Going Home…
If home is where your heart is, then I guess I’m a nomad.
Going home to NY is always like entering a time warp. Technically I’ve lived away more than I’ve lived there, but when I return I feel fifteen again. My grandma no longer lives down stairs and it’s obvious by the growing nieces and cousins that times have changed, but on the inside I feel the same things I felt when I was living there.
Home is very comfortable in a homey, familiar way, but it is still very dysfunctional, yet not as much as it was. Still it’s home. A place where people know me and love me and though I haven’t seen some relatives and friends in years, when I go back it’s like I never left.
My childhood home is a place where people look up to me as “perfect” (LOL) and where to onlookers, I may seem perfect. But I’m not. I never was. I just was a little more moral, disciplined, driven and convicted than those in my family.
But it’s so nice to go home to MY home. My adult home. To not be a daughter and to do things MY way again. Yet my home is different, sometimes not as comfortable and familiar as the home of my youth. I feel more reserved and hidden in my adult home.
Though I get to do things my way, I have more to do. More responsibility. My husband says I laugh more with my extended family. I dont’ have as many friends who really know me like my family does. Maybe I’m trying to hide myself from them. Around my Evangelical Christian friends I feel so imperfect. I’m always striving to be as good as they are, and I never measure up.
Sometimes I wish there was a middle of the road, a home between my past and my present where I can feel comfortable, let down my hair and not worry about stepping on toes, or doing something wrong. A home where I laugh more and do less. A home filled with unconditional love.
I doubt any such home exists here on earth. But thankfully, I’m a nomad and will one day make my home in heaven!!!
There’s no place like home!



































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Ahh, I know the feeling. Strange to be “mommied” when visiting the parents, isn’t it? I love them so much, but I can anticipate being treated like an adolescent again when I’m in the kitchen with mom…lol. For that reason, I love coming home to my own domain…where I love the way we do things.
I think it’s hard when you relocate apart from your loved ones. I know I really miss all my schooldays friends, and wonder if I’ll ever see them again. Thankfully my parents moved nearer to us, but it also removes most of the potential for searching out old friends.
Thank God for phones, letters and email!
July 17th, 2007 at 11:38 pmI have no clue what that feels like. I’ve only lived away from home for a total of 4 years of my entire life. My parents live about 3 miles from us. Will I ever grow up?
July 18th, 2007 at 7:43 am