home is where
the heart is...
...or so they say.
and i tend to agree. but what if your heart is in a zillion different places
simultaneously, intertwined with the hearts of hundreds of souls scattered in
cities and suburbs and jungle lands and beach towns everywhere? in your case, creating a
tangible sense of home becomes a daunting undertaking despite deep desires to nest, to grow roots somewhere, anywhere. the inescapable plight of
the modern-day nomad, whose physical home may change with the tides, leaving in
her sea-foam wake a trail of existential angst, twinges of nostalgia for what
might have been (if only…); but whose
heart, it turns out, is most at home in wandering.
……
“está bien. i’ll check your second bag for free.” i looked
up from my disheveled mess in disbelief, shoes and toiletries strewn about the shiny
marble tile. it wasn’t a common phrase in any language, let alone
airline-speak. especially when the contents of your makeshift 32-pound second
bag once inhabited the magical space above the top layer of your
already-stuffed first bag, zippers bursting at the seams after twenty minutes
of sweating the thing closed, chafed knuckles from the spots where strain met
coarse fabric head-on. it’s a two-person job, really.
grateful, i graciously accepted and smiled sweetly, repaying
him for his unprecedented kindness in innocently seductive eye contact. stoked
that i had narrowly evaded the $200 he originally threatened, i was also embarrassed
in a way that irked my soul: what kind of self-proclaimed nomad stuffs 82
pounds of worldly possessions into a giant roller bag for a three-month
adventure? even if this adventure was technically work-related and i’d packed
everything i own resembling ‘business casual’, plus the usual warm-weather suspects
since it’s summertime, and an array of atypical cold-weather cover-ups for
chilly-breezy San Diego eves, and an old pair of CFM heels just in case; still,
there was no excuse. i was weighing myself down both physically and spiritually
with stuff, and now that i scored a
freebee at the check-in counter and watched my bag disappear on that filthy
luggage belt, there was no turning back. he
should have charged me that $200; teach a faux nomad a lesson in letting go.
to add even further insult to auto-criticism of nomad self, the Chilean hitch-hiker
chick i picked up in Hermosa en route to the airport had been travelling for
two years with only a small backpack in tow. now that’s what i call freedom. gracias, Chilena citizen of the wind, rub it in a little deeper. (nomad self itching to crawl into giant suitcase in backseat
and die.)
fortunately for my soul, if not for my tired limbs, lugging
all that shit onto public buses, in taxis and through the unforgiving New York
City subway system might have been the karmic lesson i had been looking for. so
i’ve started getting over it after making a pact with myself that whatever i
don’t use on the trip i have to give away to someone who needs it. since then,
i’ve been spending time honoring rather than criticizing nomad self by celebrating some of the other
joys of being the wanderer i have come to be. embracing the chosen privilege to
get lost to get found, to find joy in the freedom of not knowing what tomorrow
will bring, nearly a year of heart-and-soul-felt experiences bouncing between
loaned beds and borrowed cars in cities and surf spots from New York to Medellin.
i’d done my
fair bit of wanderlust traveling in the past, but this year has felt different.
aside from a few surf trips, i haven’t wanted strangers in strange lands, solo
adventures lacking roots or purpose. much to my surprise (oh god, this must
mean i’m getting old), my wanderings have taken a turn for the familiar, letting
my lonely heart, rather than my insatiable curiosity, guide me on my path to where i'm going. wanting to
be near and with the people i love who i don’t get to see very often, i’ve spent
the year being present in the lives of friends and family, many times
coincidentally arriving just in time for exciting events as if by divine serendipity.
births, deaths, graduations, moon celebrations, birthdays, engagements,
weddings, spiritual workshops, winter wonderlands, anniversaries, concerts, motorcycle
trips through the Andes, boats, trains, planes, bath-time with my babies, comings
and goings, falling in love, getting dumped, camping in the rain, blogging, publishing,
sweat-lodging, surf-tripping, joyful welcomings, tearful goodbyes. it’s been a
mixed bag of emotions to say the least, but i can say with a clear conscience
that it’s been life lived from the heart.
while content in my nomad travels and joyful that i’ve been
able to spend time in familiar places with those i love, this rootlessness
weighs on me in an indescribable way. i find myself praying for stability, for
a sense of home, for building myself into and becoming part of a community that
grows with and alongside me, even something as simple as living somewhere for
longer than a week or a month maybe, instead of living out of a suitcase and
changing direction like a lost honeybee in the springtime. The word HOME took
center stage on my vision board last month. 'create a sense of home' is my long-standing new year's resolution for like half a decade. my yoga intention has been HOME for
months now, ironic when my morning practice might find me flowing and OM-ing on
different continents from one week to the next.
it’s like this grasping for
something that keeps getting further and further away. as much as i’m craving
home, my nomad reality doesn’t seem to be changing anytime soon. upcoming
commitments with the inspiring Women PeaceMakers Program here in San Diego,
an exciting opportunity for global peacebuilding at the GAMIP Summit inSwitzerland in September, 14 months of pending doctoral research in four
communities in Ecuador and Bolivia slated for next year, a leadership role on surf
tourism development courses in Costa Rica and Fiji; these are the new
purpose-driven nomad adventures igniting my soul today as i envision them all
coming to fruition, becoming the person i am through my soul-driven journey to
all corners of the globe. i embrace these challenges rather than shy away, yet i visit friends’ and strangers’ homes and i envy them, all of their
beautiful art on the walls, their own dishes, closets, framed pictures of loved ones on the
coffee table, something cooking on the stove, cushy pillows, magnets holding to-do
lists on the fridge. their own unique slice of safe haven, a place to rest and
be. i want that. i pray for home and i
get at least three more years of inspired nomad in my foreseeable future.
for nearly a year now, i’ve been gainfully unemployed –
writing, reading, surfing, loving, living; a stint of life now coming to an end
as i embark upon a new professional journey in Southern California – nine-to-five,
NPR in traffic, longboard waves, writing, loving, living. i was tired from the
cross-country flight to my new reality. but as the plane landed at LAX last
week, something crazy donned on me like a little Taser jolt to the brain: i was going home.
...in a way.
i had spent ten of
the most formative years of my life in this place, longer than i’d lived anywhere
in my quarter-century or so of earthliness, despite feeling like i was fresh
off the boat, culture shocked in my own native land. but i guess if we’re going
by the numbers, this new journey was actually a sort of homecoming to a place
that now felt foreign and familiar at the same time. driving through the Valley,
recognizing exit signs, street corners, preschool, penguin ice cream shop here,
thai restaurant there, overpass where the homeless lady we gave red grapes to used
to live, the spot where the old bowling alley used to be where i’d spent
countless days with my dad when i was mini, trying to bowl a strike to earn my
giant slice of chocolate cake from the deli that used to be down the street. a de-ja-vu
slew of memories you never knew you had; a sense that what was is not what is now. and it certainly isn’t who you’ve
become today. another lifetime with your memory flashes as glimpses into a past
that doesn’t even feel like yours. a movie playing on your retina where you can
eerily predict what happens next. a puppet master directing somebody else’s
show.
but in all of its estranged familiarity, parts of it do feel
like home. especially the new-old parts. reminiscing and welcoming newfound
kinship with family i usually only see on very special occasions; deepening
friendships with faces i’ve known for years but whose authentic humanness i am now
experiencing anew.
“do you think you’ll ever settle down somewhere? have a real
home someday?” my brother-in-law Jon and fake cousin Leah asked the same question
on separate days from separate coasts.
“i have absolutely no idea.” and i really don’t. and that should totally freak me out, right?
reflecting on a year of heart-filled wandering, and
celebrating my temporary SoCal homecoming of sorts, i discover that i’m surprisingly at ease, unknowingly testing out a new life hypothesis: home for a nomad. because for
the nomad (including self-critical faux nomads like me), maybe when your heart
is full, home is everywhere you happen to find yourself in any given moment. you are home. and
thanks to the generosity and compassion of friends and family, today i’m not
worried about when or if i’ll finally ‘settle down’ and stretch my roots into the Earth.
right now, in this second, with a full
heart and renewed zest for living, all i am is gratitude.
gratitude for those who have helped me and loved me on my journey home.
...thank you.
How Wonderfully Lovely To Read Of Your Journey And How Gratified And Honored I Feel To Recognize A Few Mentions Of Our Time Together. I Love That Life HaS Brought Us Together To Laugh And MirroR Face Making. You Are Deeply Embedded In My HEart. I Am So Happy Your Wandering Has brougHt You to SoCal For A Time. I Love You With And Without Your mole.
ReplyDeletelove you tara!!!! loved reading this.
ReplyDeleteLove your writing, chica! Thanks for sharing your thoughts and catching us all up on what you've been up to of late. Miss and love you! xo -Becca
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