Would you cry if you were a baby trying to make it through a "cave" no more then 10 inches in diameter?
And also being exposed to a new world, unlike that chamber you were once in? I think, yes!
I don't know about death though. If your just shot in the head, you don't have time to cry. If your about to die, in some kind of hospital I would say so.
LOL
Are you trying to make a connection her dude?
Funny what people can believe.;)
2007-09-09 10:31:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If I'm understanding your question- it doesnt seem to be phrased quite right- then here's my thoughts:
Life and death are very closely related. When a babe is born, it goes from having a closed life, a development that isn't even a life at all yet, to being thrust into the world and handed a life. It's all a great circle, one big cycle. The change from having no existance to having such an importance (at least to your parents or family) can be emotional, even to those of us who do not yet understand emotion. I think that the sudden shock of breathing liquid to breathing air, the difference of it all, can also shock an infant into crying.
As for crying before death, I think that on the deathbed we remember what we could not before recall. Our faith comes into play too. Some of us do not fear dying, some of us fear for our souls, etc. I think that as we know that life will end soon, all the memories from the moment we came into the world up to the moment we realized we will be leaving it come flooding back. Again, I think this can be a sort of shock, or an emotional experience. To know that a change is coming...it can shock or frighten us.
And speaking of change, do we not often fear what we don't understand? If an infant knows the womb, has always known existance there, than wouldn't it have some fear of the change thrust upon it when it is born? I think that infants have enough knowledge and thought to be afraid or shocked when they are met with such a change. All comfort is torn away, at least in the moments where it is alone and helpless, before comfort is found again in the form of its mother. As we go to exit life, we often know fear because we do not understand death. How can we know what comes after life?
Change can be frightening, which I believe to be why we cry.
2007-09-09 17:35:01
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Cry at birth entering Hell on Earth
Cry, live, die, life passes by,
Cry for joy, she had a boy
Cry like rain, we live again!
2007-09-09 17:38:54
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answer #3
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answered by midnite rainbow 5
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I have been at alot of deaths (worked in an assisted living) I never saw anyone cry at the moment of death.
2007-09-09 17:30:23
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answer #4
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answered by deb 7
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If I understand what you're asking, a person cries when their born because crying forces you to breathe, neh?
2007-09-09 17:29:40
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answer #5
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answered by Steppie 2
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IMAGINE IF YOU HAD LIVED IN A WARM. DARK, COZY PLACE ALL YOUR LIFE AND WERE SUDDENLY RUDELY FORCED INTO A BRIGHTLY LIT COLD NOISY PLACE WITH A GROUP OF NOISY STRANGERS YOU WOULD CRY TOO
2007-09-13 13:11:36
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answer #6
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answered by Loren S 7
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I don't understand the question!
2007-09-09 17:28:37
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answer #7
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answered by Kate 3
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