Skip to main content

Editorial (Issue 143): Stories From Your Neighbors

| The Fountain | Issue 143 (Sep - Oct 2021)

This article has been viewed 10356 times

Editorial (Issue 143): Stories From Your Neighbors

Our world is more connected than ever before, yet at the same time we often remain strikingly distant from one another. Technology, careers, education, or other pursuits could all be to blame. The Pandemic only exacerbated this problem when it consequently forced all of us to shelter inside for over a year. Our shared humanity should always reign supreme over these obstacles as it is what allows us to go above and beyond. This issue of The Fountain consists of many remarkable and inspiring stories from your fellow “brothers” and “sisters.”

“Homo Covidicus – Who Are You We?” delves deep into the Pandemic and its many effects on society. Mariya Tytarenko offers a retrospective on our collective experience of Covid and how it has transformed our language, lifestyles, clothing, etc. to a point where we feel like a new species!

“Voices and Monsters: Putting My Postpartum Psychosis in Context” explores the horrors of a rare psychological disorder in which one or two in every one thousand mothers feel oddly detached from their newly born babies. Jan Kaneen recounts her own story in which as a new mother she did her best to show her innate loving care and the subdue the “voices” of a monster inside not to harm the baby. Jan’s is an eye-opening story where we learn to sympathize with mothers suffering from this disorder and that through therapy and family support they can handle their situation.

“The Snowflake and the Sun,” the winner of our 2019 - 2020 Essay Contest, expertly tells the story of a young girl, Hannah, that is separated from the mother that she loves. She is forced to adapt to a life in an orphanage without being able to fully understand why she cannot live a normal life. She is eventually reunited with her parents and does her best to adjust until her mother learns one of the worst news any mother should hear. It breaks her down completely and Hannah is then prompted to move to America and begin a new life in a faraway land.

“For My Brother” is a memoir written by another girl named Hannah for her autistic brother Matthew. His seemingly endless amounts of energy, noise, and lack of control requires constant attention and care, thus putting an immense strain on her life and the lives of her parents. However, she feels an immense bond towards him despite these difficulties and loves him just as many of us love our siblings regardless of their imperfections. It is a reminder that love can be stronger than anything else if we allow it to be.


More Coverage

It was December 31st, 2019 when Wuhan Municipal Health Commission, China, reported a cluster of cases of pneumonia seen in Wuhan, Hubei Province. Later, we’ve learned that it was due to a new virus initially found in a seafood bazaar within the ci...
Fethullah Gülen, the Muslim scholar who inspired the global educational movement called Hizmet, has not only challenged popular perceptions of Islam in the West and certain practices among Muslims, but has also established a space for humanistical...
Calm your raging eyes Fuel not a hollow fire Lower your accusing gaze Point not at a whirling lily Liberate the flower of sublimity From the shackles of your enmity Let it dance to a divine melody Let it mix the blue into the green Let it reach ...
“Sincerity” in the Islamic Tradition Ikhlas is a Qur’anic concept that is variously translated as “sincerity” or “purity of intention,” and Gülen’s understanding of this term covers both aspects of the Qur’anic concept. In ordinary parlance, “sin...