
london diary
12.04.02
London's Calling
Lost in memories today I visited dear stellargirls site and
reread some of the entries I had written for London diary. It is always
strange to read your own words and especially strange to recount through
snatches of musings the story of a year. It is that same measurement
of time since I have written anything for this site and the same measurement
of time that I spent in London before my very recent relocation to
the United States.
As I read my hesitant, early words I remembered those strange confusing
emotions created by interaction with an unfamiliar world. Now, coming
full circle- as life tends to go- I feel those same emotions again.
But this time it is evoked by a place that I once called home.
About a year ago I began a new life in a city that I had lived in
for almost a year. My boyfriend moved back to Australia as I began
graduate school and in precise unrecognizable instants everything
changed. How to describe the stretching of self that occurred? My
heart broke as my mind expanded and I can no longer distinguish one
from the other. Does every burst of self-knowledge incur suffering?
We call them growing pains, but really, they are great washes of emptiness,
confusion and uncertainty.
In the past year I made the kinds of friends that everyone has always
dreamed of- supportive, intellectual, funny as hell, eccentric and
seemingly adoring of me (the one generally precluding the other I
have found!). I traveled to the east- two months in India- where I
smelled, tasted and saw as if I were a newborn babe. I studied anthropology
and watched, self-consciously amazed, as my mind attempted to conceptualize
a new way of understanding the world. I grew into a city that is at
once welcoming as it is stern, relaxed as it is hectic, and beautiful
as it is worn. I found a true home amongst strangers and foreigners
and on my twenty-fifth birthday awoke to the realization that I had
changed. Everything was different, all of a sudden. The angst was
gone, the childs need to discover herself had relaxed. Now in
its place was a kind of quiet self-confidence and wry outlook on the
chaotic variables of life. I was suddenly comfortable with the fact
that life was going to be hard, a struggle, and not always what I
wanted it to be.
But had I, on that day, fully appreciated that I might have to make
the kind of incredibly painful choice that I envisioned adults (myself
now included) to traverse with dignity and acceptance?
For the second time, my visa was up. I had options, there are ALWAYS
options, but not of the kind the law abiding generally take.
And then, all of a sudden, there was my career to think of
And so it was gone, a city in which I had loved, lost and changed
more than I thought I could- and my heart broke for the second time
in a year. I was on a plane to Newark, via Pittsburgh.
Homesickness is a funny thing, dear readers. It arrives in fits and
spurts, waves of emotion that do not clearly state their intention.
The mind struggles to remember the details of side streets as it ejects
the most evocative moments of enjoyment out of self-protection. I
miss London with every breath I take- its glorious, dirty, noisy,
misty streets; its majestically lit building glowering into the Thames;
each and every dreadful chain sandwich shop; parks with stretches
of wet, emerald green unlike anything I have experienced elsewhere;
the timbre of my friends laughter over the hum of smoky pubs-and
the feel of my own stride as I hit the streets running- late for class,
late for work, late for life.
And now? Hell, I dont know. But I am going to hold my head up
high, cry those angsty tears in private and soon, with the baby steps
of a stranger, tackle my new country America.
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London's
Calling
Livin',
Lovin' and
Wailin' On...
Back in London
May 15
April 2
March 5
January 16
January 2
December 27
eurozone
eyes of ireland
letters from japan
los caminantes
london diary
tropicalia
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