HW Senior Apartments, Westminster, CA |
http://www.trulia.com/rental-community/9000012468/HW-Senior-Apartments-13920-Hoover-St-Westminster-CA-92683/
Michael Buble isn't the only one who wants to go home. In recent years every time I return to where I grew up and raised my son, I begin to get homesick. No different this time around. When I was younger I wanted to get far, far away...and I did. Now I want to go back to my roots.
Here's a story I wrote a few months ago about this longing.
Right Back Where I Started From
“And I have loved
thee, ocean!” –George Gordon, Lord Byron
When I turned five, I received a copy of The Runaway Bunny.
I determined that it conveyed the message that elsewhere is better than right
here.
“I’ve got to run away today,” I announced.
Mama nodded. “I understand, honey bunny,” she said. So she
wrapped a peanut butter sandwich in wax paper, tucked it in the pocket of my
red boucle coat, and kissed me goodbye.
“Remember, you aren’t allowed to cross the street,” she
cautioned.
So I trudged to the corner, about three houses away. I
peeked over my shoulder. Yep…Mama stood there watching me, so I dare not
attempt to cross. I contemplated my options and decided to set up camp
right on the corner and eat my lunch there.
As I nibbled I raised my face to the noontime sun. I’d have
loved to have flopped down and snoozed for a bit, but knew I was only supposed
to take a nap in my bed. I took a final bite, stuffed the wrapping in my pocket
and trudged home.
That night at supper when I recounted how I’d run away from
home. Daddy and my first- grader sister didn’t look impressed. “Looks like you
ran right back,” they chimed.
They were right, of course, at least for the time being. So
for several decades I pretty much stayed put. I married, I worked, I raised a
son, and took care of a variety of houses that never quite felt like home. It
all was just…California.
I always imagined that home was out there somewhere beyond the horizon
beckoning me. It was someplace else…across the street…around the corner…across
the continent…on the other side of the globe.
So at age 50 I ran away a second time, this time joining the
Peace Corps. At long last I’d have the opportunity to explore those faraway
places I’d always dreamed of. Now I wouldn’t have to stop at any corners. And
maybe I’d find my home.
“You’ll come back in two years, and won’t ever want to
venture far again,” friends warned.
“I doubt it,” I’d replied. In memory of my late mother, I
packed a peanut butter sandwich to take on my first flight to Miami for a Peace Corps staging.
Though I never got to the moon, that Runaway Bunny would
have envied my worldly adventures. I joined, joined again and rejoined. As a
Peace Corps Volunteer, I hacked open coconuts with a machete outside my house
in Belize City.
I clung to my counterpart as we raced on her motorcycle to get across streams
before they flooded in the province of
San Juan de la Maguana, Dominican
Republic. I helped paint murals on the Youth Center
fence with teens on a rare dry afternoon when the monsoon winds had died down
in Mont Fleuri, Seychelles.
Vacationing in Singapore, I
sipped Slings at Raffles and stuck a toe in the South
China Sea.
Later, I continued to travel as a health programming
specialist for Peace Corps. I heard gray wolves howl on the steppes outside Ulan Bator on the spring equinox in Mongolia. I
thrilled to the spontaneous singing of Samoan chiefs and missionaries at a
training session in Apia.
I explored the corners of the earth, Guyana,
Uzbekistan, Thailand, St.
Vincent, Bulgaria.
I still was looking for home, though I’d been to over 50 countries.
When I remarried during the millennial year, my new husband,
Ken, began to talk about his vision of a dream house. “It’s got to be somewhere
with four seasons,” he insisted. “I love sweater weather.” So we settled in the
far northeast corner of Washington
State and for a few years
we shared what began to feel like home. And then Ken died.
I’ve continued to live in this huge old house, plodding
through the seasons. I’ve hired handymen, gardeners, snow plowers to tend to
the property, acres that I can’t handle on my own. I’ve dragged my vacuum
upstairs and down. I’ve mopped, scrubbed and dusted until my aging muscles
ached.
And I’ve shivered. Friends who’ve lived here all their lives
perk up in the winter, wandering outside to cheer on mittened children who
barrel down hills on cookie sheet sleds. Me? I huddle by the fireplace, sip hot
chocolate and wish it were iced tea. I’d rather be basking somewhere on a
beach.
But it’s impossible, I decided, to attempt to move. I’m too
old to be starting over somewhere else. Just thinking about what moving again
would take in time and energy wore me out. Hopeless, I thought. I’m stuck here,
and have to make the most of it.
Then I visited family in California last fall. I rambled across the
beach to the edge of the Pacific. Suddenly, as the waves washed against my
toes, I realized that this was home. Always had been. I’d grown up by the
ocean. I’d gone fishing in it off a pier when I was a child. I’d sailed on it
as a young adult. All my life I’ve loved the salty taste of my fingers after
they’ve dipped in it, the delicious shock of the water’s icy bite when I first
would dive in to body surf, the distinctive scent of seaweed and sea spray.
“I never realized how much I miss being close to the
Pacific,” I told my son that night.
“Have you thought of moving back to California?” he asked.
“It would be overwhelming to even think about it,” I said,
shaking my head at the impossibility.
He raised an eyebrow. “I thought you were the lady who at
aged 50 set out on an odyssey that took her to the remote corners of the
earth.”
I stared at him, ideas clicking away in my mind. Yes, and I
braved my way to the corner of my block when I was only five. I took a deep
breath. Have I ever been too young or too old to refuse a challenge?
I’m ready to run away again. Challenging? Sure. But I’ve
made a list and I’m checking it twice. I’ve already called the real estate
agent. I’ve written to senior apartment complexes in my old hometown for rental
estimates. I cashed in some frequent flyer miles for a ticket for a stepson to
come in late spring to help clean out my garage and shed. I’m asking friends if
they know of an art dealer who might be interested in the paintings and
sculptures.
Each day I sort through a drawer, a closet, or a bookcase to
determine what to donate, what to trash, and what to pack. I wake up each
morning humming, “California,
Here I Come.”
I’m allowed to cross the street. I’m going home.
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