Why do you think this happens? — Vera Mont
Is it confined to a related group of cultures or is it world-wide? — Vera Mont
Do you do this yourself - follow the procession on screen, or leave flowers and messages at the site? — Vera Mont
What do you think about the practice? — Vera Mont
How do you feel about it? — Vera Mont
It is beneficial. — Outlander
About 40 volunteers and 15 groundskeepers--some wielding cellular phones so they could talk from one garden to another--started sorting the millions of dust-caked flowers, cards, toys and votive candles left by mourners from across the country.
.....
90% of the flowers were dead or dying; those were taken in flatbed trucks to the Kensington Gardens leaf yard, where gardeners will compost them for mulch to be used in Kensington Gardens and other royal parks.
Messages, cards, drawings and the numerous paintings of Diana left among the flowers went in sturdy white boxes to a storage facility in nearby Regent’s Park, where dehumidifiers will dry any wet papers.Since the day after Diana’s death, the groundskeeping staff has been working 16- and 18-hour days. Some have canceled vacations. One staffer came back to work the day after his wife delivered a baby.
Historians Preserve Memorials After Mass Shootingshttps://www.npr.org/2016/09/04/492629594/historians-preserve-memorials-after-mass-shootings
And they're still sad and laying flowers, not mad as hell and marching on Washington to demand the disarmament of their crazy fellow citizens.For each of the last three years there have been more than 600 mass shootings - almost two a day on average.
Art is unnecessary. — Outlander
Empathy. You see what happened to someone, you understand that you could have been the one, and so you leave something nice because that's what you'd like to be done if it were you. — Moliere
For some, I think it's a proxy for grief in their personal lives, just like it can be easier to talk to strangers about personal troubles.Why do you think this happens? — Vera Mont
I don't know, but I suspect it's more wide-spead than not.Is it confined to a related group of cultures or is it world-wide?
Nope.Do you do this yourself - follow the procession on screen, or leave flowers and messages at the site?
I haven't given it much thought.What do you think about the practice?
Nothing expect I hope it's cathartic or helps those who need such public rituals.How do you feel about it?
Make that 30 years, because this is from a Guardian article of 2005.Until 10 years ago, roadside floral tributes were virtually unknown in Britain. Now there are parts of the country where you can't go half a mile without seeing them.
People, hundreds of people who had no personal acquaintance with any of the casualties, leave heaps of flowers, candles, greeting cards, stuffed toys and balloons at the site of the lethal incident. — Vera Mont
Most sites of typical mourning that I've encountered are not that big and if they are big it relates to the notoriety of the deceased, — Nils Loc
Why do you think this happens? Is it confined to a related group of cultures or is it world-wide?
Do you do this yourself - follow the procession on screen, or leave flowers and messages at the site?
What do you think about the practice?
How do you feel about it? — Vera Mont
I found the public grief over the empty Princess Diana absurd. — Tom Storm
I call it maudlin commercial sentimentality. — Vera Mont
People seem to have rejected reason, perspective, any sense of proportion in favour of raw, undisciplined emotionalism. — Vera Mont
Agree, and this is one of the key characteristics of Romanticism. — Tom Storm
Then why can't we express it in the quality of art and literature those other Romantics? — Vera Mont
I call it maudlin commercial sentimentality. People seem to have rejected reason, perspective, any sense of proportion in favour of raw, undisciplined emotionalism. — Vera Mont
Few might call a PGA golf tournament an example of undisciplined emotionalism — Nils Loc
Degree of absurdity doesn't figure in my assessment; I'm looking for motivation.but it is arguably as absurd if not more so than a pop up memorial. — Nils Loc
Arguably some cases of media coverage of public mourning are beneficial, insofar as it encourages more meaningful kinds of charitable support for those affected by the loss. — Nils Loc
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