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Scott wrote:
<blockquote TYPE=CITE><tt>--Ok Amanda I can respect that, but honestly
it is sickening just to think about how meat is produced. Bleah! :-(</tt></blockquote>
It's been a source of many interesting discussions betwixt my husband and
me, how modern attitudes toward both eating meat and death have been influenced
by the fact that insulation from the realities of both is, more often than
not, the norm. I'm not trying to tweak vegetarians at all, but I consider
all life is precious, and I've quite honestly never understood why breeding
specific varieties of plants, planting, and harvesting them for the specific
purpose of eating them is any different from doing so with animals. I sort
of figured it's because it's a different enough form of life from animal,
with no blood and no obvious pain response. I also think that if you're
not real familiar with butchering, then you're free to imagine things that
are lots worse than it really is (sort of like the best erotica involves
clothes and the imagination).
<p>As for death, I will always applaud my mother, who took me at age four
to my brother's funeral, and lifted me up to see into the casket. He died
of leukemia, and we all knew what was going on. If I had not been allowed
that closure, had not had it explained to me ("the part that was Kelley,
that laughed and sang, is gone, this is just the shell, like a locust shell"),
Kelley would have just "disappeared." Infinitely more frightening to a
four-year-old--what if it happens to me? Where did he go? Etc. The visual
and the participation is vital at that age, but so many people "don't like
funerals" or "they're not the place for children." On the contrary, weddings
and funerals are two of the *most* important places for children.
<p>Up until the very recent past, it was the family that prepared the body
for burial, the family that made all the arrangements. Hard as it is, I
still think that such involvement is necessary for the psyche to come to
grips with what's happened. And again, that "unknown," out there to imagine
about, makes it even worse.
<p>And a book plug--for the stout-hearted--"The American Way of Death"
by Jessica somebody. Covers how the funeral industry has sort of stealthily
gotten control of all the facets of death and burial and preparation and
such over about the past century, in the process charging exorbitant fees.
Very, very, very interesting reading. I now will NOT have an open casket,
under any circumstances.
<blockquote TYPE=CITE><tt>Then again I am a vegetarian and even though
I made that choice for namely health reasons the moral issue of eating
a living creature also came into play.</tt></blockquote>
*ahem.* I eat *dead* creatures. <g>
<p>--Amanda</html>