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“The darker the night, the brighter the stars.”

Fyodor Dostoevsky

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Restless Stars, Restless Hearts

 

Recently, in the ordinary intimacy of a conversation with a contractor working in my home, something unexpected surfaced. Somewhere between measurements and polite small talk, we discovered a shared fault line: we had both lost our parents in our teenage years. The discovery didn’t arrive dramatically—it simply settled between us, quiet and heavy. As we spoke, it became clear that this kind of loss doesn’t diminish with time. It ripens. Age does not soften it; it teaches it new ways to echo.

That exchange carried me backward to a cold evening in the mid-1990s, aboard the Princess of Scandinavia, cutting its slow path from Newcastle to Gothenburg. My head was clouded with vodka and restless thoughts, so I climbed to the top deck to breathe. Above me, the northern sky stretched clear and uncompromising, scattered with stars that felt arranged solely for that moment. It was a private spectacle—one that could never be repeated, only remembered.

Standing there, surrounded by sea and silence, I felt an unexpected kinship with Ingmar Bergman and the way he wrote of his inner darkness in The Magic Lantern. That same sense of being trapped inside oneself pressed in on me. And, as it often does, my mind returned to my adopted father, who had left this world when I was twelve. In that vast, quiet night, grief didn’t shout; it whispered—and it whispered in verse:

Meet me amidst the ocean,
Under my Northern sky,
To the light of constellations,
As our restless stars pass by.

That moment helps explain why I hold so dearly to the Swedish idea of sambovikt—a word that gestures toward balance, toward the fragile but essential equilibrium of human connection. It also sharpens a harder truth: far too many children grow up in the long shadow of an absent parent. I carry deep empathy for that pain—for the version of it that hurts in childhood, and for the quieter, more complicated version that follows into adulthood.

What I’ve come to understand is that happiness is not a sudden arrival, nor a solitary achievement. It grows slowly from stable, long-term, trusting relationships. This matters for couples, yes—but its deepest consequences are felt by the children within those bonds. When my father closed his eyes for the last time, something vanished with him: guidance, reassurance, the ritual of bedtime stories—David Copperfield, Oliver Twist, Pinocchio—tales that don’t just entertain, but quietly teach a child how to imagine a future.

Many single parents carry this burden with extraordinary strength, doing the work of two hearts with one exhausted body. Yet even in the best of circumstances, absence leaves a shape behind. Children often feel it as a low, persistent loneliness—a sense that something essential is missing, though they may not yet have words for it.

Children thrive in the warmth of praise from both parents, just as they grow through correction offered with care. When that balance is gone, what remains is often an unresolved longing—a hunger not easily named, but faithfully carried.

When I reflect on sambovikt, I’m reminded that our search for meaning is inseparable from our need for connection. It is within these foundational bonds that we hear the deepest echoes of ourselves. And it is there, too, that we come closest to understanding what it truly means to be human.

 

Sambovikt: The quiet balance created when two people share the weight of life with steady presence and long-term commitment, forming a stabilizing ground from which others—especially children—can safely grow.

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Jim McCrory

Under Northern Skies: The Enduring Bonds of Sambovikt"

Visible to anyone in the world
Edited by Jim McCrory, Thursday 24 July 2025 at 12:42

Recently, while conversing with a contractor working in my home, we discovered a poignant commonality: both of us had lost our parents during our teenage years. As we shared our stories, it became evident that the impact of such loss deepens with age.

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Image generated with the asistance of Microsoft Copilot

This exchange transported me back to a chilly evening in the mid-90s on the Princess of Scandinavia, sailing from Newcastle to Gothenburg. To clear my head from the evening's vodka, I ascended to the top deck. The northern sky, a clear vault peppered with stars, offered a silent spectacle just for me—a view never to be replicated. In that vast, quiet expanse, I felt a kinship with Ingmar Bergman, who described in The Magic Lantern his own battles with inner demons. Overwhelmed and feeling eternally trapped, I thought of my adopted father, lost to me at age twelve. My heart whispered a verse:

 

Meet me amidst the ocean,

Under my Northern sky,

To the light of constellations,

As our restless stars pass by.

 

This reflective moment underscores why I cherish the Swedish concept of 'sambovikt'—a term that captures the essence of human connection. It highlights a stark reality: too many children grow up in the shadow of an absent parent. I hold deep empathy for the pain these children endure and will continue to face.

True happiness, I've come to realize, stems from stable, long-term, trusting relationships. This foundation is crucial not just for couples, but profoundly affects the children they raise. A father's closure of eyes when I was just twelve left a void of guidance, of bedtime stories that spark the imagination—stories like David Copperfield, Oliver Twist, and Pinocchio. While many single parents admirably juggle the dual burdens of household and heartache, the absence of a parental figure often leaves children grappling with a pervasive loneliness and a sense that something integral is missing from their lives.

Children flourish under the praise of both parents, just as they grow from constructive feedback. Without this balanced presence, they often carry a burden of unresolved yearning.

In pondering 'sambovikt,' I am reminded that our quest for meaning and connection is deeply tied to these foundational relationships. It is in these bonds that we find the deepest echoes of what it means to be human.

Permalink 4 comments (latest comment by Jim McCrory, Tuesday 21 January 2025 at 16:38)
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