Monday, 30 June 2014

NOSTALGIA


I looked up the definition of nostalgia and came up with the following three suggestions:


A sentimental recollection: a mixed feeling of happiness, sadness, and longing when recalling a person, place, or event from the past, or the past in general
Those things that arouse nostalgia: something, or things, intended to arouse a feeling of nostalgia or to evoke the past in a way that arouses nostalgia
A feeling of homesickness: a longing for home or family when away from either


But for me they do not fully cover what I feel – and at times that feeling becomes increasingly stronger probably due to the fact I have lived and worked in so many different countries over my life.

For me, it represents a tension between mobility and displacement on the one hand, and dwelling and belonging on the other; whilst the former become ubiquitous and the latter become lost. – the whole being reconfigured as “nostalgia”.

I experience that tension between roaming and homing, sort of like trying to create an (impossible) truce between two warring factions or incompatible desires.

As Edward Thomas wrote:

“One aspect is going on and over the Earth; the other
would settle for ever in one place, as in a grave,
and have nothing to do with change”

I don’t have his words but the sentiment is mutual.

Finally, a quote from, I believe, W.G.Field – “nostalgia isn’t what it used to be”.

Until next time (and still wandering – and wondering)


Peripatetic Scribe

5 comments:

  1. An interesting and different slant on the topic, PS - but that is the norm for you! Seriously, a great set of statements showing you live up to your "name". I did like the final quote - first class!
    Mark NZ

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  2. Mark, thank you for your comments. I chose the name "Peripatetic" solely on the basis of my "meanderings" across the globe; "Scribe" because I enjoy writing - although not in the wordsmith class - yet.

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  3. The final quote is fantastic!
    I can only add another quote (but I prefer yours):
    “The Greek word for "return" is nostos. Algos means "suffering." So nostalgia is the suffering caused by an unappeased yearning to return.”
    ― Milan Kundera, Ignorance
    Thank you.
    Lucana

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  4. The final quote is fantastic!
    I can only add another quote (but I prefer yours):
    “The Greek word for "return" is nostos. Algos means "suffering." So nostalgia is the suffering caused by an unappeased yearning to return.”
    ― Milan Kundera, Ignorance
    Thank you
    Lucana

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  5. Lucana - thanks for your comments. I rather like your quote from Milan Kundera. It's in the same vein as others - I don't think there's a cure for it!

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