Sense of Place
The first time I ever learned that term, "sense of
place," was while reading "Walden," by Henry David Thoreau, in
college. For those who haven't read it, it is a senses story that takes place in the mid 1800s in some woods near a pond in Cambridge, Mass. The point of the first-person
account is that we need to be fully aware and appreciative of our surroundings
at all possible times. There is beauty, tragedy, and godliness everywhere. The
busyness of life sometimes prevents me from focusing; but, when I do, and I
search for the senses words to describe a "sense of place," there is
joy in that. Sometimes, in order to become awestruck afresh with all that we
see, hear, touch, taste, and smell, we have to take ourselves to new
environments. I recently thrilled at a new "sense of place" when I
had an opportunity to visit Haiti. Although I've traveled out of the country,
the extremeness of this place prompted me to want to write, and write, and
write. Although far from the genius of Thoreau, I've written a sense of this
place. I encourage you to try capture your own experiences in your own words.
Slowly, the Haitian driver maneuvers over extremely bumpy,
rocky roads - and then accelerates at bursts of breakneck speeds down few
paved roads. Our conspicuously white faces witness bizarre sights from the
van's windows: men peeing publicly, severely malnourished dogs mating,
children hanging upside down against a crumbling wall, a boy rolling a tire
down a dried-up riverbed with a Sprite bottle attached to a stick, children
pointing and smiling, roadside tables displayed with mangoes, feminine
protection, sunglasses. Ankle deep, smoldering garage. Rubble spilled into the
alleyways from earthquake-compromised buildings. Deafening honking and
screeching brakes due to no traffic laws. Women walking erect with loads
as large as a basket of live chickens balanced carefully atop their heads. An
irrigation system capturing water from high atop a mountain and rushing it past
bony horses and naked bathing woman. Voodoo chants and drumbeats leading
dancers winding through street vendors.
A country of contradictions. Vibrant bougainvillea draped over
razor-wire walls. Landscapes of garbage set against a backdrop of picturesque
mountains. Enamoured with Jesus while working to appease Voodoo deities.
Emerging from densely packed tent cities neatly dressed. Children in
uniforms to attend schools in a dilapidated building. Tap-Taps painted with
images of Jesus alongside likenesses of American movie stars or women in seductive
poses. No sanitation, yet brightly-colored water delivery trucks that blast
friendly, catchy tunes. Police with shotguns at entrances to convenient stores
and fast-food restaurants.
Resonating over the Valley of Hope countryside on a Sunday
morning is the rhythmic beat of the hands of men and boys making contact with
crude percussion instruments. Feet tap, bodies sway, arms are lifted high,
voices yell praises in Creole. "Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!"
In the still darkness of an early morning, I grip the van's
seat to avoid bruises from the extreme dips and mounds of the
"roads." Putrid smells of
decomposing waste penetrate the van's interior. Oppressive poverty, earthquake
damage, desperation - mile after mile. Barely lit with the dawn's light, a
women walks through the garbage; nostrils filled with the pungent smell, she
picks her way over the rocky bumps and around the debris. But her head is tilted back. Her hands are
lifted toward heaven. Beauty, thankfulness, and praise rise from within her -
audibly expressed in the grayness of that place.
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