绿葬,家葬:回到紫荆山

Eileen Bayer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文以我个人的绿色土葬之旅为载体,探索这一新兴产业。最近在全国各地的一次搬家,促使我反思自己的墓地。虽然多年来我一直知道自己更喜欢绿色葬礼,但从我的家乡中西部搬到太平洋西北地区的转变,让我对离开熟悉的地方来到(对我来说)陌生的地方感到焦虑。知道我的身体有一天会回到童年的山丘上,这给我一种奇怪的平静感,但粗略地看一下在印第安纳州乡下18英亩的土地上进行家庭埋葬的前景,就会发现后勤工作比我想象的要复杂得多。我了解到,印第安纳州是仅有的五个不允许在家下葬的州之一,或者有严格的法律规定在家下葬。原本看似简单而自然的生命终结决定,却演变成了官僚主义的迷宫。结合对绿色埋葬运动的见解和我自己的经验,本文试图展示自然埋葬实践的环境和个人利益,同时也揭示了使其可及性复杂化的因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Green Burial, Home Burial: A Return to Redbud Hill
This paper uses my own personal journey toward a green home burial as a vehicle for exploring this emerging industry. A recent move across the country prompted me to reflect upon my own burial place. While I have known for years that I would prefer a green burial, the transition from my native Midwest to the Pacific Northwest was a catalyst for anxieties about leaving the familiar for a foreign (to me) landscape. Knowing that my body would one day return to the hills of my childhood provided a strange sense of calm, but a cursory look into the prospects of a home burial on my 18 acres in rural Indiana suggested the logistics were more complicated than I imagined. I learned that Indiana is one of only five states that do not allow home burial, or that have highly restrictive laws governing it. What had promised to be a simple and natural end of life decision spiraled into a bureaucratic labyrinth. Blending insights into the green burial movement with a navigation of my own experience, this paper seeks to demonstrate the environmental and personal benefits of natural burial practices while also unearthing factors that complicate its accessibility.
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