So as the move to Seattle becomes more and more imminent (and by imminent I mean about 6 months away) - I find that I have to remind myself more and more frequently that this is what I want.  What I’ve been wanting.  The answer to coastal fatigue - move home.  Home is Seattle, or at least, that’s the closest viable city to the large amorphous area I call home.  So if I want to quit switching coasts every time I need to see someone important to me, I have to consolidate, I have to move out there.  And I couldn’t ask for better - I mean, Liz wants to come with me, it’s a tier 1/top 30 school, I love Seattle, I already have a ton of friends there, both my parents will be close by and they’re both happy with the decision (the last time I could say that? can’t remember.) - there’s nothing to stop me.

Except, I mean, that I love DC.  Which is ridiculous really because I hate DC.  But that’s the problem with this city.  That you can’t really love it without really hating it, and you can’t really hate it without really loving it.  And now I have a ton of friends here too… actually my first real adult friends… who I’m going to have to leave when the academic centrifuge picks up again and spins us all around and away from each other.

You know this was the first place I ever lived as an adult, on my own, without the bubble of a dorm/school/whatever to protect me.  I moved here in the summer of 06 without ever having set foot in the city, drove down the day after I graduated college, moved into an apartment I’d never seen, said goodbye to my dad and friends, and forced myself to get a job/internship and forge a life here.  I’d spent the six or so months before that hearing from a fairly nasty influence in my life that I didn’t stand a chance at surviving on my own in the city, and I had a huge chip on my shoulder and something to prove, and I think without even realizing it, I really did.  And dammit, I made this place my home.

So now the scary thing is, that for the first time ever in my life (and I know this is part of that whole “Growing Up” checklist) - I have a place that I have chosen (not a place I just kinda landed) that I have made my home.  A place that every time it’s quiet, some little voice in my head whispers, I could live here.

I’ve always called Seattle my home.  Which is strange I know since the truth is I’ve never actually lived there (but home, really, is just as constructed as any other part of our identities, so I might as well get to choose where I say it is) -  but for the first time (and I haven’t stayed anywhere for more than 4 years since I was 11, I’m 23 now) - I found myself missing DC when I was home in Seattle for December.  I’ve never missed another place from Seattle.  I always felt at home there, whole.

As much as I think it would piss my grandmother off to hear me say this (she thinks gypsies steal babies and replace them with demons) - I have a gypsy heart.  I’m allergic to staying in one place.  And now the world (and me, too) threw all these obstacles up in front of me just as the choice that I thought would be the easiest of all is looming in front of me.

I mean I think I know what choice I’ll make in the end.  But I just need to underscore the bitter irony here, that the easiest choice of all - the choice to go home after all these years of wandering - is turning out to be the hardest choice I’ve ever made.

Currently listening: Carsie Blanton - Ain’t So Green 

Here I am, ready to leave again for the other coast… I fly at 6am.

Saying goodbye is always hard, but it’s harder this time because I don’t know when I’ll be back. Really for the first time, I can’t say “I’ll see you _____” at the airport as I’m saying goodbye. I’m writing (hopefully) a thesis, and have a job, so Spring Break is not certain, and after that, who knows.

It may be at least six months before I see my family again.

I’m not a big fan of goodbyes, of flying, or of January, so I hope these things all go by quickly. I hope I get to see my family sooner than I think I will, I hope I do a better job of calling them and keeping in touch, I hope I don’t drift farther apart than I already have in my stubbornness to stay my own path.

Anyway, tears aside, wish me a safe flight.

As always, catch you on the flip side.

i know what it means
and when it is quiet
i’ll carry you home
i’ll carry you home

James Blunt, Death Cab, and Bright Eyes have been keeping me going, lately. Catch a theme here? Eesh.

Thank god for the desert though. For the hills dusted in snow, for the stars (oh my god, the stars.), and for the quiet.

And thank god for phone calls to Liz, pictures via email, and long emails from my best friend that make me laugh out loud.

It’s so beautiful here, but things have been hectic; I think it’ll quiet down but I’ve been exhausted. I’m reminded, though, that the desert is good for me (in small doses), that this town is my home (for better or for worse, and for whatever that word means), and that sitting on the porch, breathing frozen air, and looking at the stars is something that’s worth more than all the gold and all the time in the world.

It’s so quiet here. I forget that every time I’m away, so it shocks me when I get back here. I go outside and the air is so silent, I can hear it being cold, almost.

Oh, this town. What a crazy place.

As I was turning onto the street where my house is last week, there was some of the most incredible light through the frost in the desert I have ever seen.  Having no memory card in my camera, I had no choice but to use the crummy iPhone camera to snap a quick picture because it was something I did not want to forget.

As a photographer, I can say I have taken many better pictures… but there are not enough photographs in the world for where I live.

One of the things I love the most about living in the desert is the light - the way it’s always different and always breathtaking, the way it cascades down the foothills and through the farmland and into your eyes like you’ve never seen it before, like it’s new, when it’s the oldest thing in the world.  The way it changes colors, changes temperatures, it even changes flavor…. but it’s always so stunningly beautiful you have to stop, even just for a second, even if you’ve lived there all your life.

The most recent incarnation was when I was there last, when the desert sand and farmland was dusted lightly with frost and the fog of the hills was slightly frozen so you could see the mist as it hung there, letting the sunlight through in broken ways - I can’t tell you how beautiful it is.

This photo certainly doesn’t.

photo.jpg

Maybe my defenses are getting weaker in my old age, but it’s getting harder and harder for me to live a life split between two coasts.

I won’t lie - it’s always been hard on some level.  Leaving to go to Mount Holyoke was devastating… I cried on so many plane-rides from Seattle to Hartford I can’t even count… but I got better at it, I got good at separating out my life, at counting out the months between when I was “home” and when I was “at school”… I got better at making those months count more, or count less… I studied abroad and that was okay.

Basically, I got good at keeping distance from getting to my heart.

I think you have to get good at that, to an extent, when your life looks like mine, geographically.

But now my home… well… I guess that’s the problem.  I can’t lie, I can’t say I will ever be anything other than a Pacific Northwesterner… that’s where my heart is, and always will be. That’s not going to change, it’s just a part of who I am, that my soul is on the West Coast.  And yet…

My life in DC has gotten closer to my heart than my life anywhere besides home… I have an apartment with a woman I love and two cats and friends I adore and it’s perfect… so I’m in a position where I always feel torn.

I’m missing home when I’m in DC, I’m missing DC when I’m home.

It’s tiring.  I’m tired of always saying goodbye to someone.  Of always having to put someone I love on hold to call someone else I love.  I can’t do it anymore, I don’t have the strength or the energy to always be tearing myself away from someone I love so much.  I’m tearing myself away from Liz to go to my family, or I’m tearing myself away from my family to go back to Liz - it’s getting to feel like each time I get on a plane and tear myself away from someone, I’m leaving a bigger and bigger piece of myself behind.

I’m sitting at home, all packed, waiting to get on the plane to go back to DC at 6am… feeling actual, physical pain at saying goodbye to my home and having to leave.  There’s comfort in being here, Washington is my home, this is my family, this is where I belong.  But then, I also belong with Liz.

It’s too painful to be in this middle place… too painful to have to flip-flop coasts for three weeks every seven months or so to see the people I love with all my heart, my own family… it’s too fucking hard.

I’m going to make a decision in 8-10 months that will put me either in DC or in Seattle, and what I decide will be where I am. I am not going to split my heart up like this, it’s too much. I need to know where I belong. My compass needs a North.  I need to know where home is.

I don’t usually spend a lot of time missing home.

I come from a small town in Washington State - one that doesn’t really have a lot to offer a metropolitan soul such as myself.   And by small town, I mean small town. Population roughly 3500, doubles during agricultural season.  I live on 10 acres of desert/farmland.  This town raised me, to be sure - but it also broke me in more ways than I can count.  I grew up knowing I needed more, but not knowing what kind of world existed beyond the boundaries of my little rural town.  I suffered.  And I grew.

I think it goes without saying that I can’t imagine myself ever living there again, or ever being a part of that existence.  I’m a city person.  I need the noise.  But…. nostalgia has a way of getting what it wants, no matter how hard you fight.  And there are some things that I truly believe we can only understand if we grow up in a small town.

Liz played a song for me a while ago, and when I heard it I could barely contain myself from weeping, just breaking down.  Here are the lyrics, I’ll share them with you and maybe you can understand how I feel about my home.

T he song is “Scott County” by AJ Roach.  I hadn’t heard of him until Liz introduced me.

Scott County is a habit
some find hard to break
first freeze is in October
lasting out the first of May

it’s beauty is not rivaled
in the western hemisphere
so they say
the hemisphere don’t stretch out
past the state lines anyway

but i have seen stretches of green
that run the length of day

Scott County is a woman
want to treat you like a child
the more you try to hate her
the more she’ll make you smile
and the more you try to stand up straight
the more you’ll lean against
the crooked lines
stone shoulders
the rusted barbed wire fence

Scott County is a hand-out
that some find hard to take
well I left home at 17
not a penny to my name
no sense of where I came from
and a vague of idea of where I meant to go

but, God I miss the dust
that gathers at my gravel road

God I miss the dust
that gathers at my gravel road

It’s too amazing.  I think I’m going to write more on this later.  I’m escaping at a coffee shop right now.  But I needed to fill this space a bit, and I think this song is a good introduction to who I am.


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