“Sanctuary”
is the word I prefer to “quarantine” for this time of COVID-19 social
distancing. “Quarantine” implies a
person or animal is tainted and outcast. Another word for it, “Lockdown,” is
most often applied to prisoners isolated
in their cells, typically after an escape attempt, or other disturbance. To call
this staying home a lockdown makes me a prisoner deprived of my freedom and
rights. “Sheltering in place” was a term first coined during the Cold War,
applied to bunkers and school basements in case of an explosion of an atom bomb. Arguable, COVID-19 is a global attack. If I call sequestering “sheltering in place,”
I lose that sense of protection and care that home means, for many have had to
hunker down in foreign lands and roadside motels to shelter in place. So, unless I have succumbed to the virus, to
call it “quarantine” makes me feel sullied, resentful, angry. If I call it “lockdown,” I am a prisoner deprived
of my freedom—and I want to rebel. What I call staying at home determines my experience,
so I most often call it “sanctuary”—protection, refuge, retreat, safety—something
chosen instead of imposed; an assertion of strength instead of vulnerability.
Sanctuary means permission to retreat from the careering
and careening that is contemporary life.
It is a refuge from the storms of days that start with stressing about
clothing, driving, stalled trains, delayed flights. Just as if I were on a
retreat, I can relax vigilance about how I look and seem to others. I can focus on what I love about my work. I can be grateful that I have virtual tools
to do it.
A sanctuary is the innermost sanctum of a church. Although I do not claim membership in any religious
tradition, home is where I can feel what I’m feeling, reflect on what matters
to me, visit life’s larger questions—breathe.
A sanctuary is where I would pray for peace and the end of the war.
Sanctuary is also a word often applied to natural reserves—for the
protection of animals and birds, especially those that have been injured. It is a place where endangered flora and
fauna might find resurgence. There are
parts of me that I have lost—talents, feelings, relationships, energy, joys. This sanctuary provides me the space and the
time to rediscover and reclaim them.
There is a storm going on in our world, the virus is a constant and there
are armies of truthers out there spreading the disease. They are calling protective measures “quarantines,”
“lockdowns,” “infringement of freedom.” To
deny and defy directives is, bizarre as it may seem, their misguided way to
protect what’s sacred to them—as it is to me—the pursuit of happiness, freedom
to realize myself, to live. The cog they
are missing is that someone else is in charge of that. I’m not embracing sanctuary only to be a good
citizen, I’m embracing it as a privilege and gift.
But what I most prefer to call this time of
self-protection and regrouping is “Coming Home” and all that implies—comfort,
ease, casual tees, safety.
What do you call it?
I call it "business as usual", lol. My day to day life hasn't changed much due to Covid.
ReplyDeleteThought provoking as always, Dr. Rich.
Darian, Thank you for your response! A wry sense of humor is healing, especially now. And do call me "Susanna." I have graduated from Kean and am a civilian again.
DeleteI like sanctuary. My home is that. It's my personal space where I wind down, find hope, comfort, and memories sometimes. I'm retired and ancient. Yet I like to say, "I'm as old as I'll ever be, and as young as I ever was." I don't believe that the inner self ages or gives up learning. Every day is different and interesting. I look forward to tomorrow, but live in now. I'm still writing and planning. As for the virus, nothing is forever. We'll beat it eventually. But there will be changes in us, in society as a whole.
ReplyDeleteI like sanctuary and place of refuge-however and definitely there is continual regrouping.
ReplyDeleteGood to hear from you, Gina! Yes, continual regrouping!
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