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Monday, 23 September 2013

The Thing About Being A Female Turtle...


I've heard that when female turtles lay their eggs, they return to the very same place each time. Sometimes they travel for hundreds of miles to get back home. It's believed that they follow the earth's magnetic field to find their way. Many times, due to the turtles lack of landmarks, strong currents, and poor visibility, the turtle must rely on instinct. Female turtles have been taken by boat and dropped in far flung lands, only to then swim thousands of miles to make it back to familiarity. Just in time to waddle their way along the same stretch of beach and begin digging their nests.

Scientist are unsure why. I think perhaps if they sat down with a group of expectant expat mothers they may begin to understand. The magnetic pull to home has never been stronger.

The first little traveller was born in Australia. We were living in Indonesia at the time and I knew I wanted to be home for my first. But when the second little traveller was due to arrive, like many expat women, I realized it was a very long swim to make with a toddler on my back. Unlike a turtle, I had others to consider, a husband who obviously wanted to be around for the process, and my first little turtle who had her own life going on.

On the evening before the second little traveller's birth, I sat in an unfamiliar hospital room in Malaysia wondering if I'd made the right decision. G had gone home to gather supplies and like many pregnant woman before me I suddenly changed my mind. I have a friend who stood up mid labour and announced she was going home "I've changed my mind, I don't want to do this anymore". When we talk I only have to utter the words "I've changed my mind..." and we'll both giggle hysterically.

What I hadn't bargained for was how I would feel after the event. That Kuala Lumpur was no longer just a location that we'd lived in, it was now the birthplace of my child. More than a name on a birth certificate, it now encapsulated everything in those few few days when our family changed forever. The flowers, the visits from friends, the drive home - all of it now interwoven with a time in another place.

When the third little traveller announced his surprise arrival with the onset of morning sickness and a vague memory of a very big night at the British Embassy in Libya, I began to map out a way home. I had a small problem, one that even the best cartographer couldn't help me with. I had too many young turtles under the age of two to legally navigate my way home on my own. We headed to Mediterranean waters. The third little traveller is inexplicably proud of his Maltese origins, and I have to agree with him. We all fell in love with Malta in that time of our lives. The entire experience for many reasons, has its own permanent piece of real estate in my heart.

When the fourth little traveller told me the other day that he hopes to marry a Canadian, I didn't have to ask why. As a family we all talk of Canada with the kind of melancholy that comes when you leave fabulous friends, snow capped mountains, and a number of first of the firsts behind you. Our first house purchase, our first visit from the tooth fairy, our first Christmas away from home. It was a fellow mother from the first little traveller's kindergarten class who delivered him. "It's a boy" she squealed, knowing that his brothers and sisters were all at home with fingers and toes firmly crossed that it was a new brother coming their way.

The thing about being a female turtle is you often have to make a long and lonely trek home. Sometimes if we can ignore the magnetic field, the tug and the pull, we can surprise ourselves with how much like home so very far away can feel.

9 comments:

  1. I'm not a mum - but as I read your words, you nevertheless draw
    NOSTALGIA out of my ever pore!!! Living away, the richest and hardest
    thing of all is that we do make multiple homes - and can never again
    collect all the places and people we love in one room.

    Sending you sunny alpine greetings from a day which is causing me to want to yodel like Heidi,Ali of the Alps :-)

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  2. What a rich mix of cultures you have just in your little brood. Fabulous.

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  3. I love this and I completely understand! I was also living in Indonesia but on Borneo in the little oilfield town of Balikpapan when the first was expected so I went home to have her. The second was born in Paris but not before a trip home just a couple of months before her birth because I woke up one morning and HAD TO GO HOME. I wrote about it here. http://bit.ly/16UmVAQ

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  4. My Dad was in the Navy when I was born in Cuba. My husband was in the Army when our daughter was born in Texas. Neither of those places are home. But the pull is still there.

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  5. I love this post. Although it has always been very good, your writing seems to be getting even better. I guess practice does make perfect. I hope the fourth little traveller gets to marry a Canadian!

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  6. Exactly. G and I are hoping that one day we can take everyone back to where it all began. One day...

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  7. Stacy, I am willing to bet that we have mutual friends. Balikpapan was home for a few close buddies of mine. Heading over to your post now.

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  8. As I start to prepare to move back to Australia for a couple of years before venturing to New York for the next stint I have this gentle tug on my heart. You have explained it so well, I am taking my daughter from her birth place, from the best memories that my husband and I have together. Bringing her home, first smile, laugh, roll, crawl, steps! That is what I will cry about when we leave. Thanks for the post x

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