Time and Direction
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Family pieces returning to New England |
I had grown up with a family history book on our shelf that told our story and traced it back to this area of New England. Before the move, when I was cleaning and packing, my daughter began to read a book from my shelf that had been given to one of my great, great, etc. grandfathers in Francistown, NH. So with this move, in some sense, I was going backward. And I was bringing those same family books and items, once passed down to me, back to their origins. Direction and time were crossing each other as I journeyed into my future.
Other societies have different cultural frameworks for the relationship between direction and time. The Yupno tribe of Papua New Guinea, for instance, sees the past as always downhill and the future as uphill, perhaps mirroring the migration of their tribe from the coast upward into the hills. But time and place are more complicated than this simple framework. Time for the Yupno is not linear, merely extending from the coast upward toward the mountains. Time is also anchored to smaller-scale topographic features. They point toward a doorway when talking about the past and move away from the door when referring to the future.