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- ESSAY, Page 78The Bright Cave Under the Hat
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- By Lance Morrow
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- A man in a park in Phoenix showed me how to make a home out
- of cardboard boxes. Not a home, exactly, but something like a
- backyard playhouse built by an ingenious child. The cardboard
- boxes interlocked, and the shelter, secret and cozy, kept out
- the cold of the Arizona night. The man, named Ernest, had once
- been an engineer at the Boeing Co.
-
- Ernest, I came to understand, was a sort of brilliant
- grown-up orphan: he had an air that was both distinguished and
- tattered. Something in his mind had broken years before. He
- survived on technique. Ernest taught me how to forage for an
- all-American diet: wait politely behind a fast-food place at
- closing time and accept the unsold hamburgers and fries. A
- third problem, keeping clean, was difficult but manageable: a
- cold-water spigot in the morning sun.
-
- It is not always the physical part of homelessness that is
- hard: home and homelessness are also ideas, emotions,
- metaphysical states. Home is all the civilization that a child
- knows. Home is one of nature's primal forms, and if it does not
- take shape properly around the child, then his mind will be at
- least a little homeless all its life.
-
- A child is a precise metaphysician. He (or she) writes down
- name, house number, street, town, state, ZIP code, country .
- . . and then, to be exact, "Planet Earth, the Solar System, the
- Galaxy, the Universe." Creation is an onion with many skins,
- all layering outward from the child's self. If he gets lost in
- the galaxy, he can find the way back, can fly through the
- concentric circles to his own house -- from outermost
- remoteness to innermost home. Nostalgia means the nostos algos,
- the agony to return home. What got broken long ago in Ernest
- was his charts and instruments for the journey.
-
- The ideal of home has been grossly sentimentalized from time
- to time, of course, just as mothers and small towns have been.
- Both can be suffocating, like an interminable Sunday in an
- airless house. Home is a place to run away from when the time
- comes.
-
- But people want to run back sometimes as well. Home is both
- magnetic poles, the start and the finish. T.S. Eliot wrote, "We
- shall not cease from exploration/ And the end of all our
- exploring/ Will be to arrive where we started/ And know the
- place for the first time."
-
- People tend to run back at this time of year. If war and
- recession come banging on the door, as they are doing now, the
- spirit feels unquiet, dislodged. The news carries with it
- threats of eviction and violence.
-
- The young Americans wait for their presents in the desert.
- They come addressed to Operation Desert Shield, APO New York,
- 09848-0006. They are parcels of home shipped into a zone that
- is nearly as alien and inhospitable as space -- temperatures
- unnatural, planet sand-colored to the horizon, days blinding,
- nights full of stars. Home, built around the cave and fire pit,
- belongs to a more Teutonic, cold-weather scheme of things.
-
- A Connecticut man has been convicted of murder. The man
- argues in his defense that the police made an illegal search
- of his "home" -- the cardboard boxes he used as a chest of
- drawers as he sheltered beneath a highway overpass -- in order
- to get their evidence. Does the Fourth Amendment protect
- cardboard boxes? What is the legal definition of home? What
- confers the sanctity of home? A lease or a deed? Four walls?
- How thick or thin? Must home have doors and locks?
-
- The womb is the first home. Thereafter, home is the soil you
- come from and recognize, what you knew before uprooted:
- creatures carry an imprint of home, a stamp -- the infinitely
- subtle distinctiveness of temperature and smell and weather and
- noises and people, the intonations of the familiar. Each home
- is an unrepeatable configuration; it has personality, its own
- emanation, its spirit of place. Nature's refugees, like eels
- and cranes, are neither neurotic nor political, and so steer
- by a functional homing instinct. Human beings invented national
- boundaries and the miseries of exile; they have messier, more
- tragic forms of navigation that often get them lost. The earth
- is home, and all its refugees, its homeless, sometimes seem a
- sort of advance guard of apocalypse. They represent a principle
- of disintegration -- the fate of homelessness generalized to
- a planetary scale.
-
- In later years a person sometimes visits his childhood home
- and circles it with a sort of alienated wonder. Someone else's
- lights are burning inside upon someone else's Christmas tree,
- and the child that once lived there is now a stranger in the
- skin of a middle-aged man. It seems a sort of obscure outrage
- that the windows and doors are not all open at once, telling
- stories. The home, like the mind, is a time capsule. Where are
- the stories and jokes of the house? Its old animation has
- become a ghost and gone into memory. The house is someone
- else's now.
-
- Love is home. But home may be a horror also, a cage with
- wild animals in it. Home is aligned on the side of life, and
- so the perversion of it (by incest, for example; by violence;
- by betrayal) is a filthy business, and sometimes evil.
-
- The myth of Eden records the first trauma of homelessness.
- Home, after that expulsion, is what we make, what we build. We
- build our own home again, endlessly, in memory of Eden, or hope
- of it. Past or future. The present is never contented,
- perfection is hypothetical, and home is always incomplete.
-
- The flesh is home: African nomads without houses decorate
- their faces and bodies instead. The skull is home. We fly in
- and out of it on mental errands. The highly developed spirit
- becomes a citizen of its own mobility, for home has been
- internalized and travels with the homeowner. Home, thus
- transformed, is freedom. Everywhere you hang your hat is home.
- Home is the bright cave under the hat.
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