Friday, August 22, 2008

Homeward bound

When you plan to leave home, reactions are always mixed: excitement from friends, concern from parents, and, for the less geographically-inclined, puzzlement (or perhaps the last only applies when you move to Belgium; I had some questions about it too… like where it is). People ask if you’re nervous, if you’re worried about moving away, leaving family and friends, contending with another language and a new place. They’re full of tips on how to meet new people and how to ensure that you ‘really experience the culture’, all the while confiding different methods that will enable you to preserve a little bit of home. It’s all welcome, and provides a discordant medley to distract from that moment when the airport gates close, when you know that it’s going to be an awfully long time until you hear those voices again, face to face. With only two weeks to go, however, and excited about coming home, I suppose I’m also in a bit of a quandary. No-one dishes out tips on what to do when you return.


Looking back on the last year or so, I perhaps feel like I’ve been living in a bit of a vacuum. With ailing grandparents and other upheavals stemming from Melbourne-ways, all of a sudden my Belgian swaddling cloths are about to be, if not willingly shed, then well and truly stripped from me in about two weeks. Personally and professionally, life in rural Flanders was always going to be the equivalent of a rather bucolic black hole, and now, in my last port of call, Indonesia, the reality that this point in my life has ended is starting to hit: I’m going home. I don’t have a house. I don’t have a job. I don’t exactly, at the age of almost 26, have a discernible direction.


I also don’t have an excuse any more.


I know I want to write, but I’m not sure what, or for whom, or if anyone would take ‘what I do’, whatever that is. This blog was always a testing place, a space outside the academic context I’d been operating in for so long where I could produce work that I’m perhaps not rigorously able to defend, work that, being an anal, obsessive drafter, I’m frequently unhappy with, yet work that needs to stand up and, at the very least, be readable. I take comfort in cliches and tell myself ‘it’s all about the process’, all the while trying not to fiddle with posts too much, despite the fact that I find some incredibly flip, poorly expressed, or just, to be an articulate self-critic, plain dumb.


I realise this is a lot of angst to fit between beachside meanderings, but it’s the first time in the last few months that I’ve had time to think, and for the reality of home to be somewhat tangible. I’m here with one of my closest friends and we’re having a fabulous time, catching up, sounding things out, beaching, eating and drinking. But at the same time, it’s made me realise that while it’s true that nothing ever changes, equally apt is the notion that life goes on. My friends all have jobs, homes, and partners, whereas I feel almost like I’ll be setting up in a new place again, despite the fact that Melbourne contains so many of the people and places that I love.


So what to do? Find some form of gainful employ, a roof, and hopefully write, one would presume. But how will other things pan out? Will this blog have run its use-by date? Would I be better off channelling my energies into finding publications that will accept my miscellaneous wordy stuff? Shouldn’t I be working on a folio, gathering some examples of my communication skills that don’t involve a cocktail glass and a raised eyebrow? I just don’t know; it’s all a bit too hard.


Perhaps I’ll just work on getting out of my banana lounge first.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi there!

Long time reader. First time commenter.

On the subject of your imminent return... I think I may have a hot tip for you. My amazing friend Dave has a vacancy in his lovely Northcote/Westgarth 3 bedroom house after the very abrupt departure of one of his housemates. (It was all rather exciting in a Days-of-Our-Lives kind of way, with secret affairs and emotional turmoil etc... but Dave assures me that following the ejection of the offending parties the house will return to its normal harmonious self).

Glad to see you are back on the writing ...uh.. wagon.

Ben

Anonymous said...

Dearest Ms Central Tendency,

Perhaps you need to centre yourself to counter the tendency for the mind to wander. A home is merely four walls. It is a state of mind. One-third of the day is spent sleeping so it doesn't really matter where one is. That means there is only two thirds to worry about.

I have no doubt Melbourne will embrace you with its loving, open arms. Take your time to reacquaint with the nooks and crannies, the laneways and wide boulevards.

Part of life's journey is finding which direction to take. And how to do a U-turn. Once we arrive, though, another search begins. We are forever in flux.

Stock your suitcase with ample amounts of Belgian chocolate and have then at the ready when your aircraft lands to nourish your soul. That's a way of ensuring you retain a bit of Belgium in Melbourne.

Best wishes,

Gladys

heroverthere said...

Gracious me! I'm rather used to putting this out into the ether, so two comments on one post - I'm feeling rather spoilt, actually!

Many thanks for the tip Ben. It sounds like this place might challenge my chakras a little (I'm in Bali right now, the land of perpetual massage)but I'd love to hear about the place/check it out ... do you have my email address? Actually, I think I probably have yours somewhere on a Sez-email, will try and drop you a line.

Thanks too, Gladys, I know what you mean about 'centring' yourself (or myself, I suppose) - it's an unfortunate, ah, tendency of mine ... I'm considering taking a 10 meditation retreat when I return - that should sort it out! Chocolate is probably a more enjoyable option, though, I might keep that one in mind ...