Five Brothers, one Mother - Conflicts
Essay by Joelyn Armas • March 21, 2017 • Essay • 381 Words (2 Pages) • 40,495 Views
Five Brothers, One Mother
by: Exie Abola
No matter what place you call home, the very word strikes a chord deep inside each of us. Home means sanctuary, for every person, some places hold great importance. At some point in our lives, we experience a culture as an outsider by moving from one culture to another. Like so, the writer exhibited this kind of experience of struggling towards shifting of houses and necessitates a vital conflict in the essay.
At the outset, he describes his house in Marikina as fragmentary with no electricity, unembellished windows and has a profusion of mosquitoes. Having the sense of obligatory to move in, or as the writer asserted, an ultimatum hanging over their head; showing the engagement of Man vs. Nature.
Moreover, the writer seems to contemplate himself about the home he finds certainty and the home he is longing for; that timeless place of deep rest, place of eternal freedom from uncomfortable thoughts and feelings. Hence, the writer was fighting against himself. For him, the cherished memories his family made in their home is something he really seeks, and those seemingly troublesome thoughts and feelings – the ones he have been resisting in his whole life – are not actually enemies or imperfections to be annihilated or rejected.
In seeking our true home outside of this present moment, we deny the present moment its true home. And that is the establishment of all our suffering and stress and longing for more. In recognizing ourselves as the home we have always sought, in remembering who we really are, the writer teaches us to delight in every second and as Ida McKinney quoted, “Do not look back and grieve over the past, for it is gone; and do not be troubled about the future, for it has yet to come. Live in the present, and make it so beautiful that it will be worth remembering.”
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