Let’s rewind your life back to the good old high school days. It was your Science class. You greet your teacher a good morning. She tells you to sit down and open your textbook to a certain page. And then she utters a word that confused—and almost freaked—you: symbiosis. With your limited and very narrow mind, you weren’t able to fathom the meaning of the very peculiar term. You weren’t even able to sleep because it was disturbing you, fearing that your teacher might suddenly ask you the meaning of the word, humiliating you in the process.
Now that you’re already a college student, you already know what symbiosis is. You can even name the types. But have you asked yourself: have you really understood what the word means?
According to Wikipedia.org, symbiosis “commonly describes close and often long-term interactions between different biological species”. It’s a pretty complicated definition, knowing that it came from an encyclopedia. But to help you grasp the meaning of the word in a very simple way, here is a list of questions (and you can even consider it a checklist) for you to ponder:
- Do you need oxygen?
- Do you consume something to survive?
- Do you know that someday and somehow, your life will end?
If you answered yes to all of the questions, then you appreciate what symbiosis is, literally. Indeed, you need oxygen, food, and water to survive, and when you die, other organisms will benefit from you, particularly decomposers and plants. Sure, you passed your biology subject in high school because you understood it, but little do you know that there is a lot more to go into than just understanding.
The news is everywhere—in print, television, radio, and even online—that a new plague is beginning to affect us: the plague of climate change, extinction, and environmental imbalance. It is also starting to affect you, like a fire trying to consume your entire system.
Now you have come to the point where you have to delve more about the true meaning of symbiosis. It’s not enough to just understand it the way the encyclopedia does. Symbiosis also means that you are a part of nature, not apart from it. The environment needs your help; you need its help, too. It may not speak to you directly like a human being can, but the problems you and the entire world are facing speak for it.
Symbiosis also means realizing your role as a human being, as a catalyst for change in the environmental scenario. Indeed, if man destroys, man must restore as well. Climate change, extinction, and the like serve as an intense wake-up call for us to act for the refurbishment of Mother Earth.
So the next time you come across the word symbiosis, may the troubles that affect it disturb you the way the word itself did when you were still in high school.


