We got back to Ireland last Tuesday, but I had a message on my phone stating I needed to call work. I called and my boss wanted me to go to Galway for a business trip. I had no time spent at home and now that I'm home today I've done nothing but be lazy around the house.
The wedding was nice and we had a great time being with my old friends. Still, the trip back to my hometown just didn't have the same feelings to it as in the past. Everything was the same, but it all seemed different to me. I felt like a stranger in a place I once belonged. It took me awhile to figure out it wasn't the place that had changed, it was me who had changed. Being in places I grew up brought back many memories that replayed in my head from a time since past. But it was like remembering a movie that I had watched.
The life I had lived there seemed so far and distant it was hard to imagine it was my life. Even the house I grew up in had changed. The trees that my father and I planted in the front yard when I was a young boy and had grown up along with me, were torn down by the new owners. The house has had many subtle changes over the years and all those changes have made even visiting the house and remembering the way it used to be a distant memory. It was the one constant that I could hang on to and remember my family. Now I have lost that.
Even many of my friends that attended the wedding and whom I haven't seen since I moved away have moved on. This is to be expected and you know their lives change as much as your own. Yet, in your head they are still the same as you last saw them. Some have now bought a house, had children, or changed jobs. Some are dating new people that just didn't seem to fit since I still pictured them with their old love. The only constant that hadn't changed was my friendship with Mike, Kelly, and Jen. It was like old times with us and it was on their friendships that I chose to focus myself and not on the past that had changed so much. We laughed because there were actually six Mikes at the wedding and would have been seven had my cousin attended. That made us laugh that parents at that time were not very original when picking a name for their boys. We always laughed at stupid little things and it was in the laughter of my friends that I found the most comfort.
Visiting the hometown was bittersweet. It was great to see my friends and my niece and nephew. But I also have to deal with my past. I went to the graves of my parents and my brother and spent time standing there on cold night thinking of them and missing them. I've often said it before, but I definitely know now after this visit that I could never return to this place I grew up. I don't belong here anymore. I'm no longer the person I was while growing up here. I've seen so much and done so much and still I want to know more and do more and see more. So much of life I want to experience.
I miss all those that I have lost over the years and would love to spend one more day with each of them. I wish they could have met Gareth and I could tell them the stories of all the places I've been and the things I've seen and done. I would like them to know that I'm happy where I am in my life and to thank them for helping me become the man I am. I talk to them and tell them these things when I am standing at their graves, but I don't know if there is anything on the other side and they can hear me or if I'm just talking to the wind. But it feels good to be able to say the words out loud.
Looking at the dates on their headstones makes you realize how little time we have in this world. How quickly this life passes and how I let so much time slip away. Just when I started to feel alone and maybe a little sorry for myself, Gareth came and stood by me and took my hand in his. It was at this moment I realized my past is my past, I can't change it. It is what it is. Looking into his eyes, I realized here beside me is my present, my future. This is where I should focus myself. For I know with him by my side this life will have many more special memories to live.
this brought tears to my eyes.
ReplyDeleteglad you're doing well.
Wow! Very powerful. I've read this three times and I'm crying like a baby.
ReplyDeleteWhat happened to your parents/family??
ReplyDeleteSean Patrick
Laurel, md.
I can so relate to this post. Just focus on your current life, which seems pretty nice. You'll do just fine. At least that's what I tell myself.
ReplyDeleteI read it. I am very sorry.
ReplyDeleteYou are sharing life with beloved man. I've lost the One that I loved so much. Now I can't love anymore.
Please, live! and love!
Best
What a nice text... What nice feelings. We would not never coming back : that cuts the heart and often makes us so sad...
ReplyDeleteBut this kind of visiting makes you to write a keen narrative.
And now you're with your nice lover Garreth : it's happiness for you !!!
Have very nice days together !
Thank you for your posts...
Laurent,
from France
I'm glad you are back and had a good visit. I know exactly what you are talking about.
ReplyDeleteTalking about standing at your parents graves brings back a lot of memories for me. I've done the same thing at my mom's grave.
How is your cousin Mike?
I like your moments of introspection. To become aware of our feelings, accept them and be ready to go forward, this is simply great. Compliments,
ReplyDeleteWith love.
Sounds like you had a real eureka moment while visiting your hometown. I agree with anon about focusing on the present, but also recommend remembering the past and where you came from. As for the 'other side', who really knows? I think most parents want their children to be happy and have an easier time attaining their goals then they did. The easier time thing may not apply, but you certainly seem happy and at peace with your life and where it's going. You have some very profound thoughts and they have the ability to make others of us stop and think about our lives, loves and the way we spend the time we have here. Enjoy life because it can be brief.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the nice comments everyone. Life is always teaching us a lesson wether we know it or not.
ReplyDeleteDave, my cousin is doing good I guess. He didn't go to the wedding. He's in Australia now coaching. Last I heard from him was at Christmas we talked on the phone and he seemed happy.
This post brought a tear to my eye ... I too haven't been to the place I grew up in many, many years ... you made me remember things I hadn't thought about in a while ... great post ... Thanks (guelph guy, ontario canada) ...
ReplyDelete