Previous Challenge Entry (Level 1 – Beginner)
Topic: The Family Home (05/29/08)
-
TITLE: Solastalgia | Previous Challenge Entry
By Emily Gibson
06/02/08 -
LEAVE COMMENT ON ARTICLE
SEND A PRIVATE COMMENT
ADD TO MY FAVORITES
Solastalgia--a pining for a lost environment or a state of homesickness when still at home. This word is derived from solacium ("comfort") and algia ("pain") and coined by Professor Glenn Albrecht in Australia in his research in Environmental Studies. He has been studying Australian farmers displaced by climate changes that have rendered their land and homes uninhabitable dust bowls. Their despair is losing not just their livelihoods but more emphatically, the familiarity and solace of surroundings lasting for generations of family members. They become lost souls at home.
It is easy to dismiss talk of "home" in this modern day and age as sentimental hogwash. When we can travel globally in a matter of hours and via computer can arrive in anyone's backyard, living room or even bedroom, "home" seems an outmoded concept. Yet we, and our children, thrive on predictability, stability and familiarity. When home no longer resembles home, when the birds no longer sing as they once did, the native flowers no longer bloom, the trees no longer move in the breeze, where can we seek solace and comfort? We are homesick right in our own back yards, if there is a back yard left to sit in.
As Joni Mitchell once wisely observed: "They paved paradise and put up a parking lot."
As a child, one of my favorite books was Virginia Lee Burton's "Little House", written in 1942, about a cottage built sturdy out in the countryside to last for generations of one family.
" The Little House was very happy as she sat on the hill and watched the countryside around her. She watched the sun rise in the morning and she watched the sun set in the evening. Day followed day, each one a little different than the one before... but the Little House stayed just the same."
As the years go by, more houses are built near by and then a town surrounds the cottage, and finally it is engulfed in the noisy, smelly, sooty, smoky city. Eventually a great-granddaughter finds the Little House and moves it out far in the countryside to become "home" to a family once again.
How many live somewhere that looks like it did 20, 60, 100 years ago? How many would recognize our childhood homes if we drove by now? How will our children remember "home"?
There is one potential cure for solastalgia. It is to create home where we are, whether it is for one year or thirty. One of the most effective ways is to plant trees. Again and again. This cure is as familiar as Johnny and his appleseeds and the French fable "The Man Who Planted Trees" about the shepherd who restored an entire valley by planting acorns. It has nothing to do with climate change, global warming or the Sierra Club. It has to do with restoring life on the land with a love for continuity, commitment and caring beyond ourselves.
Home is more than just the boards and doors and windows and fireplaces. It is the earth we steward and the care we provide it, through our respect and worship for God and His creation.
So solace is available for the homesick.
We will be able to always come home because we have planted ourselves and are rooted there.
The Man Who Planted Trees: http://home.infomaniak.ch/arboretum/Man _Tree.htm
The opinions expressed by authors may not necessarily reflect the opinion of FaithWriters.com.
If you died today, are you absolutely certain that you would go to heaven? You can be right now. CLICK HERE
JOIN US at FaithWriters for Free. Grow as a Writer and Spread the Gospel.
~Ree~
Perhaps one small thing would give it great readership and impact: a stronger "hook". I had to read down a few paragraphs before I found the stuff that really grabbed me.
Excellent writing.
I actually enjoyed reading this entry, it is so creatively different.
Thanks for the new word!