• @Grass
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    201 month ago

    . I’d rather be harvested for any useful organs if I have any left healthy enough to save someone, then the rest of me thrown in some kind of corpse compost or bio reactor or something.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 month ago

      Yes, but the whole thing isn’t about you but about the people you leave behind. It helps me a lot that I can visit the place where I buried my father’s ashes and tell him about what is going on and how live is currently. I miss him a lot.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 month ago

        For every person like you there may be a person like me that couldn’t care less to visit a grave. I can remember my fallen ones from anywhere.

        Don’t want to sound callous but if you’re dead you’re dead to me too, like it’s a part of life. Just accept it and move on. I’m gonna die one day whoop whoop.

        • @[email protected]
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          81 month ago

          Maybe as a compromise, then, the people who care can do the thing and the people who don’t don’t have to?

          • @[email protected]
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            61 month ago

            Sure, but if the argument is that graveyards take to much valuable space that could be used to house living humans.

            Perhaps people should keep ashes in their own gardens etc and you can alsways go and do the things you do.

            To be transparent, this isn’t something I have given a lot of thought to until I saw this thread.

            • @[email protected]
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              31 month ago

              Suppose so, I feel like they’re pretty low on the list of land we could reclaim tho. Would rather go after golf courses first for example

              • @[email protected]
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                41 month ago

                Oh I agree that golf courses would be a priority. The same for office blocks where people can work from home.

                I’m with mark twain on golf, it’s a good walk spoiled 😂

            • 𝔼𝕩𝕦𝕤𝕚𝕒
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              1 month ago

              Something I think I’ve seen in movies (mostly ones implied to be ancient japan) is a family grave. A single pillar driven into the ground with the family name and then everyone is cremated or something. Notable individuals for the family get a pillar next to it, but this could be a solution as first world countries reach the point where space is a premium. This allows families to mourn recently, and not-so-recently deceased.

              Cyberpunk has the Columbariums - huge columns of thousands of cremated individuals, with a digital display for your Epitaph and name

              • @[email protected]
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                11 month ago

                The uk had 3500 cemeteries in 1914 and more have been built since. A a report in 2013 said that nearly half would be out of space by 2033.

                I wouldn’t like to say how much land this accounts for but just in my small town you could build hundreds of houses or even more apartments on all the land.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        Yes, it’s also called Natural Organic Reduction or terramation. This would be my dream.

        When I die compost my body and use the compost on a tree in the garden or spread it in a natural reserve. This way if my relative want to visit my grave they go in nature rather than going in a gray cemetery full of concrete.

    • VulKendov
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      11 month ago

      If you don’t have any useful organs, I imagine you can still be used as a cadaver for medical students.