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2007-10-01 02:49:13 · 26 answers · asked by anil m 6 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

26 answers

death is the end of life. so no question joy or sorrow to that person.

2007-10-02 06:12:29 · answer #1 · answered by prince47 7 · 0 0

You don't specify whether You mean joyous for the dying or joyous for those who are left behind. For the latter, the end of a loved one's suffering can be a relief, which unfortunately comes with guilt and the feeling of having wished him/her dead. Happiness is not there. Joy, however, is always there when there is faith.

For the person dying, i can only imagine (having never died myself) but i remember making a conscious choice that, even if i could somehow get out of dying, i would choose to die. Afterlife considerations aside, dying is part of living and i don't want to miss out on the experience.

2007-10-01 03:05:45 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Death itself is never joyous. What comes next though is absolutely joyous... a new world, a new life, learning, preparing, regrouping.

Peace!

2007-10-02 02:53:35 · answer #3 · answered by Janet Reincarnated 5 · 0 0

The only death that will be joyous is my own. I am sorry for the ones I will leave behind, but I will be happy to be going home.
Peace

2007-10-01 06:41:02 · answer #4 · answered by Linda B 6 · 2 0

It really depends on who's feeling joyous upon the event of death.

2007-10-07 08:57:47 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes it can. It is simply a matter of how you persieve death.

When someone dies, then the happy news is that the person no longer suffers mentally.
The death of a person also means that there will be that much less pollution in the world, and that is good for nature. What is good for nature is life sustained else where.

Death is in many ways a very positive thing, if you dare to think of death in such a way. Imagine the impact on the global ecosystems, if there was no such thing as death!

2007-10-01 02:55:12 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Death is joyous ask those who have had near death experiences and regressions into their past lives where they have relived their deaths. They all confirm that your consciousness/soul floats up out of your physical body and is engulfed in a peaceful light through a tunnel. The soul is at absolute bliss and peace at death and it never wishes to return to a bodily exile, but somehow it keeps coming back into the exile again and again to account for its deeds.

2007-10-02 21:34:55 · answer #7 · answered by crewsaid 5 · 0 0

If Death is feared , it becomes the source of pain. But when it is anticipated and wished for, it becomes joyous. All pain and pleasure are nothing but reflections of our attitudes toward the situations.The same experience which at one situation was pleasure turns out to be unwelcome and painful, because we do not want it any more and have consciously shut it off from our list of desires and enlisted in the group of things not wanted

I have witnessed three peaceful deaths where the dying persons called me to be present at the hour of their passing away. I learnt quite early in life , therefore that death can be a joyous exit from the bondages of man.

But when Death came stealthily and robbed me of my young son of 13 years, I was thrown in disarray and asked for an explanation of this . Wise ones counselled me that each one of us comes to this world with a predetermined span of life and that grieving is okay for releasing the immediate shock, but carrying on the work which he would have done, if present is the way to keep him alive in memory. Nineteen years later, I feel his presence with me whenever I desire and I am no more afraid of Death. I have a similar experience with my younger sister who died when she was barely five years old, two years younger to me. For me, she is always at hand as a constant presence, a counsel I rely on.keepimg pace with my aging

2007-10-01 03:18:00 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

We have no memory of what we had beenbefore our birth , though we relly existed before we were born ,though not as what we are after birth.so alos we shall e after death .we shall not cease to exist though we shall not hae anymemory of what we were before we died .
We are supposed to die only when our brain forgets everything and stops fuctioning .Weshall not be dead even if there is a little consciousness .So death is a state of purity and ceanliness.of mind .No joy , no worry can follow death
While alive man longs to have a sound sleep and only those who are in perfect mental peace are able to sleep well and not all. So sleep is vey much sought afer in life and people really enjoy it unconciously and unknowingly.Death is only a perfect sleep from which we never wake up and no one can distrub also.So a sound sleep for eternity without anybody being able to disturb shoud be something very great .as no pain or pleasre can disturb it .
Accordig to shakespeare .," We are such stuiff as dreams are made of ,and our little life is rounded with a sleep"..

2007-10-01 07:13:36 · answer #9 · answered by Infinity 7 · 0 0

death can be joyous if we think about the new etarnal life of happiness, peace, love, care and share that awaits us

2007-10-01 07:14:42 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I think my death will be joyous.......if i live a long long, full life!......death after a long illness can be a joyous relief!!......

2007-10-01 02:57:39 · answer #11 · answered by ask me a 3 · 1 0

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