If so, then each death will take up twice as much space as they used to. :eek:
Which would become a problem if it became fashionable enough. Older more densely populated areas of the country already have a problem with filling or full graveyards. Adding in site-of-death shrines will really cramp the older areas.
Hey, that gives me an idea. How about we do away with cemeteries and simply always dispose of the body at the site of death? Dig a small hole in the grass, cut a hunk out of the sidewalk, whatever it takes. Bury the body, or the recoverable pieces or the cremains as the case may be.
Or just leave the body laying there for the vermin and vandals to cart off piecemeal? Great idea, huh? Now *that *would be a memorable memorial. If you want the public to remember, give 'em something noteworthy with a big emotional value.
I think it’s like this: Family and/or friends are sad, and they want everyone to know it. Simply having a marker at a cemetery isn’t enough. By erecting makeshift memorials, they force people to notice. It doesn’t matter that people like me are like, ‘Good grief. Someone I don’t know and have never heard of snuffed it there.’ They point is that people notice, and Those For Whom Life Continues, But Whose LIVES Have Ended can believe that those tens or hundreds or thousands of people who see the memorial every day are sending them prayers (but not cookies).
Until you get the Slim Jim house where there’s a death memorial in the closet and it is written into the sales contract to keep it and allow access.
(You’ve seen the commercial? House way over budget so husband signals real estate guy who opens closet and says ‘interesting note, this is where they found the body!’)
Per the website I cited earlier, roadside memorials have existed for centuries. And seem to have been a bigger thing in Latin countries than elsewhere. So the custom probably first entered the US with the increasing Latino population but it’s now gathering speed as a generic US cultural expectation at least in some social circles.
I’m wondering how social media plays into this? IMO one of the defining characteristics of people who are big on social media is they come to feel that stuff in their life isn’t really real to them until it’s shared and, ideally, commented on by others. Increasingly it seems, your life *is *your wall or your timeline or whatever they call it.
As applied to roadside memorials, I wonder how much people’s unconscious thought process is being conditioned to believe it isn’t real grief until it’s public grief? Which they’re driven to publish to the public as many ways as they know how? Which means both TwitFace and roadside crosses & teddybears?
Brilliant analysis. Seems as if it is an inevitable part of our Look At Me, Nothing-Is-Real Unitl I Post It society. Things just can’t be internal anymore, everyone has to see it.