The daughter of a man who passed away from pancreatic cancer and Motor Neurone Disease has honoured her father's wishes by writing a rib-tickling obituary.

Daughter Caitlyn Connors' hilarious, yet heartfelt obituary provided readers with a unique glimpse into her father Chris's full life and playful sense of humour.

According to the obituary, Mr Connor — who lived in York, Maine — died from "stubbornness" and "whiskey".

"Chris Connors died, at age 67, after trying to box his bikini-clad hospice nurse just moments earlier," it read.

"Ladies man, game slayer, and outlaw Connors told his last inappropriate joke on Friday, December 9, 2016, which cannot be printed here.

"Anyone else fighting ALS and stage-4 pancreatic cancer would have gone quietly into the night, but Connors was stark naked drinking Veuve in a house full of friends and family as Al Green played from the speakers.

"The way he died is just like he lived: he wrote his own rules, he fought authority and he paved his own way.

"And if you said he couldn't do it, he would make sure he could.

Chris' daughter Caitlyn wrote a heartfelt and hilarious obituary sharing his life with the world. ( Supplied: The Chris Connors Fund )

"He lived 1,000 years in the 67 calendar years we had with him because he attacked life; he grabbed it by the lapels, kissed it, and swung it back onto the dance floor.

"At the age of 26 he planned to circumnavigate the world — instead, he ended up spending 40 hours on a life raft off the coast of Panama.

"In 1974, he founded the Quincy Rugby Club. In his thirties, he sustained a knife wound after saving a woman from being mugged in New York City.

"He didn't slow down: at age 64, he climbed to the base camp of Mount Everest.

"Throughout his life, he was an accomplished hunter and birth control device tester (with some failures, notably Caitlin Connors, 33; Chris Connors, 11; and Liam Connors, 8).

"Of all the people he touched, both willing and unwilling, his most proud achievement in life was marrying his wife Emily Ayer Connors who supported him in all his glory during his heyday, and lovingly supported him physically during their last days together.

"'I just want you to make it funny' were his instructions. 'I don't want a run-of-the-mill obituary'. So we had champagne and we had an obituary-writing party," his wife Emily said.

With people around the world reacting to the family's heart warming post, Mr Connors obituary was far from "run-of-the-mill".