences to the latest in entertainment. For me, journalism is about bridging local stories with global conversations, arming readers with the knowledge necessary to make up their own minds. Research is at the core of my work. I believe that well-sourced, factual storytelling is essential to building trust and driving meaningful engagement.

    Read less »
    Abel Musa Miño

    Abel Musa Miño

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    Born in Santiago, Chile, with a background in communication and international relations, I bring a global perspective to entertainment reporting at Bored Panda. I cover celebrity news, Hollywood events, true crime, and viral stories that resonate across cultures. My reporting has been featured on Google News, connecting international audiences to the latest in entertainment. For me, journalism is about bridging local stories with global conversations, arming readers with the knowledge necessary to make up their own minds. Research is at the core of my work. I believe that well-sourced, factual storytelling is essential to building trust and driving meaningful engagement.

    What do you think ?
    ElfVibratorGlitter
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Poor Mama. I got nothing. This is just sad.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Even if the cryo stuff works out and we can later revive people post-death (and heal the brain damage/brain death...) this poor kid is still going to have depression and other issues from the bullying he endured. That stuff isn't going to magically go away unless we somehow also have "cures" for depression/trauma/PTSD (not just therapy, literal "cures") in this far-off hypothetical future as well :( But - in all reality - depending on how long he was dead before his body was even discovered... his brain sustained so much damage that only the most "pretty much indistinguishable from magic" science (that we don't even have a single sliver of right now) would be able to revive his damaged brain, even if the other organs (lungs, heart) could be revived.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    As an aside - I understand a small shred of her agony. My dad fell off of a ladder when I was 18. He was only 58. He sustained catastrophic brain damage, and while he survived, my "dad" was lost the day of his accident. I would have done ANYTHING to have the magical-science to heal his brain and have my dad back, even if he was permanently wheelchair-bound. My mom did all kinds of BS (stem-cell infusions in Tijuana, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, this weird "magnetic field" pad on his bed) and nothing did a single thing to help my dad's brain. He never "got better". We don't even have the BEGINNINGS of the ability to truly heal brain death/severe brain damage right now. And the mom talks about how cryopreservation was the family "would want to do together, never separate" - so will she then ask for $600k after this in order to ensure that she and her spouse are also cryogenically preserved in order to be with Atreyu if he is ever revived? :( It's a pipe dream, at least right now.

    Load More Replies...
    Virgil Blue
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Too much focus on the cryonics and not enough on why he took his own life I feel. Bullying is still treated far too much as a semi cute "kids will he kids" thing and as not too serious. Bullying at those formative years digs in deep and can really mess you up for the future. I myself still carry the mental (and some physical) scars that have yet to be resolved by therapy.

    Load More Comments
    ElfVibratorGlitter
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Poor Mama. I got nothing. This is just sad.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Even if the cryo stuff works out and we can later revive people post-death (and heal the brain damage/brain death...) this poor kid is still going to have depression and other issues from the bullying he endured. That stuff isn't going to magically go away unless we somehow also have "cures" for depression/trauma/PTSD (not just therapy, literal "cures") in this far-off hypothetical future as well :( But - in all reality - depending on how long he was dead before his body was even discovered... his brain sustained so much damage that only the most "pretty much indistinguishable from magic" science (that we don't even have a single sliver of right now) would be able to revive his damaged brain, even if the other organs (lungs, heart) could be revived.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    As an aside - I understand a small shred of her agony. My dad fell off of a ladder when I was 18. He was only 58. He sustained catastrophic brain damage, and while he survived, my "dad" was lost the day of his accident. I would have done ANYTHING to have the magical-science to heal his brain and have my dad back, even if he was permanently wheelchair-bound. My mom did all kinds of BS (stem-cell infusions in Tijuana, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, this weird "magnetic field" pad on his bed) and nothing did a single thing to help my dad's brain. He never "got better". We don't even have the BEGINNINGS of the ability to truly heal brain death/severe brain damage right now. And the mom talks about how cryopreservation was the family "would want to do together, never separate" - so will she then ask for $600k after this in order to ensure that she and her spouse are also cryogenically preserved in order to be with Atreyu if he is ever revived? :( It's a pipe dream, at least right now.

    Load More Replies...
    Virgil Blue
    Community Member
    9 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Too much focus on the cryonics and not enough on why he took his own life I feel. Bullying is still treated far too much as a semi cute "kids will he kids" thing and as not too serious. Bullying at those formative years digs in deep and can really mess you up for the future. I myself still carry the mental (and some physical) scars that have yet to be resolved by therapy.

    Load More Comments
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