Channel: Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows
Category: Entertainment
Tags: escapismjohn koenigcivilizationnatureenvironmentalismcornatavismjason silvadictionaryofobscuresorrowscropsphilosophydictionary of obscure sorrowsagricultureenvironmentemotionpsychologywildernessdogswildnessshots of awewonder
Description: THE BOOK IS HERE, with hundreds of new definitions: bit.ly/3z1RYvH Available in hardcover, ebook, and audiobook (read by the author). ˅˅˅ ETYMOLOGY, CREDITS, TRANSCRIPT & MORE ˅˅˅ ETYMOLOGY From Gaelic balla gàrraidh, "garden wall." PRONUNCIATION For proper pronunciation go here: learngaelic.net/dictionary/?abairt=garden%20wall THE DICTIONARY OF OBSCURE SORROWS dictionaryofobscuresorrows.com The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows is a compendium of invented words written by John Koenig. Each original definition aims to fill a hole in the language-to give a name to emotions we all might experience but don't yet have a word for. Follow the project, give feedback, suggest an emotion you need a word for, or just tell me about your day. Email the author: obscuresorrows@gmail.com Facebook facebook.com/pages/The-Dictionary-of-Obscure-Sorrows/137197489655526 Twitter @ObscureSorrows twitter.com/obscuresorrows WHAT IS THAT MUSIC? "HEART OF NATURE" BY DARYL NEIL ALEXANDER GRIFFITH VIDEO CREDITS Vimeo Creative Commons Attribution License: Distress by Samuel Grandchamp vimeo.com/63207132 Vital Films - Close To Home by Vital Films vimeo.com/57867933 Robot Koch - Glassdrops (Official Music Video) by editude pictures vimeo.com/29841509 PRANATIC by SMALL BANG vimeo.com/55432735 ICELAND In the land of landscapes by julienAMC vimeo.com/93007536 ELENKA - Schmetterling (Music Video) by Helgi Jóhannsson vimeo.com/75504595 The Suburbs by Yaël Bienenstock vimeo.com/103525520 Kiwi Country by Jean-Philippe Angers vimeo.com/124134526 The Thirst for Adventure by Aaron Rickel vimeo.com/78685497 Beyond the Wild Saving the Sacred Headwaters by SUMMER RAYNE OAKES vimeo.com/47615929 Impressions of Greenland by Florent Dubé vimeo.com/82426476 SICMANTA PRESENTS Donnie Vincents The Rivers Divide Trailer by Sicmanta vimeo.com/64107884 Dark seeks dark. by Hugo Martinez Toledo vimeo.com/73343299 Reverie by Daniella Golden vimeo.com/90395940 The Pilgrims Litany All Hollow vimeo.com/59152756 Monster Rally - Honey by Tyler Coray vimeo.com/44227406 All men are called Robert Tous les hommes sappellent Robert by Insolence Productions vimeo.com/28817159 TRANSCRIPT Sometimes you move through the city and feel in your bones how strange and new this all is. The spectacle of modern civilization, just barely older than you are. With all its cramped logic, the artificial faces of asphalt and black glass; its rules and gridlines and rigid justifications for why the world must be the way it is. But there's a part of you that thinks: you are not at home here. That still remembers Eden, and longs to return. Ballagàrraidh. The story of humanity is a move from the countryside to the big city. But it's happened so fast our brains are still stuck in the hinterlands. So now a part of you longs to leave your car idling in traffic, and flee into the wilderness. To live off the land, without tools or simulations, to experience nature in all its simplicity-raw, indifferent, and ferociously real. To feel the lushness and harshness of the wild, the clarity of eating and killing and growing stronger, the dumb luck of surviving the night. But another part of you knows that Eden is a fantasy, and you'll always be floating just above it, trailing clouds of civilization wherever you go. Even our ancient symbols of nature are deeply unnatural. The plants we eat are sterile, swollen, unrecognizable to the food chain. Our domesticated animals are caricatures of their wild ancestors. The family dog is just another piece of technology, designed and bred to serve a purpose. And you too are a domesticated animal, shrouded in synthetic fibers and synthetic thoughts. Even if you sleep in the woods with a stove and a backpack, everything from the buzzing in your ears to the howling in the distance will be trying to telling you, you are not at home here. We need to believe in the fall from Eden. But all along, we were the ones who cast out the world. Who stripped it naked, taught it good and evil, and barricaded ourselves in a walled garden. We banished most of the world in order to get by. We couldn't handle the true state of nature-the overwhelming chaos-without first dividing it up in little boxes, in little frames, in little gardens. Maybe we were wrong from the start. In the beginning, there was everything.