2 minute read
is not place of hon
of the Toronto skyline from the roof of the building. I remember that my friend had to dare me to make the (admittedly short) jump from one section of the roof to the other. I remember there was a wooden beam carved with the names of past explorers.
I’ve been thinking a lot about long-term nuclear warnings recently. The whole ‘this place is not a place of honour, no highly esteemed deed is commemorated here, nothing valued is here’ deal. I’ve been thinking about ghosts, about ghosts haunting a location, and about some locations having no ghosts and yet being haunted by something. I’m not a particularly spiritual person; I don’t think ghosts are real, but I do think there was something haunting that building when I visited it.
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Every building we’ve ever visited is filled with the souls of those who came before. Not in a ‘they died and now their spirit walks the halls’ kinda way, but something more tangible. The crack in the wall where someone hit it in a fit of rage. The deep lines carved into the table where a knife slipped from a cook’s hand. All the signs are there, and they prove that there was life here once. Looking back, I wish I knew what that building used to be. I wonder if it was ever someone’s home, if someone took their first breath within those walls, lost their first tooth, and had their first kiss. I wonder how they would feel about it now: covered in graffiti, trash strewn across the floor.
Should these places be left alone and fade into nothingness? Is that really worse than what they currently are?
I wonder what the world will look like 100, 200, 1000 years from now. Will we be haunting the landscape, just like our ancestors do to us? Will they have built homes—monuments even—out of our bones? Or maybe all of human civilization will fall in a year, destroyed by a nuclear war that there were too many warning signs for. Maybe we’ll be discovered by another species, one that’s a little less self-destructive than ours. Maybe they’ll see our buildings and our statues and wonder at their beauty, and our spirits will still be alive.
We can look back on pottery that was made tens of thousands of years ago and see the fingerprints of the artists who made it and poured their souls into it. We can keep a spirit, the soul of the person alive through their creations, through the mark they left on the world. Maybe that won’t matter if there’s no world left to live in.
Will the building that I stood on three years ago—where I felt the warm summer breeze upon my face—still be there? Could it have been torn down for parts and scrap metal just a year after I saw it?