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Tove Jansson on the Worm and the Artwork of Self-Renewal – The Marginalian


Trauma, Growth, and How to Be Twice as Alive: Tove Jansson on the Worm and the Art of Self-Renewal

There are experiences in life that strike on the middle of our being, sundering us in half with unexpected ache for which we have been fully unbraced. As a result of we all know that that is attainable — from the lives of others, from our personal previous expertise, from the historical past of the guts recorded in our literature — we’re at all times dwelling with the notice, acutely aware or unconscious, that life can sunder us at any given level with out warning. That is the worth of consciousness, which makes dwelling each troublesome and pressing. “Nothing is straightforward while you would possibly come aside within the center at any second,” Tove Jansson (August 9, 1914–June 27, 2001) writes in her virtually unbearably fantastic 1972 masterpiece The Summer time Guide (public library), written within the wake of her mom’s demise.

Jansson’s statement right here is literal: Her protagonist — just a little woman named Sophia, who resides on a small Nordic island together with her aged grandmother after her mom’s demise — finds herself fascinated about what it’s wish to be a worm, fabled to go on dwelling two new lives when cut up in half.

Illustration by Emily Hughes from Little Gardener.

Worms — these humblest of creatures, which Darwin regarded with absolute amazement and celebrated because the unsung sculptors of the biosphere, having tilled and fertilized the Earth as we all know it — dwell within the well-liked creativeness as a dwelling metaphor for regeneration, for turning trauma into redoubled life. (Right here, poetic fact and scientific reality diverge — in actuality, most earthworms, of which there are greater than 1,800 species, have a definite head and tail; if minimize within the center, some species can regrow a brand new tail from the pinnacle half and go on dwelling, however the tail half dies. Maybe the planarium flatworm — a tiny invertebrate belonging to the phylum Platyhelminthes, separate from earthworms — is the superior metaphor, for it can regrow its total physique from the smallest minimize fragment.)

Nonetheless, the poetic picture of the cleaved worm that goes on dwelling is a fertile thought experiment for the way we might take into consideration these most sundering experiences.

Questioning about what it might be like for the worm to be minimize in half, Sophia discovers one in all life’s elemental truths — that the worth of all progress is ache, however the ache passes and the expansion stays:

The worm most likely is aware of that if it comes aside, each halves will begin rising individually. House. However we don’t know the way a lot it hurts. And we don’t know, both, if the worm is afraid it’s going to harm. However anyway, it does have a sense that one thing sharp is getting nearer and nearer on a regular basis. That is intuition. And I can inform you this a lot, it’s not truthful to say it’s too little, or it solely has a digestive canal, and in order that’s why it doesn’t harm. I’m certain it does harm, however possibly just for a second.

It at all times hurts to develop twice as alive. And the query is at all times what are you going to do together with your new uncharted life.

Jansson considers the worm halves that go on to dwell as reborn wholes:

They realized that to any extent further life could be fairly completely different, however they didn’t know the way, that’s, in what approach.

Artwork from An Almanac of Birds: Divinations for Unsure Days. (Out there as a print and as stationery playing cards, benefitting the Audubon Society.)

Couple with some enduring knowledge on management, give up, and the paradox of self-transcendence from one other of Jansson’s classic youngsters’s books, then revisit her breathtaking love letters to the love of her life.

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