It takes a spot of courage to stand up tall and a bit of derring-do to rise when you fall

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Wanderlust

Sometimes I get the itch to go somewhere new so badly that it kind of supercedes all other thoughts for awhile. Often it comes out of nowhere, this desire, and it sticks like glue. I'll go online and search for houses in other areas. I see what kind of a house I could get in say, Plano Texas, or Boise, Idaho, and then I feel discontent for awhile. I keep thinking: three times the house for half or even a third the price!! Closet space!! A room for everyone and even extra!! Space!! Several houses had four living spaces, whatever that meant---I don't know, but it sounded good to me. A couple of them had a guest cottage. (And yes, it does occur to me that it's that much more house to clean. But hey!! I could hire a housekeeper!)

Where does it spring from, this wanderlust? I think perhaps it has its roots in childhood, my childhood. We moved quite a bit when I was a kid, for various and sundry reasons, and it seemed that after a few years in a place, I was itchin' to move on. Part of me was. Part of me longed to stay in one spot and develop friendships and have roots. But the other part---the gypsy side---kept looking to the horizon.

Also, every summer for quite a number of years, we traveled to visit my grandparents in the midwest. It was a several-day car trip, and I still remember those trips as the highlights of my childhood. Oh, I'm sure I've forgotten the long boring hours, etc., but I remember the Kansas wheatfields. I remember the long, lonely stretches of road that went as far as the eye could see. I remember the Colorado Rockies and the New Mexico deserts. I remember them in my mind's eye with a kind of ache. Hey! I sound like a country song. Sometimes I feel like a country song.

I don't think we'll probably ever move, though, at least not for a long time. For all sorts of reasons: The kids are settled in their schools and there's never a perfect time to go. If it would be a good time for one of the kids, it'd be a real bummer for another (school/grade-wise). There's no burning need to go anywhere else. There isn't one particular spot that we've always been dying to live. My husband isn't exactly known for making any sort of spontaneous decisions (Thank goodness! Most of the time, thank goodness,) and by the time all the research would be done, I'd probably have changed my mind. It's been so long now since we've been anywhere else that I'm not sure if I'd really have the courage to go someplace new at this point anyway. Which bothers me somewhat. I don't like the "rut" feeling of that. I don't want to stay because I'm too scared to spread my wings. I don't want to stay just because it's easier when maybe there's a really great experience out there, waiting.

And yet. There's a lot to be said for blooming where you're planted. For being content. For living in the moment. For appreciating what you have. For the great experiences right in the present spot. I do know that; I just forget sometimes. And I do know that the grass is never greener....

but the houses are a little bigger (she said in a sing-song-y voice). More space. Ahhhh....

8 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Trust me, the 'staying put' is worth more than a million moves...

12:14 AM, August 31, 2006

 
Blogger heatherfeather said...

i agree. i'm the queen of "i could be so happy if i lived in ____________".

and it's never true. make your home your family.

and take a several day car trip from the parents' point of view and see if that disabuses you of the fun of it. :)

10:43 AM, August 31, 2006

 
Blogger jay are said...

yes, heath, I've noticed that traveling with my kids isn't quite as fun as I recall traveling being...if that makes sense.

10:46 AM, August 31, 2006

 
Blogger mreddie said...

Just had to smile when you said that sometimes you felt like a country song. To really feel that way you should have a pick-up truck, a guitar and a hound dog to ride with you. But the grass is always greener - over the septic tank. ec

4:50 PM, August 31, 2006

 
Blogger Left Coast Sister said...

Having just relocated to a much less desirable part of the great Golden State, lemme tell ya. You don't want to move. but I know that wanderlust of which you speak... i have the tendency too to think that the grass is always greener, and forget that wherever I am it still needs to be mowed.

9:46 PM, August 31, 2006

 
Blogger Lisa said...

I read this post to T., and he thought I wrote it myself. I can literally spend hours on realtor.com. Seriously.

12:12 PM, September 01, 2006

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jay Are and Lisa, you come by your 'wanderlust' naturally! Goes way back.....

3:39 PM, September 01, 2006

 
Blogger jay are said...

I hear ya, Lisa....a bad habit! But fun....I think :)

7:17 PM, September 01, 2006

 

Post a Comment

<< Home