Is there one place you have lived that you love more than any other? Is it because of the place, the time or the people? I may be thinking about this because we are living in our friends' home in Santa Barbara, California. I have been posting about this. They have a view of the mountains. None of my own homes has ever been in a setting like this.
My life is more prosaic. Our North Carolina home is mid-century modern with trees and a meadow. Lots of privacy but always needing clean-up and repair. Fallen branches, flooding creek, piles of debris. Deer ticks and humidity. A lovable place in every way, but hard to keep up. Here, "seems it never rains in southern California," as the song goes. So as house-sitters, we are watering desert-like pot plants that sit on a pebbled patio (no grass of course). I never knew how vibrant bougainvillea are.
Where do you live? Overlooking a city street? Traffic sounds out front? Do you have a balcony to lean over? Can you wave when a neighbor walks by? Or is it swings and a sandbox in the back yard for you? Have you been able to make all the places you've lived feel like home?
Where we have lived in Princeton, New Jersey for short stints, the bathroom window abuts the sidewalk where the kids line up for their school bus. The kitchen door opens to a fire escape and laundry is in a moldy basement. But with plants, pillows and fairy lights it's a super place to live. I could make that home.
Where we stay in London, we carry our laundry to the basement across the street. Years ago when we lived there as international students, we were all young and having babies. Decades later we lived in a colleague's apartment in Zimbabwe while our London-born daughter taught in Lebowa, South Africa. Twice a week a woman washed our few clothes in the bathtub and swept the worn carpet with a broom. I remember all these places with affection.
I think about people who have lived in the same place forever. Maybe that's you. My best friend from childhood-to-now, has lived in our native state her whole life. Her children and grandchildren too. Same with my favorite cousin who is like an older sister. I can't help but think that because their friendships are longer, they must be deeper than mine. Deeper connections with place, with the history around them.
The other thing about homes, though, is they aren't just places of comfort. We all know that tragedies happen in our homes. Bad news. Hurtful discoveries. Facts that won't disappear. Words that can't be unspoken: forgiven, yes, but not unsaid. Where love is greatest, emotional distress is too. Our beloved pets die. Our parents die. A spouse, a partner and yes, even a child may die. So home isn't just a refuge. It's where we get bad news as well as good. We have fights there. We get hurt there. We crawl inside our closets and hide our scars. Home is not such a simple place after all.
The sayings about home are interesting. Is home people or a place? I don't have a single friend in London, but the city myself is my friend. I know the bus routes and alleyways, the neighborhood restaurants. I can shelter in a museum or cafe. Many of us have a favorite city.
Robert Frost (1874-1963) says, "Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in." That may be true if our parents are alive. Or a brother or sister or friend who loves us. But not everyone has a place like that. The greatest scourge is homelessness.
British poet Dame Edith Sitwell (1887-1964) says that winter is the time for home--good food, comfort and warmth. But so are the other seasons, we might say. I am here in our friends' home in spring. That too is a time for home, when we might grow with the season. Or summer, when the sun warms our souls and bodies. Or fall, when the reds and yellows remind us of death and rebirth.
My widowed father lived in his home until two weeks before he died at age 94. By that time home was a small apartment in a retirement community where he had spent the last ten years. He enjoyed it as much as any home where he had ever lived: company, good food, activities and just 10 minutes from me. May we all be so fortunate.
Thoughtfully, Nina Naomi

