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2006-10-30 02:27:19 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

13 answers

No not always. It can be. Have you ever assissted a coroner in picking up a dead body? I mean a really rotted corpse. I have done this many times and when you see real death at the morgue you will know it is more than a fascination that some goths seem to have hanging around in graveyards. When you have to pull a maggot filled corpse out of a bath tub and the parts are falling off you begin to see the realities of real death. Actually you get used to it as anything. Experiencing this was not a fascination, I got paid for it. I had to pick up the worse case scenarios. Movies, websites, videos, etc. show some nasty stuff and if you like this or are fascinated by it then I do not know what to tell you. I can tell you about the hands on experience of death and you know it's smells and the changes bodies go through. Death is part of a system and is quite natural. What is unnatural is how we sometimes end up dead. If you think being goth or listening to death metal or something like that is fascination then go visit a morgue or a funeral home and see what it really is about. If you are morbid you will always find someone more morbid believe me. An obsession with anything that creates an inbalance with other aspects of our lives can be unhealthy. Death is not to be excluded. Obsessing with death to the point we ignore the living is not healthy.

2006-10-30 02:43:13 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Not in the least, I'd say! Many contemporary cultures, especially in the US and Western Europe, treat death like the Victorians treated sex- as somehting unmentionable, despite the clear fact it exists!

I think all aspects of existence are fascinating. I suspect the thing to avoid is becoming so fascinated by only one that you miss out on all the rest!

2006-10-30 02:31:06 · answer #2 · answered by PhD 3 · 1 0

it depends I suppose on exactly what you mean by fascinated and how far you go with your fascination. Generally i would say it is healthy to be curious about death and to develop a good understanding of its eventuality. it is not unhealthy to think about it now and again as it will happen to each one of us and it is as natural as birth and living.

2006-10-30 08:36:24 · answer #3 · answered by cherub 5 · 0 0

Death is an un-natural separation of the soul from the body.

It is normal to contemplate it and quite natural. However there is an obscenity that is connected with the way people die, which perhaps questions the subject on it's conversational value.

Fascination is just an exaggerated curiosity of a particular subject which in this case I believe is fine. Ask a funeral director, grievance officer or pathologist technician if you wish to know more.

2006-10-30 03:29:20 · answer #4 · answered by jessieket04 3 · 0 0

good question, Livvy. properly, there are 2 the thank you to look at this. Morally, you're taking a life, it extremely is seen incorrect- regardless of if it is your person or no longer. Taking your life will finally end up hurting somebody, pals, family contributors, etc. so as that's the place the selfish area comes from. you additionally can seem at it from a non secular viewpoint. Suicide is seen incorrect in accordance to the Bible, and a few human beings say you will flow to hell in case you commit suicide on account which you have been disobeying God's plan for you. in my opinion, i don't have self assurance that. God is loving and accepting and does no longer deliver somebody to hell using fact they have been unhappy. yet another component to contemplate is that with a super form of persons suffering to stay, spending hundreds of dollars purely for a raffle to spend one final day in this Earth. and then somebody kills themselves whilst they nonetheless had a super form of life left. Their issue that lead them to suicide ought to and probable might are starting to be greater useful. and then human beings ask your self what might have been. might the guy that committed suicide discovered a therapy for many cancers? Had infants? And that finally ends up in a chain of what-ifs. i actually don't be attentive to if this made any experience, yet that's merely what i've got discovered. i attempted to look at it from some distinctive view factors. You get a action picture star now! maximum theory-frightening question of the day :)

2016-11-26 19:16:02 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, I'm also facinated by the possibilites of what happens next and do we really find out everything we need to know or is it a case of that's it folks.

I'm also doing my family tree so it's something else that crops up often.

2006-10-30 02:37:46 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no not at all. now if you had said necrophilia then yes. being fascinated by death doesnt mean your going to go round digging up graves or stuff

2006-10-30 02:31:31 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not at all, that's why I once didn't empty the bin for two weeks, my wife left me for a snow globe, I hope it can put up with with her promiscuity, awful snoring and she's, 'very close' to her father now, more information than I needed still, time heals all wounds.

2006-10-30 02:50:04 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

very unhealthy......unless u have a deep fascination to sit in graveyards

2006-10-30 03:20:33 · answer #9 · answered by cookie 3 · 0 0

I don't think so! Depends how deep that fascination goes I suppose!

2006-10-30 02:46:46 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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