Curiosity and the Refusal of Uncertainty

Human relationships with nature often begin with curiosity. People want to see what is hidden, understand what feels mysterious, and explain what resists easy meaning. However, In literature or environmental history, curiosity rarely stays harmless. Again and again, the desire to know turns into a desire to define, control, or dominate. This shift appears across different genres and time periods, suggesting that the problem is not curiosity itself, but how humans respond to what they cannot fully understand.

In The Romance of the Faery Melusine, Andre Lebey presents a story where curiosity toward the natural and supernatural leads to destruction rather than understanding. Raymondin’s need to know Melusine’s hidden identity pushes him to violate boundaries that once protected love and balance. Also, In Vast Expanses: Introduction: People and Oceans, Helen Rozwadowski traces a similar process on a historical scale, showing how human curiosity about the ocean slowly transformed it from an unknowable force into something measured, named, and controlled. William Cronon’s The Trouble with Wilderness also helps clarify this shift by revealing how nature itself becomes masked by cultural ideas that make human influence invisible. Together, these texts suggest that human curiosity becomes dangerous at the moment it refuses uncertainty and demands control. This essay will talk about how curiosity is not harmful on its own. Instead, when people feel fear or cannot tolerate uncertainty, curiosity turns into a desire for control. Through The Romance of the Faery Melusine, Vast Expanses, and The Trouble with Wilderness, these texts show how nature, from the supernatural to the ocean, becomes something humans feel they must explain, manage, or dominate. Lebey shows this shift most clearly in the moment Raymondin decides to spy on Melusine. The narrator describes his movement, “He climbed quickly in his eagerness to strike, his heart pumping under his coat of mail as he climbed the narrow winding stair, steeper and steeper, to the very top” (121). This sentence frames Raymondin’s curiosity as violent. The phrase “eagerness to strike” is especially striking because it appears before Raymondin even sees Melusine. Knowing has already become an act of attack. Lebey does not describe curiosity as gentle or patient, instead, it is aggressive and physical. Raymondin’s heart “pumping under his coat of mail” links emotional intensity to armor, suggesting that his desire to know is already defensive and hostile. Curiosity is no longer about closeness, it is about power. Also, the structure of the sentence reinforces this obsession. The repetition of “climbed” and the phrase “steeper and steeper” stretch the moment, pulling the reader into Raymondin’s fixation. The climb becomes symbolic, the higher he goes, the further he moves away from trust and intimacy. Lebey ends this moment by emphasizing the place, “There where he had never been before. Neither he, nor anyone, except her – and – who else?” (121). These broken phrases mirror Raymondin’s unstable thoughts. The space is defined by exclusion, it belongs to Melusine alone. By entering it, Raymondin crosses a boundary that should remain intact. His curiosity becomes intrusion, much like humanity’s repeated entrance into natural spaces that resist explanation. Before this intrusion, Lebey presents Melusine as part of a balanced natural environment. Raymondin first hears her before he sees her, “He heard not far away, in a place that he could not yet see, a strange sound of splashing water” (123). This sentence delays vision and prioritizes sound. The water announces presence without revealing form or meaning. Melusine exists without being defined. Lebey allows the natural world to remain partially unknowable, suggesting that mystery itself is not a problem. And when Melusine is finally described, Lebey writes, “A tail of green scales stretched under the water made the water lilies move” (125). This sentence places Melusine in direct relation with her environment. Her body does not dominate the space, it moves with it. The water lilies respond naturally, without fear or disruption. At this point, curiosity has not turned into control yet. The scene shows humans and nature existing together, not one dominating the other. The tragedy begins when Raymondin feels the need to know and control everything, which destroys this balance.

Rozwadowski talks about a similar shift, but from a collective and historical perspective. In Vast Expanses, the author explains how the ocean gradually became something humans believed they could understand. She describes how people learned to see the sea as “an environment that could be studied, mapped, and known.” This sentence is important because of its verbs. “Studied,” “mapped,” and “known” suggest order and containment. The ocean, which is physically vast and unstable, becomes conceptually manageable. Curiosity leads people to create systems of knowledge that aim to control the world. Rozwadowski’s language shows that this change is not neutral. When humans turn the ocean into an object of knowledge, they begin to separate themselves from it. The sea becomes something outside of humans, something they study and control. This is similar to Raymondin’s gaze. Once Melusine is treated as something to be understood, she can no longer exist as an equal partner. In both cases, curiosity creates distance rather than connection. William Cronon also helps explain why this transformation often feels harmless. He writes, “Wilderness hides its unnaturalness behind a mask that is all the more beguiling because it seems so natural” (7). This sentence exposes how cultural ideas disguise human influence. The word “seems” is important, since it suggests appearance rather than truth. Nature looks untouched not because it is, but because humans have learned to imagine it that way. The mask allows people to believe their curiosity is innocent, even as it leads to control. Across these texts, there is a pattern. Curiosity becomes dangerous not when humans ask questions, but when they refuse limits. Raymondin cannot accept not knowing. Explorers cannot accept unmapped seas. Modern culture cannot accept nature without explanation. In each case, the desire to know becomes the desire to dominate. The cost of this transformation is the loss of balance, trust, and responsibility.

Furthermore, If curiosity becomes controlled, there question remains about what prompts that shift. Across The Romance of the Faery Melusine, Vast Expanses, and The Trouble with Wilderness, the turning point is not simple desire to know, but discomfort with uncertainty. These texts suggest that humans struggle to live alongside what they cannot fully explain. When uncertainty threatens identity, authority, or emotional security, curiosity hardens into domination. In Lebey’s story, Raymondin’s transformation is driven less by discovery than by fear. After hearing Melusine’s mysterious sounds, he imagines betrayal and danger before seeing any proof. Lebey describes Raymondin’s mental state just before the revelation, “His imagination, inflamed by jealousy, had already created horrors which reason could not control” (124). This sentence reveals that the true source of violence is not Melusine’s secret, but Raymondin’s imagination. The phrase “created horrors” shows that uncertainty leads to fear. Instead of accepting that he does not know, Raymondin makes up explanations. At this point, curiosity is no longer about understanding, but about feeling safe. Also, the order of the sentence matters. Fearful imagination comes first, and reason fails to follow. Lebey shows that when fear enters curiosity, rational limits disappear. Raymondin’s desire to see Melusine’s true form becomes an attempt to stabilize his own anxiety. Knowledge seems to promise safety, but it instead leads to destruction. This moment shows when curiosity turns into control, when knowledge is used to protect oneself rather than to respect others. And when Raymondin finally sees Melusine, Lebey does not use dramatic language. Instead, the scene is quiet and tragic, “She was there, in the bath of clear water, her long body half hidden, her green tail gleaming softly beneath the surface” (125). The sentence emphasizes that Melusine is only partly visible, using phrases like “half hidden” and “beneath the surface.” Even at this moment, she is not fully revealed. Lebey suggests that nature cannot be completely known without harm. The problem is not what Raymondin sees, but that he cannot accept incomplete knowledge. Once he sees her, their relationship collapses. Curiosity demands full access, and this demand destroys what it tries to understand.

Rozwadowski describes a similar process on a global scale. Rozwadowski explains that early modern explorers first approached the ocean with awe, but this feeling quickly turned into anxiety. She writes that because the sea was unpredictable and difficult to control, humans tried to turn it into “a space that could be ordered, classified, and made legible.” This phrase is important because “legible” means more than understanding, it means forcing the ocean to fit into human systems of reading and control. What cannot be made legible is seen as threatening. Rozwadowski shows that mapping and measuring the sea did not eliminate fear, it disguised it. The drive to classify ocean currents, depths, and species reflects a desire to eliminate uncertainty. Curiosity turns into control at the moment when humans decide that mystery itself is unacceptable. Like Raymondin, explorers could not tolerate partial knowledge. The ocean had to be fully explained, or at least appear to be. Cronon’s work also helps explain why this change seems justified rather than violent. He writes, “The more wilderness seems pristine, the more it appears to be untouched by human hands, the more it offers itself as a place for escape” (8). This idea shows how imagination can turn domination into something that looks innocent. When wilderness is described as “untouched,” humans hide their own role in shaping it. As a result, control becomes hard to see. Curiosity appears harmless because its effects are hidden by cultural stories about exploration and progress. Cronon’s use of the phrase “offers itself” is also important. This wording suggests consent, as if nature willingly invites human control. This rhetorical move is similar to Raymondin’s reasoning. He convinces himself that he has the right to know Melusine’s secret because it affects him emotionally. In both cases, personal desire is reframed as entitlement. Once curiosity becomes a right rather than a question, control becomes unavoidable. Across these texts, fear plays a crucial role. Fear of betrayal, fear of danger, fear of the unknown. But rather than confronting fear, humans attempt to eliminate it by redefining nature as something manageable. Rozwadowski notes that scientific knowledge did not replace wonder, it replaced vulnerability. To know the ocean was to believe one could survive it. And to see Melusine was to believe one could possess her truth. These attempts, however, always fail. Raymondin ultimately loses to Melusine. Explorers exploit the ocean until it collapses under human pressure. Cronon warns that many modern environmental crises come from the same belief that knowledge equals control. Together, these texts show that the real problem is not curiosity itself, but the refusal to accept limits. Also, his refusal has ethical consequences. Lebey shows that crossing boundaries destroys relationships. Rozwadowski shows that trying to control the sea erases histories and labor, especially of people who lived with the ocean rather than above it. Cronon shows that hiding human influence allows environmental harm to continue under the idea of preservation. Together, these writers suggest that environmental destruction begins not with direct violence, but with a mindset that cannot accept not knowing.

Moreover, I will discuss how these texts suggest a different way of relating to nature, one based on humility rather than control. By examining how loss functions in each work, I will talk about how learning to live with uncertainty is the ethical response these texts call for. Across The Romance of the Faery Melusine, Vast Expanses, and The Trouble with Wilderness, the shift from curiosity to control leads not to understanding, but to loss. Each text shows a different kind of loss, love, balance, trust, or ecological stability, but has a similar pattern. When humans cannot accept uncertainty, they try to gain mastery instead. Together, these texts suggest that environmental harm begins not with exploitation itself, but with the belief that everything must be known, explained, and controlled. In Lebey’s narrative, the cost of this belief is immediate and personal. After Raymondin exposes Melusine’s secret, Lebey describes her final departure in restrained, sorrowful language,  “She uttered one long cry, full of pain and tenderness, and vanished into the air” (129). The sentence is brief, but heavy with meaning. Melusine does not accuse Raymondin, she does not curse him. Instead, her cry combines “pain and tenderness,” suggesting that loss is mutual. Yet she is the one who must leave. The human impulse to know does not simply reveal truth, it forces nature to withdraw. I also think the word “vanished” is important. Melusine does not die, she disappears. Lebey implies that nature does not retaliate against domination, it retreats. This withdrawal mirrors modern environmental crises, where ecosystems collapse quietly after prolonged control and exploitation. Raymondin’s tragedy is not that he learns too late, but that learning itself arrives only after irreversible damage. Knowledge comes last, not first.

Rozwadowski also describes a parallel loss on a historical scale. Rozwadowski explains that as the ocean became more thoroughly studied and managed, it also became abstracted from lived experience. She writes that modern societies began to treat the sea as “a space defined by charts, measurements, and data rather than by human encounter”. This sentence highlights the emotional cost of control. By replacing encounters with data, humans distance themselves from responsibility. The ocean becomes something that can be used without being truly known. Rozwadowski does not reject science, instead, questions the belief that scientific knowledge alone produces ethical relationships. Rozwadowski’s argument suggests that when knowledge is pursued without humility, it becomes extractive. Like Raymondin’s desire to see Melusine, the desire to know the ocean completely produces separation rather than connection. What disappears is not ignorance, but intimacy. Cronon’s essay makes this loss clear. He writes, “We are no less likely to destroy nature when we idolize it as wilderness than when we exploit it for raw materials” (13). This statement changes how environmental harm is understood. Damage does not come only from greed, but also from idealization. When humans place nature on a pedestal, they remove themselves from responsibility. Wilderness becomes something distant and separate from everyday life, just as Melusine becomes other once her difference is revealed. Cronon’s warning explains why mastery is so dangerous, it often presents itself as respect. Raymondin believes he deserves to know the truth. Explorers believe they deserve knowledge. Modern societies believe they deserve control. In each case, domination is justified as progress. This illusion of innocence allows harm to continue without accountability.

What unites these texts is not a rejection of curiosity, but a critique of certainty. They suggest that ethical relationships with nature require accepting limits, limits to knowledge, access, and power. Melusine’s tragedy occurs because Raymondin cannot accept that some truths are not his to possess. The ocean’s exploitation occurs because societies cannot accept that not everything can be mapped or owned. Wilderness is destroyed because humans cannot accept themselves as part of it. Together, these works propose humility as an alternative ethic. Humility does not mean ignorance or passivity. It means understanding that knowledge does not equal ownership, and curiosity does not justify control. To be humble before nature means accepting partial understanding and recognizing our mutual dependence. Lebey points to this ethic through absence. After Melusine leaves, Raymondin is left with knowledge he cannot use. Rozwadowski shows it through history, demonstrating how domination has repeatedly failed to create sustainability. Cronon points to it through language, urging readers to abandon the fantasy of purity and separation. By reading these texts together, it becomes clear that the environmental crisis is not only ecological but also epistemological. It starts with how humans view nature, what they think knowledge is for, and who it serves. When curiosity seeks reassurance rather than connection, it becomes destructive. When knowledge tries to eliminate uncertainty instead of accepting it, it becomes violent. This final insight changes how we understand the role of literature and environmental history. These texts do more than describe nature, they reveal the assumptions that shape how humans interact with it. Through the reading, we can see how small narrative moments, one glance into a bath, one chart of the sea, or one metaphor of wilderness, expose deeper ethical problems.

Ultimately, The Romance of the Faery Melusine, Vast Expanses, and The Trouble with Wilderness ask readers to rethink what it means to know the world. They suggest that the greatest danger is not curiosity itself, but the refusal to live with uncertainty. In a time of increasing environmental damage, these works remind us that learning when not to know, to pause, to listen, and to respect limits, represents a more ethically responsible understanding of knowledge.

Reflection

Looking back on this semester, this class changed how I understand both nature and literature. Before taking it, I thought of the environment as something separate from human life, something that people either protect or harm. Through the course, I came to realize that nature and humanity are deeply connected, and that the way we describe the natural world often reflects how we see ourselves or our own perspectives. Also, at first, I didn’t know much about mermaids, but through this class, I found that it was interesting how mermaids became a bridge between humans and nature. They are not just mythical creatures, but symbols of many things, such as transformation, nature, or coexistence.

I also learned that literature can shape environmental awareness. Stories are not only for entertainment but also for rethinking how we live with the environment. Also, I was able to know that studying literature is not only about interpreting texts but also about thinking critically about the world we live in.

Final Project Proposal

For my final essay, I plan to expand my Discovery 1 about The Romance of the Faery Melusine by Andre Lebey. In my first essay, I focused on how the story reveals humanity’s fear of nature and the desire to control what cannot be fully understood. For my final project, I will develop this idea further by connecting it with Helen Rozwadowski’s Vast Expanses: Introduction: People and Oceans. Using Rozwadowski’s discussion of how humans turn the ocean into a concept shaped by knowledge and power, I will explore how Lebey’s portrayal of Melusine reflects the same human impulse to dominate and define the natural world. My essay will analyze how both texts show that human curiosity often becomes a form of control, turning nature, from the sea to the supernatural, into something that must be explained, contained, or destroyed.

The Rebirth Beneath the Waves

In The Deep, chapters 8–9, the part that stood out to me was the scene where Yetu and Oori meet again at the end of the story. The line, “She did not transform in the way wajinru pups transformed in the two-legs’ bellies. She didn’t grow gills or fins, but like Yetu, she could breathe both on land and in the sea. She was a completely new thing.” I thought this moment shows how the story connects memory, pain, and love to the idea of becoming something new. Oori doesn’t just change into a wajinru, she becomes a bridge between two worlds, land and sea, human and ocean. Through her, I think it shows that transformation can come from understanding and connection, not just survival.

I also liked how this scene turns the ocean from something dark and heavy into something peaceful and full of life. When Yetu invites Oori “into the dark, into this world of beauty,” the darkness doesn’t feel scary anymore. It feels calm and comforting, like the deep sea itself. I think this shows how Yetu learns to see her memories differently, not as pain, but as something that gives her strength. I thought the water became a symbol of healing, where remembering is not a burden but a way to live more fully. Another part that I found interesting is how Oori can breathe both underwater and on land. It feels like a metaphor for balance, between past and present, pain and peace, self and community. It made me think that being “a completely new thing” means not choosing one identity, but accepting both.

For me, this ending reminded me that healing means carrying the past with us, but letting it shape us in a softer way. Like water, memory keeps moving and changing, but it also gives life. In this way, I thought The Deep ends not in tragedy, but in rebirth, where Yetu finally finds peace within the waves and within herself.

Final project idea

For my final essay, I am planning to close read Helen Rozwadowski’s Vast Expanses: Introduction: People and Oceans. I will explore how Rozwadowski redefines the ocean as a space shaped by human knowledge, power, and imagination rather than a neutral part of nature. My essay will focus on how she describes the ocean’s “vastness” not just as a physical quality but as an idea built through exploration, science, and stories, turning something wild and limitless into something they can name and own. I plan to analyze how Rozwadowski connects human curiosity about the sea to the desire for control, how people have tried to measure, name, and own something that resists boundaries. 

The Emotional Spirit of Water

In African Mermaids and Other Water Spirits, the line that I thought that interesting was the description of Yemoja as “associated with family, women, motherhood, and the arts.” I thought that this sentence shows how deeply connected she is to the idea of care and creation. When I read this, I thought about how the author makes Yemoja more than just a goddess, she becomes a symbol of the emotional side of nature. The text also says her name means Mother of Fish, which makes the connection between life and water feel even stronger. Fish depend on water to live, and by calling Yemoja their mother, the story gives the river a sense of love and responsibility, as if nature itself were alive and caring for what it creates.

Also, I liked this text how it personifies water as something emotional and human. In many modern views, nature is treated as something to control or use, but here, water has feelings, it can protect, nurture, and even react. Yemoja’s image as a mother connects to this emotional side of water. She reflects comfort and creation, but also the unpredictability of emotions. Just as water can be calm or stormy, Yemoja represents the complexity of how humans feel. Through this line, the text makes me realize that water and emotion are not separate, they both move, change, and affect everything around them.

Another detail that stood out to me is that Yemoja continues to be honored in many places. I thought that this shows that her image travels beyond one culture or location, flowing like the water she represents. Even if people interpret her differently, the emotional meaning remains. It was interesting how a single symbol, water as a mother, can connect so many people across different parts of the world.

For me, Yemoja’s description reminded me that myths are not just old stories, they are ways to understand what it means to feel and to live in balance with nature. Yemoja’s gentle but powerful image that can help us to see water not only as a physical need but as something emotional that connects humans to the world around them.

Seeing Through the Mask

In William Cronon’s ‘The Trouble with Wilderness’, the author explains that what people see as pure nature is actually shaped by human culture. He writes, “wilderness hides its unnaturalness behind a mask that is all the more beguiling because it seems so natural” (7). This image of the mask helps readers understand how humans cover up their own role in creating what they call nature. Cronon argues that seeing wilderness as pure is a dangerous illusion because it lets people ignore their own responsibility for environmental change. By showing how beauty and deception work together in this idea of wilderness, he suggests readers to look closely at their own beliefs and see how imagination shapes the world we think we are simply observing.

Cronon’s words make readers feel the difference between what is truly natural and what only seems natural. The word mask has two sides, it can hide something, but it can also make it look more appealing. When he describes the mask as beguiling, the word adds a feeling of temptation. This shows that humans are not just fooled by nature’s appearance, they want to believe in it. It reminds readers that what looks natural might actually be constructed. Even the structure of the sentence works like the mask itself, beautiful on the outside, but hiding something more complex beneath.

Cronon expands this idea when he writes that wilderness “seems to offer an escape from history and the self, when in fact it is the product of precisely that history” (8). This sentence shows that our idea of wilderness comes from culture and time, not from nature itself. Cronon suggests readers to notice how their sense of pure nature is built by human stories. Later, he writes, “the dream of an unworked natural landscape is very much the fantasy of people who have never themselves had to work the land” (11). The word fantasy connects back to the earlier image of the mask. It suggests that this illusion of untouched nature often comes from privilege and distance. People who do not depend on the land can afford to imagine it as pure and unworked. Cronon’ criticizes this way of thinking, showing how human fantasy turns nature into something unreal.

The mask also represents how modern society separates people from the natural world. Cronon points out that people idealize wilderness because they live apart from it. By calling it sacred or untouched, they make nature seem distant from everyday life. The mask, then, becomes a symbol of denial, a way to hide human influence on the environment. He suggests the idea of pure wilderness hides the fact that humans have already shaped it. I thought that Cronon uses this metaphor to show that the line between human and natural is not real, but imagined.

In conclusion, the mask is not only about wilderness but about how people see the world. Cronon reminds readers that language and culture shape what we call truth. Wilderness may look untouched, but that is because we have imagined it that way. By removing the mask, Cronon asks readers to see nature not as a fantasy or escape, but as part of the same world we live in, one that requires care, respect, and shared responsibility.

The Sea as a Living Memory

In Derek Walcott’s poem ,The Sea Is History, the poet begins with a question, “Where are your monuments, your battles, martyrs?” and then answers, “The sea is History.” This made me think about how the sea can keep memories that people have forgotten. I thought that it suggests that history is not always something we can see in books or buildings, it can also live in nature, especially in the sea.

Walcott’s poem starts with using the word Genesis, and then shows how human actions, pain, and destruction followed. For example, he writes, “First, there was the heaving oil, heavy as chaos; then, like a light at the end of a tunnel, the lantern of a caravel, and that was Genesis.” I thought this image was interesting because I thought that normally, Genesis is about beginnings and creation, but here, it feels heavy and dark, not holy. I thought that it shows how something that looks like a beginning can also bring harm.

Another line that stood out to me was “Bone soldered by coral to bone.” It made me imagine bones lying on the bottom of the sea, slowly becoming part of the coral and rocks. I thought it shows how the sea keeps traces of people’s lives, even after they disappear. The sea becomes a kind of memory, it doesn’t speak, but it remembers. Also, later in the poem, Walcott writes, “Emancipation—jubilation, O jubilation—vanishing swiftly as the sea’s lace dries in the sun.” I thought that the word jubilation means joy, but it disappears quickly, like water drying under the sun. It shows that happiness or freedom can be fragile. Even moments of celebration fade away, just like waves that come and go.

Overall, this poem made me think that the sea in this poem is not just water, it’s like a living archive of human emotions, pain, and time. It holds stories that people no longer tell. For me, this poem reminds that nature itself can be a keeper of history, quietly carrying memories that the world has forgotten.

Time and Decay

Sirenomelia is a video that shows a mermaid swimming through an old base under the Arctic, which is a place used to be full of people, machines, and noise, but now it is empty and silent. Watching the video, I felt that the film is about how time changes everything, even the strongest things that humans build eventually break down and fade away.

In the video, the base looks strong with its metal walls, pipes, and thick doors, but everything is slowly falling apart. The paint is cracked and the air feels heavy. I thought that these details show how time and nature are quietly taking back what humans made. It made me think that even though humans try to control nature with technology, time always wins in the end.

Also, I thought that the mermaid’s movement makes this feeling stronger. She moves slowly and gracefully, almost like she belongs there, even though the place was not meant for her. When she swims past the old machines, it feels like she is connecting two different worlds, the natural world and the human one. The way she moves makes the space feel softer and more peaceful. To me, the mermaid doesn’t seem sad about the ruins. Instead, she looks calm, as if she is saying that everything changes, and that’s okay. The base used to be a place for a power or technology, but it seems that for now, it has turned into something else, something quiet, still, and natural. I thought that the film shows that time doesn’t destroy, but it transforms.

In the end, this video made me think about how all the things we build are only temporary. Nature always comes back, and life continues in different forms. And I thought that the mermaid is a symbol of that change, moving through the ruins like a reminder that the world keeps going, even after us.

People and Oceans

In the Vast Expanses, Helen M. Rozwadowski talks about how people and oceans have always been connected. She explains that the ocean is not just empty space between countries, but a place full of history, stories, and human activity. One sentence that caught my attention was, “The sea has always been part of human history, but only recently have historians begun to see it as a central force rather than a background.” This line means that the ocean has always mattered, but people are only now starting to see how important it really is.

I like how Rozwadowski uses the idea of the sea as a central force. Normally, when we study history, we focus on land, cities, empires, or wars. The ocean is often seen as a blank space. But she shows that the ocean actually connects people across the world. Through sailing, trading or exploring, humans have built relationships with the sea for thousands of years. The word “expanses” also gives a image of something wide and deep, reminding us that there is so much more to learn about the ocean.

Reading this made me think differently about nature and humans. Rozwadowski shows that humans and the ocean affect each other all the time. The sea gives us food and shapes our climate, but people also change the sea through travel, pollution, or stories. From this I thought that we should understand the ocean as part of our world, not something separate from us.

By reading this, now I see the ocean as something alive that holds memories and histories. Rozwadowski helped me realize that the ocean is like a storyteller. It remembers everything people have done and still connects us all through its movement and sound.