Research Paper On Fear Of Death

Words: 831
Pages: 4

The gates of the cemetery crack open as you enter a location you've been avoiding your whole life. Your feet are soaked in mud, your mind is filled with solitude and anxiety. You come closer to a grave and as soon as you do, you see an engraving carved into the dark wet stone. Born 1998. Died 2016. You quickly do the math and realize that this person was only a year older than you when they passed away. You turn around and suddenly, hundreds of tombstones surround you and all you are able to see are 2012, 13, 14... All of these people took an early train on a road of darkness. All of them are dead. You run away, terrified, and hear a scream. Thankfully, you wake up. It was nothing, just a nightmare, but was it really?

All around us, we see countless young adults
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Quite the opposite actually. Our fear of the inescapability of death is what makes us do these fatal things in the first place. Psychologists call this mortality salience.

Throughout history, religion has ruled over the people, promoting ideas of afterlife. People didn't fear death, since they didn't believe in it in the first place. Death for them was a door to heaven. However, as time passed, science started revolting against religion, changing people's mentality. The population started to focus more on the physical side of death, the desecrated body, moving away from ideas of life after death. This was the point where people truly commenced understanding that death is in fact inevitable and is a final destination of the mind.

At some point in our lives, we think about death and try to find ways to escape it, yet we arrive at the conclusion that death is inevitable. It will come around at some point. It will grab your hand, pull you into the ground and extract the life out of you. As this realization strikes, fear and terror bloom and take over. This is where terror management comes in. As anxiety slithers into our lives, we find ways to deal with the