Site Meter Peculiar Susceptibility: boundaries

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

boundaries

Growing up as I did, the daughter of a surveyor, it is perhaps not surprising that I regularly wonder about borders and boundaries.

The forest in which Nora, Pat, and I grew up is filled with surprising stone walls - stone walls where no foundation or house is nearby, stone walls that the Joshua's Trust trails now traverse.

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I've had debates in suburban backyards about whether or not property boundaries are real (nb. do not try to have this argument with an existentialist, even one well-acquainted with stone walls and hedgerows, unless you are prepared to give up a bit flustered).

In my days teaching daycare, I enjoyed watching the various methods 3-year-olds have for negotiating boundaries - rule bending, side-stepping, and loop-hole-finding at its best.

These days, I've been wondering about where the self starts and stops. Sometimes I feel the fixed perimeter of this corporeal husk so palpably. I feel amazed that I don't burst over the seams of my body. Other times, it seems comforting to reject the "hereness" of our bodies.

What keeps one fragile force from another? That's what I kept wondering last night as I was watching Caribou at the Iron Horse. It was easily the best concert I've seen this year and, as they sat, drum kit to drum kit, face to face, I couldn't help but marvel over all those sounds - those overlapping indexes of self - and where it all starts and where it all stops.

2 comments:

betsy q. bramble said...

Your speaking of the "hereness" of our bodies brought me back to another thing you once wrote that has stuck in my mind ever since I read it:

"There's something inescapable about incidents of clumsiness. They scream "Be here!" when one would otherwise be going about one's life with a certain amount of disassociation."

The literal pain that comes along with breaking the boundaries of our bodies? Something to think about..

Meghan Maguire Dahn said...

I thought about this comment of yours last night when we were in the tree and you told the story of your horrific fall.

I think about the physical boundaries of my body/our bodies a lot. They're at once so defined and so permiable: pores, orifices, laceratable skin, etc. I wish I knew more about molecular science, sometimes.

I love that you read what I write.