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I mean when somebody dies ,why do people cry?I mean its due to a societal tradition that if somebody dies people use to cry....or something else...

2006-06-14 10:29:35 · 14 answers · asked by joy_rudra 1 in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

If you are crying bcoz you are losing somebody from your life then you are crying for your ownself and not for that person...isn't that a selfish act? And when u know a man/woman is dead, then why we cry ...Isn't it meaningless?

2006-06-14 10:39:00 · update #1

Hi manic, It was an open question, and plz don't be personal,that spoils the good spirit of this Yahoo Answer. Many questions comes to our mind and it doesn't mean that u believe in those,thats why we ask questions?

2006-06-14 10:49:08 · update #2

14 answers

Hi ..When someone we love dies, it hurts us. ..We feel sad that the person will no longer be around to talk to or to have fun with... Their absence leaves a big hole in our lives. Maybe you had a pet that died.... Remember the first few times you walked into the house after your dog or cat was gone? It was strange not to have your pet there. Maybe you cried - that's OK... We need to mourn, or grieve, over losing people and animals and other things we love. ..But just like when you skin your knee, the first, intense pain will go away after a while. It takes time for your knee to heal, but it hurts less and less each day. It's the same when somebody dies... That doesn't mean you forget the person who died, or that you stop missing them ..After a while, we can go back to our lives, still loving them and remembering them always...

Remembering people we love who have died is one way to keep them a part of us... Pictures help us do this. Looking at a photo album can help us remember fun times we had together. Lots of families bury the bodies of loved ones in a cemetery. Then they can go and visit the person's grave. It's not that they think of the dead person as really being there, but it is a special place to go and think about how much that person meant to them...................

To the asker: Let Manic not , get to you!
I have seen .. that he has comments, on my question,to;/ ........
Kind regards!:) ..

2006-06-14 14:43:04 · answer #1 · answered by Kimberly 6 · 0 0

Personally, crying is a selfish act, but uncontrollable at times when pain is greatest, and not limited to simply sadness, but anger, joy and fear can invoke tears also.
We certainly have not always mourned the loss of our loved ones. Many cultures, past and present, have held funeral rituals that would rival many a kegger, and they are considered to be celebrations for the departed.
I think the root of crying is that very simple means of communication we all used as infants. There is an intelligible language hidden in the wail of a mourning mother who has lost her son that transcends culture and tradition. We understand what she is saying, when no words are used.
On the other hand, I have certainly witnessed professional boo-hooers, who cry at politically/socially correct moments, and not necessarily because of any emotional or physical pain.
So there definitely are social and physiological causes for this behaviour.

2006-06-14 11:04:36 · answer #2 · answered by mia_violenza 3 · 0 0

I could like to mention that sorrow isn't neccessary, however one will have to be definite of the change among what's real felt and what possibly a reactionary emotional defence like surprise... Be inclined to discover your emotions over a interval of time to be definite there's not anything fitting suppressed or denied. For essentially the most facet it will depend on your standpoint, and difficulty. Grief is our manner of expressing that we appreciate the whole existence vigour in our existance has come to be reduced with the loss. In essence, there's no extra time and new reminiscences available with that individual and to these virtually the departed, the complete dynamic of existence has modified. An elder that has had an entire existence possibly celebrated for his or her passing, a little one; mourned deeply for a existence unlived... If any individual has been pain, there's a liberation subsequently. If any individual used to be a tender and shiny beacon taken speedily and too quickly by means of sickness or twist of fate, there's an never-ending query final within the hearts of those who cared - a tiny lifelong torment... I for my part believe that not anything is ever real misplaced - it simply takes new varieties, and even though the ancient style is precious, the brand new one is for a first-class endeavor or exploration past some thing we consider we all know. I feeel it's necessary of social gathering, and honoring of the existence lived. I desire not to have a funeral, however to go away at the back of the legacy of shared precious reminiscences and one heck of a first-class occasion. I'd as an alternative go away seeing the ones I love smile and chortle, as I loved them doing in existence, when you consider that they're loved and will have to no longer endure. "The exceptional you'll be able to do is your exceptional being you."

2016-09-09 01:48:09 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It is the fact you will no longer hear or see that person anymore. A space in your life is now empty. In some cases a life is cut short and you wish that person had more time to be here. There are time when some one you know has been suffering with and illness and you stil do not want to let go

2006-06-14 10:34:48 · answer #4 · answered by oneofthebless 3 · 0 0

My grandfather, whom I was very close to, just passed away a few weeks ago. It would have been harder I know if I did not have a strong testimony of my religion, I am LDS. I know I will see him and be with him again, if I remain faithful to the covenants I have made in the Lord's temple. I read a wonderful quote by Russel M. Nelson. He said about loss "...we can’t fully appreciate joyful reunions later without tearful separations now. The only way to take sorrow out of death is to take love out of life."

2006-06-14 10:36:17 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You are a lucky idiot. Or extremely stupid. You have never lost a close friend or relative.
If your parents are killed today in a car crash would you be happy or sad? Got any brothers or sisters? Well they died too and so did both sets of grandparents. You're all alone in the world but you're tough. The state will find you a nice foster home where they'll work you like a slave. You won't cry.

I read your latest details and I'm convinced. You are a stupid idiot.

2006-06-14 10:40:39 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

If you know the person, you cry because you'll miss them. If you didn't really know them that well, you cry for the family and those who were closer to them. Sometimes you may cry because of the circumstances in which they passed (murder, suicide or childhood accident, etc. . .). It's reflexive. I've been in a situation where I thought I was fine but as soon as the immediate family (the children) approached the casket, I lost it. Sometimes, funerals make us think of things we haven't accomplished and makes us feel more vulnerable.

2006-06-14 10:36:01 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

It's not social, it's emotional. You feel a sense of loss and pain and cry for it. It may not make logical sense, but neither does crying when we are hurt physically.

2006-06-14 10:33:38 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

in fact we dont like that any one dies cause life is the best gift we had from god and its very prousous to us and yu get very sad when some one yu know dies cause because yu knew him so much and he was so close to him and yu needed him alot in yr life and even if some one yu dont like dies yu will be sad because yu will know that any one can loose his life at any time so we must thank god for that gift he gave us

2006-06-14 10:37:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Usually, when it's someone you know, it's because you're sad and hurt that this person is no longer in your life.

2006-06-14 10:33:09 · answer #10 · answered by gemthewitch 3 · 0 0

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