In the back of my mind is a little room. It has a swinging door, much the same as you would find in a restaurant leading into a kitchen. Don't be deceived by its size, its a busy little room, the phone is constantly ringing and it's full of overflowing boxes that have been stacked on top of each other. On a daily basis the door swings open, usually because of a thought, sometimes a question, other times it's a discussion.
The room is about the "when", it's about the "if". It's about "where" and "how". When we go home. If a job was to suddenly end. Where will we live and how will it work?
In the boxes are locations that never happened. Places we were certain we were moving to that changed on a whim. Boxes labelled "Nova Scotia" full of notes about living in minus degree temperatures and shoveling snow. There's another box labeled "London", another with "Singapore". These are all places that I may have never physically picked up the house keys, but in my mind I was there. The school, the house, the life. Emails were sent to real estate agents, websites of schools were visited.
Go to any expat function and listen to an introduction and I promise these two questions will be heard in the first five minutes. "Where are you from?" and "How long are you here for?" We are constantly reminded of how we came to be here. We talk in time frames. We discuss our children's future, how we see it. What do they gain? What do they lose? What if we can't get a job when it's time to go home? More notes are made and stuffed into boxes.
Five years ago in Sydney, I sat on a wooden bench next to my father outside of a busy cafe. We were enjoying the vibe of Darling street, the children had ducked in to a toy shop with Granny Max and G. We sipped on our lattes and enjoyed sitting under the same blue sky together. G and I were home for two weeks that year but we weren't really HOME home. Sure we were in Sydney, but we hadn't made it back to my parents house in South Australia. It didn't feel the same. No roast dinner at Mums, no drinking red wine in their kitchen late at night. I hadn't seen my sister. I spoke to friends on the phone, I could have been anywhere.
My Dad and I have the same eyes, almond shaped and brown. Our distant chinese heritage shines through in our thick dark hair. A girlfriend of mine said my father and I look like a couple of black labradors when we're together. Our tails wag, we're usually pretty happy to see each other. It was one of those ordinary moments, we were making observations about people and shops and living in Sydney. Dad was making me laugh. My Dad's a country bloke, he was trying to imagine what it's like to live a Sydney life. I'm not sure if it was because G wasn't there or because we were finally getting two minutes alone, but my Dad asked me something that he'd never asked before and has never asked since "when are you going to come home love?" His voice wavered just slightly midway through the sentence.
My answer was longwinded when it didn't need to be. I talked about G and his job. I talked about housing prices and saving money. I talked about possible opportunities and the children. About the plans in the back of my mind. If it should be Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide or Brisbane. The real answer was much simpler. The real answer was "I don't know".
I still don't know - but I've changed a few things that have quietened down the noise in that little room in the back of my mind. For three months of every year we have a home in Australia. There are no more quick twenty minutes coffees, there are now sleep overs and weekends and walks to the beach. There are heights measured in door frames, toys left to return to and new friends in neighborhoods we plan to keep forever. If we decide we want to see Granny and Gramps we hop in the car and go.
The doors of the room continue to swing back and forth with more ideas, more notes and thoughts of how and if and when. It is quieter though, home isn't as far away as it used to be.
For those of you who are away from family. When is it time to go home?
I don't know..... but it's likely to be another five or six years as the plan was to allow Sapph to start highschool and finish it in the same place.
ReplyDeleteBut --- and there's always a 'but', isn't there? - things can change a lot in five years.
I finish every strong and determined thought with a BUT when I talk about our plans. I'm so glad I'm not the only one :-)
DeleteI agree with Kath - there is always a but!
ReplyDeletecan I just say that this is completely on my mind today too. I think I am ready ... but!
Its been almost 7 years. this is not the life I want to live for many more years. there are other things/experiences/lifestyle choices I value more than the ones I am living now.
who knows when. I tend to think things will change when they need to ...
its all a game of wait and see - and while waiting, make the best of it!
Hi Kirsty,
ReplyDeleteWe started our life living in Melbourne as 17 yr old uni students.We then moved to Seattle back to Melbourne where we had 2 kids in less than 2 years.France was next for 4 years and then a move to Sydney (as expats)for 4 years. Another baby and the a move to Singapore for 9 years (and one more baby).
This year I decided to come back to Australia to live ( my husband will commute for a year before joining us) I just had a yearning to leave International schools and expat communities behind.I have moved to live in our beach house in a little community about an hour from Melbourne. After major culture shock ,we have settled in remarkably well. Not sure if I can really settle long term but short term love pretending I am here forever.
I wish I knew how to go home. At this stage we have the plan in place but I really need the universe to help by providing the jobs and the money. For us the question is where - NZ or Australia?
ReplyDeleteQuite clearly it's New Zealand - then you can be MarmiteVix!
DeleteNever, in my case. Because I don't really know where home is anymore.
ReplyDeleteI must say that I was touched to read the part where your dad asked you "when are you coming home love" I think there is something special when a dad asks his daughter questions like that. You feel like your'e missed.
ReplyDeleteHaving lived the expat life for over 10 years, the longing to go home has come around more than once. Our selling point to our kids in the beginning was that we were going on a BIG ADVENTURE!! They were 5 & 6 at the time and now they are 17 &18. Big Adventure doesnt cut the mustard. Now they are old enough for us to tell them well there are just no jobs at home for us to go home to.
I heard a guy say a few weeks ago that we all need to Bloom where we are planted..... which i translated as we all need to thrive instead of survive!! For now that is my mantra.... for now......
I'm having the almost 12 months expat blues. We are on a 3 year contract but hubby will need to find a job back in OZ as he is working for a local company....added stress.
ReplyDeleteThe stress of being very housebound and so security conscious really takes its toll - family and friends don't get it.
Ahhh, don't listen to me - having a bad day. Who knows when we will actually go home....before High School for my eldest as I am sure I wouldn't survive sending him to boarding school.
and then it happens when you least expect it...we are going home :(
DeleteMy mum would love to know when we are moving back home....but I have no idea also. I have only been gone from my home town for 10 months, and I already cant ever imagine living in our family home - my taste has changed so much, I dont want to live in suburbia. But I know this could change, and I know we may not have a choice. It is complicated by the fact my husband is from another country, so my "home town" is not his, and he is an expat there.
ReplyDeleteBefore we moved, I was quite concerned about how you do the move back. I still am, but I need to trust the Universe and stop worrying about things I cant foresee.
It is so wonderful you have your "holiday" home in Australia. That is a long term goal of ours too, it sounds wonderful!
I'm with Sanda... I don't know where my home is. Sometimes (often), after an argument with Mr Sunshine, or getting lost in the Dutch telephone system, I get the urge to cry and scream 'I wanna go home!'. But, if I try to think of 'home', I always think of my childhood, so unless someone invents a time machine, I'm never going home....
ReplyDeleteKeep coming back to this post. Everytime I read it I tear up. I'm living in that room right now, in that indecision, in that impermanence. My day to day is simply me going through the motions. I'm already thinking about schools, and rabies injections (for the pets not the kids), and that never-ending list of pros and cons. I know from past experience that the only way out of this room is for serendipity to play its part. I know it will, I just don't know when. As I wait I do what I'm best at; I worry.
ReplyDeleteMan, Kirsty, you ask a hard question! (And your dad asking choked me up!) There have been times when I have been desperate for home and others (usually after a few weeks AT home, with some family members who can't get along and who put me in the middle) when I am grateful not to live there year round. So I am torn.
ReplyDeleteA wave of emotion washed over me when I read, "When are you going to come home, Love?" If only there was a home to go to-- my family is dispersed all over the world, I grew up between countries, and even most of my family that I had in California, where I might have considered home, have moved away.
ReplyDeleteWe are living overseas indefinitely. My husband's job options working in a foreign country are much better than in the US, and can't pass up the opportunity to see the world and give our daughter the quality of life we have here. But I do often think about landing somewhere for good, of having a close-knit community, and of my daughter having life-long friends. I missed out on having grandparents and aunts and cousins nearby, and I envy people who have friends nearby that they have known all their lives.
The bottom line is, we can't have it all! And we have chosen new people, places, and experiences over these other forms of stability. For now.
Is "home" really all you imagine it would be?
DeleteThat anonymous question probably does not come from an expat. I have soooo many good friends 'back home' and I love them and miss them but there are just too many ways in which we now can't connect (I don't tell them this though as they are not aware). But this is just the kind of question they would ask.
ReplyDeletepeople have stopped asking me when we're coming "home" I have one of those little rooms in my head too
ReplyDeleteHi Kirsty,
ReplyDeleteYou just brought me back to a memory that was way way back in my mind. I had that same "when are you coming home" conversation with my Dad. The question came while we were 1,000 kms away from "home" during my first tour of the new house my parents built in a warmer climate. It struck me odd that Dad, newly installed in this strange place, was asking when I was coming home. I guess it's true. Home is where the heart is.
Thanks for continuing to write! I look forward to your posts.
Susan
Home...the place i can be 'me' with the people that matter. No longer missing key birthdays or family gatherings because work commitments beckoned or flights just didn't make it possible. One thing I have learned, and we are in the process of a 12 month de-expating ourselves to be home early next year, is that once a dear family is no longer here, it's too late. My darling Dad died whilst we were in Singapore and despite all the flights back and forth and all the phone calls and Skypes, nothing, no nothing ever replaces 'popping in to give Mum a break', catching him when he was 'good' and able to have energy to talk. Don't leave it too late. There may be too few of the people who matter around to share time with. I miss my Dad heaps.
ReplyDeleteAs my hubby once said to me - Home is where the six of us are. It does hurt to be away when their is a death in the family I must say!
ReplyDeleteLump in my throat. Every day I feel like it might be a good time to go home. My husband says never, I say maybe one day. I wish I had a little home at home like you do. It would make things feel a bit different.
ReplyDeletexx
My parents don't ask me - I think its deliberate because they know I can't answer it without a burden of guilt.
ReplyDeleteWe are leaving South Africa in six weeks, after three years here onto our third 'new home' and fourth continent of residence. When I used my magnificent (not) photoshop skills to invite our friends to join us to celebrate the 'Durban Years' I used a map of the world and charted our trip so far. It starts in Sydney and then a little dotted line goes up to Hong Kong, then dips across to Durban and now curves up to the US and Atlanta. A friend wrote back in their reply saying - I guess after Atlanta you're moving home, because that is the next logical progression on the map - a wavy line, bobbing up and down around the equator and around the world. The thought had crossed my mind as well - purely from the visual side. The answer is I don't know, we don't know but I love the way you write about it - its perfect.
We have just moved back to Aus after two years in the UK. We are going to be moving back into the house we left behind, so I guess we have moved 'home', but I've been really struck by the fact that we will probably always have two 'homes' now,our UK one and our Australian one. Especially since having had Miss 12 months in England.... That has changed my perspective on 'home'. But it is good to be back. Now to try to pick up the threads with friends and family who seemed to cope just fine without us!
ReplyDeleteThis post made me a little tearful. I've sat with my Dad in much the same way, on visits back home to Canada. He's since passed away, but I'm rather glad he never asked me that question. The answer probably have been "I don't know" back then, but now that both my parents are gone the answer is "Australia is my home now."
ReplyDeleteIn 18 months, I will have been in Australia for longer than I ever lived in Canada and that is indeed a strange feeling.
18 months ago my Mum became ill with heart failure, she had always been so active, healthy and strong and it was a terrible shock for her and us. I travelled backwards and forwards from Jakarta to England every month or thereabouts for 6 months causing us all heartache and the children to be unsettled but it was the least I could do for my Mum and as an only child she had never once asked us to come home even after 11 years away. My Mum had been with us for each of our children's birth and helped us with every move, she was my rock. We all assumed that she would recover or at least be able to live with heart failure as many do but the time had come for me to ask my husband if we could request a move back to England so that I could be closer to my Mum and for us to support her, she had always done so much for us. So thankfully my husband's company supported the move home and we made the necessary plans, half way through our leaving party with 70 people in our house I had the call that no one ever wants to get - you need to come home now. 48 hours later the house was half packed (seriously good friends dealt with the rest) and I was on a flight with our youngest to my Mum's hospital bedside. My husband and 2 other children followed a day later. The next 2 weeks were spent ever hopeful that a miracle would happen but it was not to be and on 5 July 2011 I lost my Mum. Not once had she questioned our living overseas, she saw the benefits and opportunities for us all and as she had been stationed in Asia with the forces in the 60s so she loved visiting us there.
ReplyDeleteWe all hope and pray that it won't happen to us and I hope it doesn't to many others but your gut instinct will tell you when it is time to go home, be it for family that need you, your children's schooling, your partners job or anything else.
Another thing that I used to tell new arrivals finding it hard in Jakarta is that really if you weighed up the pros and cons of most places to live (perhaps excluding some severely third world countries) most would come out even, including your home country.
Interestingly friends in Jakarta asked me if now that my Mum was sadly no longer with us would we be returning to Jakarta, they weren't being thoughtless they were thinking of our friendship but I can honestly say that we are very happy at home for now, lets see how long the novelty lasts!
This post and the comments have made me quite teary.
ReplyDeleteMy Dad has also had the quiet "so when are you coming home love" chat with me. He only asks when it's only the two of us and he can never quite look at me.
There are some things in motion that may allow a return home early in the New Year. This will come at a cost to my partner and I know it's wrong, but I am hoping it happens so we can go home.
Beautiful post, one so many of us can relate to. Especially now as my dad faces another round of health problems, and my parents' aging starts to really accelerate. Plus parenting across continents (son in uni) has its moments. The short answer is not for a few years (youngest wants too graduate here, and it's the right thing for that and other reasons). In the meantime we make the most of visits, and I'm sure there'll be more in the future. Like you, we're in the early stages of thought on establishing a home base for the future.
ReplyDeleteYou do the best you can, make the most of the time you have together, and stay connected. But we've found that home is where our nuclear family is, and we're the stronger for that.
It is quite settling, in a way, if that is the right way to put it, to know that I am not alone with these feelings.....
ReplyDeleteI miss Aus daily. I miss my family and friends daily as well. I have been living in England for the best part of 10 years.....we have a lovely life here...and I throw myself into it. As the years fly by tho, I am more and more aware that a) my friends and family don't miss me half as much as I do them (which is natural, not a slur. I am one person on my own, they are carrying on with life as they have always known it, surrounded by the people that they grew up with) We never discuss "Are you ever coming home" we don't even do "I miss you" - which I actually find really peculiar, but it is as if those sentences are spoken they will unleash the homesickness......and it is far better to embrace the "Pollyanna" version of life (written with heavy irony)
I didn't choose to leave Aus. I did choose to marry my English husband tho. Our daughter is English, she is doing her GCSE's, all her childhood friends live locally..and although she is very happy in Aus (we try to visit annually) I know that her heart is here. I wonder where my heart will be by the time she has finished school...My beloved parents are both in their mid/late 70's. I speak to them at least 3 times a week. We Skype. But it is just not the same as being there. I cannot begin to imagine them not being there....
I have learnt to put my immediate little family first. But I am constantly aware of feeling "family isolated" - my only blood relative in the northern hemisphere is my daughter.
I think I am a more rounded person for having lived abroad for so long. My heart is in Australia - and when I go back I can cry with the raw emotions that go with simply being in my homeland, where all is familiar and people know me from childhood. Yet, here in the UK I am known as "The Australian" who has lots of great friends (I think you work harder on friendships when you have to start from scratch) - I am at ease with who I am, proud of where I come from, and very keen to remain true to my roots (I "keep" my accent, have filled our home with things that remind me of my Aus life, fill my daughter's head with stories from my country Australian childhood, follow Aus press and tv) I feel that I now belong in 2 hemispheres. I call them my parralel lives....as rarely does one cross over with the other.
It has certainly taken a lot of time - and a lot of tears - to reach this stable position in my life. It is also different for other expats who are moved on every few years. We have been lucky enough to put our roots down in the one place for the last 5 years.
I also haven't been "home" for over 12 months. I find trips home undo me! Let's see how I return after my proposed visit in October....
All the comments strike a chord. As I said at the beginning of this (lengthy, rambling (!) post) it is settling, strengthening (?) to know that these feelings are not unique. But it is certainly a unique kind of pain.....
Great post! You have got a lot of of us thinking about all those boxes......(I just might have to shut the door to my box room tho, so that I can get on with my day....)
I absolutely love your writing!!!
ReplyDeleteI'm living in the at little room in my head right now. We've just left Brazil, are staying in Houston (in our house) for the next few weeks (A month? Two?) and then moving on to Scotland to spend time with my husband's aging father who isn't doing well. We don't know for how long, and we don't know where we'll go from there. The possibilities are wide open, and that's ok.
ReplyDeleteScotland is home for my husband, but a new place for me. I'm from California, but it's not 'home' anymore. I don't know anyone who still lives there, and I have no desire to move back. I don't have a home, truly. There will never be a time in my life that I go home. Home is where my husband is though, so as long as we go together, I'm happy with any new move.
I'm excited about living in Brian's home town for a while. Looking forward to learning more about it, adding it to hour shared history, and spending more time with his family (whom I adore). I'm really, really happy that he'll be able to spend time with his dad at the end of his life. He would regret it forever if we weren't there with him.
So, my little room in the back of my head is really in the front of my head right now. It's a pretty interesting room.
My head is the same. However, I'm new to expat life and I don't want to go home ever. I am so disillusioned with everything to do with the UK. (ssh don't tell my husband or family!)
ReplyDelete