July 9, 2007

Home Itself

Having so recently lost my mother,  Geography Incarnate is especially telling.

To be a Mother is to be the sacrament--the effective symbol--of place. Mothers do not make homes, they are our home: in the simple sense that we begin our days by a long sojourn within the body of a woman; in the extended sense that she remains our center of gravity throughout the years. She is the very diagram of belonging, the where in whose vicinity we are fed and watered, and have our wounds bound up and our noses wiped. She is geography incarnate.

....The mother is the geographical center of her family, the body out of whom their diversity springs, the neighborhood in which that diversity begins ever so awkwardly to dance its way back to the true Body which is the Mother of us all. Her role then is precisely to be there for them. Not necessarily over there, but
there--thereness itself, if you will; not necessarily in her place but place itself to them; not necessarily at home but home itself.

Posted by Jill Fallon at July 9, 2007 9:15 AM | Permalink
Comments
Post a comment









Remember personal info?