#6 Please don't die!
![Is it worth your life?](https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg?w=190 190w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg?w=720 720w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg?w=640 640w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg?w=1045 1045w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg?w=1200 1200w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg?w=1460 1460w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg?w=1600 1600w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2017/08/64180-1503002913-800.jpg 1920w)
It might seem strange to people outside of the pro-wrestling bubble, but us fans like to see grown men risk their health for the purpose of entertainment. With high-flying wrestling at an all time high right now, superstars like Kalisto, Sami Zayn and AJ Styles are always looking for ways to up their game and deliver big impact spots during matches.
But on some level, we understand that mere entertainment shouldn't come at the expense of someone's long-term well-being. As much as we loved the sight of Mankind falling from the Hell in a Cell onto the Spanish announce table, there was still a human element of concern in between all the frenzy.
In the arguably more level-headed times of 2017, we are made more aware of the true dangers of consistent blows to the human body from jumping onto tables and onto opponents. Nothing shows this strange dynamic quite like the 'please don't die!' chant. It has been used several times throughout the past few years, normally when guys like Sami Zayn or Seth Rollins are poised to leap off an unimaginable height onto the poor victims below.
And I'm sure this is something we were all shouting with complete seriousness when Shane McMahon was ready to replicate Mankind's spot from 1998 and jump of the Hell in a Cell at Wrestlemania 32.