Puddles
Do I need to get the spray plaster out?
- Location
- Hamble, Southampton
Interesting input
I don't think I am removed from the reality of death, I agree a person just disappearing and no explanation given to a child is wrong, children accept truth quite readily and are very open creatures.
I do not think having a cast made of the dead persons hand for the child to hold is really the way to go either, go and hold a persons hand, feel the warmth the tiny pressures that are on yours and the feelings you can convey with someone you love/care about without saying a word, now think about a cold hard metal hand and holding that with the emotional maturity & understanding of a just turned 3 year old being told this is Nannys hand for you to hold?
I fail to see where that could be considered a comfort, an article of clothing that smells of her, a squirt of her perfume on a pillow I can understand there is a connection to the person there is an associated rush of feelings in connection with the smell, same with a photo or some video.
When I say I don't do the dead body peering thing, it is because I have no need to see a life less corpse. I don't feel the need to add that memory to mine of the person I knew to me it is just a body the person that I knew is not there
I also may be odd in the aspect that I think a life should be celebrated, I don't do grave visiting, I will, however, have a conversation with someone who has died, to explain....
On death I was raised being told stars are dead people, your loved ones do not go far, just as far as the stars to watch over you and wait for you, and although you cannot see them in the day they are there, and it does not matter where you are in the world if you miss them, you can always look up to the sky on a clear night and see them there - some people will considered that weird but it has been a comfort.
I have no hesitation in talking to dead people, I don't do going to graves as personally I do not feel the person is there, I will quite happily chat away to them whilst in the kitchen or walking the dog you know normal everyday settings. When my Maternal Grandfather (he was very ill & in lots of pain) died some 20 odd years ago I can remember my Mum saying to me you are crying for yourself not for him, because if you could wish him back in the pain he was in you did not love him at all.
I was around 3 when my Paternal Grandfather died, I don't remember him at all, there are pictures of me with him but I have no memory of him but that is the nature of the beast small people simply do not retain memories as a matter of course at that age.
I am not judging them for the hand cast, more saying "I" find it creepy and weird & it is not something I would personally do as I do not understand what it is meant to achieve as a comfort. In short as I said I don't "get it"
I also fully accept I have no need to "get it" but I do try to understand things and this I simply do not understand how this would be a comfort.
I don't think I am removed from the reality of death, I agree a person just disappearing and no explanation given to a child is wrong, children accept truth quite readily and are very open creatures.
I do not think having a cast made of the dead persons hand for the child to hold is really the way to go either, go and hold a persons hand, feel the warmth the tiny pressures that are on yours and the feelings you can convey with someone you love/care about without saying a word, now think about a cold hard metal hand and holding that with the emotional maturity & understanding of a just turned 3 year old being told this is Nannys hand for you to hold?
I fail to see where that could be considered a comfort, an article of clothing that smells of her, a squirt of her perfume on a pillow I can understand there is a connection to the person there is an associated rush of feelings in connection with the smell, same with a photo or some video.
When I say I don't do the dead body peering thing, it is because I have no need to see a life less corpse. I don't feel the need to add that memory to mine of the person I knew to me it is just a body the person that I knew is not there
I also may be odd in the aspect that I think a life should be celebrated, I don't do grave visiting, I will, however, have a conversation with someone who has died, to explain....
On death I was raised being told stars are dead people, your loved ones do not go far, just as far as the stars to watch over you and wait for you, and although you cannot see them in the day they are there, and it does not matter where you are in the world if you miss them, you can always look up to the sky on a clear night and see them there - some people will considered that weird but it has been a comfort.
I have no hesitation in talking to dead people, I don't do going to graves as personally I do not feel the person is there, I will quite happily chat away to them whilst in the kitchen or walking the dog you know normal everyday settings. When my Maternal Grandfather (he was very ill & in lots of pain) died some 20 odd years ago I can remember my Mum saying to me you are crying for yourself not for him, because if you could wish him back in the pain he was in you did not love him at all.
I was around 3 when my Paternal Grandfather died, I don't remember him at all, there are pictures of me with him but I have no memory of him but that is the nature of the beast small people simply do not retain memories as a matter of course at that age.
I am not judging them for the hand cast, more saying "I" find it creepy and weird & it is not something I would personally do as I do not understand what it is meant to achieve as a comfort. In short as I said I don't "get it"
I also fully accept I have no need to "get it" but I do try to understand things and this I simply do not understand how this would be a comfort.