Elena Georgiou

Writer, editor, and professor Elena Georgiou: author of Rhapsody of the Naked Immigrants and mercy mercy me; co-editor of The World in Us...

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Looking For A Sanctuary In Order To Surrender

By e g

Is it ever possible to be truly connected to another being?

There is a fear that exists inside most of us, and it is this fear that keeps us on our islands. We are right to feel afraid. When we were first introduced to the world, it shocked us how nonchalant it was. Even small children were not safe. And you were one of those unsafe children. Your mother did not take you out into a meadow and ask you to greet the day with an open heart. Your father did not walk you up to a tree and tell you to hug it. Instead, they lined up lines, and you watched them shoot it up their noses. They were on their islands. And they left you alone.

Connection, as you no doubt know, is not an easy thing to come by. I know we are all supposed to be connected to everyone. And maybe we are . . . But how can we feel connected to those closest to us when they do their damnedest to keep us at bay, at whatever cost, even with threats? This too can be a connection, in a way. But I’m sure that this is not what you meant when you asked your question. I’m thinking you were talking about a positive connection. For this to happen, a space has to be made. Sometimes the space you make is initially painful. It can keep you on your island, alone, for longer than you want, for longer than you’d like. But if there is no space, then there is no room for a being to connect to you.

What I’ve said here is blurry and vague and longwinded. What I really want to say is this: it is possible, but it is not easy. Before it can come, you must surrender, but you must only surrender in a place where you know that you will be unharmed.

Comments

  1. Jan Vallone says

    December 28, 2013 at 11:27 am

    I can speak only of my own experience, which has shown me that we can indeed be connected to other human beings, but only for fleeting moments. Sometimes the connection with a particular person consists of a single fleeting moment. Sometimes it consists of a series that spans days, weeks, months or years.

    • e g says

      December 30, 2013 at 3:52 pm

      So true, J. Thank you for joining in. Connecting.

  2. Amazed by you, Elena says

    December 29, 2013 at 7:49 pm

    Is the eventual harm worth the positive connection?

    • e g says

      December 30, 2013 at 3:54 pm

      There should never be eventual harm. Connection should never ask for more than you can give.

      • Ginna says

        January 1, 2014 at 5:42 pm

        Connection, in its very nature, asks for more than we can give on a daily hourly basis. And yes , I think a positive connection is worth the suffering .

  3. patrice says

    January 9, 2014 at 1:20 am

    I keep reading all of these words over and over to make sure what I say resonates, to make sure I make the connection, to make sure I do no harm, cause no suffering, but I keep thinking about the ability to be vulnerable.

    But about connection … maybe this is what I want to say … I don’t think surrender is truly surrender if it is only partially done or done like you wrote, “But you must only surrender in a place where you know that you will be unharmed.” I don’t think surrender can truly surrender if the surrenderer needs to know ahead of time there is some guarantee that there will be no harm, but maybe I am the crazy one.

NEW BOOK FOR 2018!

The Immigrant's Refrigerator
Fiction. Short Stories.
GenPop Books, 2018

If luck is on an author’s side, a book reaches its audience at the right time. Elena Georgiou’s The Immigrant’s Refrigerator can confidently make this claim. Populated with a cast of characters that shine the light on what it means to be an outsider in the early part of the 21st century, this story collection takes its reader into the private lives of those who have entered a country legally, others who were forced to enter illegally, and the rest who call a country home as a result of birth; characters searching for what they need to sustain them on their journeys towards a future that will not only be a place of refuge, but also one of hope.

Read more about The Immigrant's Refrigerator

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