In one way it's kinda nice in that they make you reflect on peoples lives and life in general and how we're all gonna go some day, etc. And it memorializes people.
On the other hand though it's kind of a waste of land.
Discuss.
I think it's a waste of land. I'm for Viking funerals, burials at sea, cremation (by funeral pyre if desired), etc. The idea of being plugged into a mausoleum or put in the ground really creeps me out. I've considered donating my remains to science as well.In one way it's kinda nice in that they make you reflect on peoples lives and life in general and how we're all gonna go some day, etc. And it memorializes people.
On the other hand though it's kind of a waste of land.
Discuss.
I like the process of seeing my fathers resting place, but I also like that my best friend (small urn) will always be a part of my home.
As for me, I'm really not sure what I want. But I do think at some point, cemetaries are going to be a problem.
Makes me think of the catacombs under Paris. Pretty weird but substantial impact.But the thing is, once they become a problem what do you do? Do you dispose of a bunch of corpses? Even ten generations down the line there will probably be some people complaining "That's my great great great great great great great great grandfather, you can't desecrate his grave."
Makes me think of the catacombs under Paris. Pretty weird but substantial impact.
But you're right, it's a tough call any which way. I wouldn't want my fathers grave disturbed. Many cemetaries in WV are having issues, as ground shifts cause cracks in tombstones and naturally disturb the graves.
So true. A small pioneer graveyard is sacred ground in my small town, but a graveyard behind some tennis courts near my childhood home was just a pain to members of the local country club because they couldn't relocate them...but they were old enough to be sacred.That's another issue. First, when does a grave convert from a place of meaningful memories for descendants to a meaningless waste of land holding a body of someone nobody knows or cares about? And second when does a meaningless waste of land holding a body of someone nobody knows or cares about convert to having historical meaning because it's been so long since the person died?
Obviously it takes a long time to become meaningful history but OTOH if we found a cemetery thousands of years old we wouldn't say "Let's dig these up and use this land for something important." We'd want to preserve it as history and try to learn about the people simply because they lived so long ago.
But the thing is, once they become a problem what do you do? Do you dispose of a bunch of corpses? Even ten generations down the line there will probably be some people complaining "That's my great great great great great great great great grandfather, you can't desecrate his grave."
I rented a place in NC mountains that ended up being directly across from a church cemetery. My wife and I walked it up and down. People had been buried there since the 1700's. It was really interesting. That's my only thought.
When a bug would splat on the windshield, my Gramps would say "He won't have the guts to do that again."My dad said people are always dying to get into cemetaries.
Seriously, every time we passed one. Got old, of course, but now I say it to my kids.
Speak for yourself. You see history, I see real estate ready for development.OTOH if we found a cemetery thousands of years old we wouldn't say "Let's dig these up and use this land for something important." We'd want to preserve it as history and try to learn about the people simply because they lived so long ago.
Considering I had one foot in the grave and the other one on a banana peel 4 years ago, I may donate my remains to science fiction.I've considered donating my remains to science as well.