CASTLE @ HOME NEITHER ON THE LAND NOR ON THE WATER - AN AMPHIBIOUS NEST AND UTOPIA


Castle @ home neither on the land nor on the water   - an amphibious nest and Utopia

 
  
                                                                        
                                             
  


Food, Oxygen and Water…What is next ……A Nest.    Home …Sweet Home.


 
Whenever I think of a nest, my mind gets occupied with the buildings immersed partially in the water, the boats, and the bridge on the horizon of Geneva, Switzerland. Not only because Switzerland has the world’s best bank but also because Switzerland is the most beautiful tourist destination.
 

The amphibians always attracted me. Amphibian is an animal that lives part of its life in the water and part of its life in the land. The crocodile, frog, salamanders, toad, octopus, sea horse, newt, starfish, snake, caecilians and tortoise are some of the amphibians.
 


The amphibians are “cold-blooded” or “ectothermic” animals, which means they depend on external sources like the sun to maintain their body temperature.


Some Amphibians like the turtle and tortoises live more than 100 years.
 

A frog can breathe through its mouth as well as through its skin. More than 75% of toads and frogs live in tropical rain-forests. The emerald tree boa can strike a bird or a small mammal in complete darkness. Depending upon the size of the meal, anacondas can go between meals for several months. It exemplifies the saying like a snake who has swallowed its prey.


The Merchant Navy Sailors can be safely described as having an amphibious existence. The Sailors live six months in the sea and six months in the land.
 
 
 
 

A famous quote –

“It is precisely because we resist the darkness in ourselves that we miss the depths of loveliness, beauty, brilliance, creativity, and joy that love at our core.”
-           Thomas More
 




Sir Thomas More (1478-1535), venerated by Roman Catholics as “Saint Thomas More” in 1935 was an English lawyer, social philosopher, author, Statesman, and noted Renaissance humanist.
 


Sir Thomas More’s best-known and most famous treatise “Utopia” talks about castles in the air. Utopia is a controversial novel written in Latin in 1516. “Utopia”, in the book means an imaginary island with a perfect social and political system. Utopia was envisaged as an ideal political system in which policies are governed by reason. An imagined place or state of thing which is perfect is called Utopia.
 

Utopianism is the views and habits of mind of a visionary or an idealist sometimes beyond realization.




A Utopian Society is a community possessing highly desirable or near-perfect qualities.


Utopia can be described as Eden of Garden, Paradise, heaven, bliss, Shangri-La, Happy Valley, et al.


 
The “Castles in the air” - definition is extravagant hopes and plans that will never be carried out.  Just imagine the image of a castle in the sky.  Such an existence is only a Utopian dream.
 

Castles in the air and Utopia are both sides of the same coin. It is a daydream.
 
Build a castle in the air means that you make plans that have little chance of success.
 
 
Castles in the air are plans that have little chance of happening. e.g. - “My father built a castle in the air about owning a private jet plane”. Another version can be “he is always building castles in the air without doing anything practical”.

 
The people always build castles in the air.


Build a bridge of friendship and not castles in the air.


While talking about realistic dreams, my mind goes to check the most famous English writer William Shakespeare’s seven deadly sins or vices in his Drama “Hamlet” like Sloth, Lechery, Envy, Greed, Pride, Wrath, and Gluttony.
 

The above vices are highly condemnable and can be strictly avoided. The above-mentioned sins are observed in bad elements of the society and the people with good and decent upbringing must avoid falling into the trap of such satanic temptations.


Utopia can also be regarded as a fool’s paradise due to the stretching of unrealistic cravings for perfection.

 
The castles in the air created in our visualization are a crime as lethal as Shakespeare’s seven deadly sins or vices. The illusion is most deceptive and can be a sin or vice.
 






              






                                     











A famous quote by Sir Thomas More -


“An absolutely new idea is one of the
Rarest things are known to man”.




We must in our daily life, set realistic goals which will help us in leading a virtuous life.
 


We must avoid Utopian culture and building castles in the air which have scant respect for realistic terms of existence and always live in an illusionary world, a fantasy land.
 
 
 
 
 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

TO BEGIN WITH AND END THERE WAS A RAY OF HOPE - SATYAJIT RAY

CATCH ME IF YOU CAN - MOVIE REVIEW

GANDHARVA AND APSARA