We need more unimpeded family time away from home. No technology, no house to look after, no employment or community functions. Just time to remember why we love each other. This is the best and most important, and it's really that simple.
Our kids have
talents we might not see. Maybe we need to give them space or
opportunity to shine; maybe we need to get our own eyes away from the
static of home just to look at our dear ones from another angle.
Travelling has allowed me to see amazing things about my children that
I didn't fully appreciate before. My daughter sees my heart
when I don't even notice she's looking. Away from the frustrations
of daily life I saw through the sheen of teenage angst and recognised
the delightful, deeply compassionate daughter I have always known. My
son is also a ridiculously amazing photographer. Here we were with
two cameras, mine a fancy one and his a cheap rugged fully automatic
thing, and he usually made more amazing photos than I did, by sheer
instinct, as well as lots of practice while I apparently haven't been
looking. Maybe at home we don't look at our children enough.
It's easier to learn
new things while travelling than in our own backyard. I am pretty
sure I've said the opposite, before, so let me explain. It takes
skill and practice to keep seeing new and more deeply into the things
we are familiar with. It takes a deep commitment to finding new
angles and seeing through the known to discover the unknown. We do
practice this, and I still think it's incredibly important to do so.
However travel just makes it so easy. Every single day of our trip
was filled with new experiences, from discovering religion through
great cathedrals and family members' beliefs and practices, to the intricacies of
European urban norms like learning to hand-wash laundry, identify
unfamiliar plants and use all kinds of unfamiliar tools and
appliances. Never mind language. We experienced so much in these
four weeks of travel that I believe it will take years to process it
all.
Family is really
important. Our own nuclear family had time to renew our bond, but we
also had time to visit no less than 60 family members from
Switzerland through Germany to the Netherlands, and to see the things
that we share. My kids got to spend time with cousins they've never
met before and discover that amazing feeling of knowing someone
intrinsically.
Graves. Family
history. It matters. When I was a teenager my grandmother took me to
see her father's grave. I thought it was weird. I never knew him. I
remember more about the many strange gravestones in the ancient
graveyard she took me to than I do about his actual grave. Since then
I have grown up, had various deaths of close family members, and
gained a new understanding of the importance of memorials. Even when
the person we grieve the loss of is not buried in a particular place,
a grave or other memorial gives us a place to ground our hearts.
Three of our grandmothers have died since the last time I went to
Europe. Two of my husband's and one of my own. So we made certain to
visit each of their graves while we were there, knowing that our
children might find it odd. This time, though, it was a wholly
different experience for me than it was when I was a teenager. My own
grandmother's ashes are now buried in the ancient graveyard she once showed me,
nestled under the stone beside the remains of her father. I felt very strange and comforted
to know that I had been there before; that I have known this place
since I was a teenager, and that she has come to rest somewhere
familiar to me. So we sat around that old grave, eating lunch and
listening to my grandmother's laughter, since I happened to have a
recording of it available via my phone.
We need to go home
again. After all the wonder and intensity of travelling, there is
truly no place like home: the arms of friends and family (and pets!)
who are still here when we return, the garden needing our attention,
and even the ever-failing house and the lumpy bed that has
nevertheless held so many of our dreams and that now waits to gather
us up again. We need a place to come home to. We need a refuge in which to process all those other wonderful things we learned while travelling.
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