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[personal profile] devi
England really made an effort as I was coming back from Gatwick yesterday morning. It hit me with the works: darling buds and clouds of blossom on the trees, baby lambs who were definitely gambolling, morning mist lifting softly from the fields, half-timbered houses covered in climbing rose, shafts of sunlight beaming from the clouds. "Look at me! Look at me!" it was saying. "What a green and pleasant land I am!"

But despite all that, and despite deciding halfway across the Atlantic to cram my ears with all the music I could think of that would remind me where my loyalties lay - the Streets, the Clash, the Pistols, Saint Etienne, "Irish Blood, English Heart" - I'm sorry to be home. I'm back in the flat, which seems poky and grubby and cheerless, and my suitcase is sitting behind me, reproaching me for no longer living out of it.

I've had three weeks of adventure, exploration, converting strangers into friends, and freedom from all the burdens of ordinary life. London and work and bills and daily grind were literally on the far side of the world, not my problem. This is part of what holidays are for. I'd forgotten.

That could apply to any holiday, but also... I went to America full of preconceptions. Most of them got proved wrong. But the one thing I wasn't expecting was getting completely smitten with the place. I have a new crush on America. I left my heart in San Francisco, I could actually feel the drag in my chest as we sped away from it on the BART, and then went on to leave other vital organs in Portland and Seattle. I loved small things (peanut butter milkshakes; beatnik bookshops with sections labelled "Anarchy", "Class War" and "Muckraking"; endless coffee; smoking cloves on a balcony in Seattle looking at the sunset over the Olympic mountains) and big things (the way they've got proper, vast, breathtaking wilderness; the way everyone we met seemed so politicised, principled and angry with the government and generally not apathetic). Of course there was bad stuff too, like beggars with one leg and the hollowness of Hollywood, but I was expecting the bad stuff. I wasn't expecting the love, so it knocked me over.

People, please help remind me why I love London. I do. It's always mixed with hate, but every time I think I've had enough of this city it shows me something amazing or tantalises me with a story, and I feel the rush of being at the centre of things and forgive it for another while. That feeling will come back given a little time, I know.

I feel completely stateless right now. I don't want to move back to Ireland any time soon, and it isn't quite the Ireland I left anyway. I feel dislocated from London, and I've always known doing the London Thing wasn't forever, and I can't think of anywhere else in the UK I'd really like to live. And everyone knows brand-new shiny crushes are not to be trusted. Where on earth do I belong?

Date: 2005-04-12 05:51 pm (UTC)
ext_34769: (Default)
From: [identity profile] gothwalk.livejournal.com
Where on earth do I belong?

I think you may have to make your own place. It's what most people end up doing with lesser or greater degrees of success.

Date: 2005-04-12 06:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bluedevi.livejournal.com
Eventually, yeah, I hope to do that. Probably that much-discussed house :) I just don't know where my roots want to plant themselves in order to do that yet.

Have you read Amnesia Moon by Jonathan Lethem? It's a sci-fi novel where something's happened to the fabric of the world so that bubbles of reality develop around 'strong dreamers', becoming what they think the world should be like. One bit is post-apocalypse survivalist, another is thin people only, in another the people are sort of suburban nomads. But America's like that anyway. Maybe I need to dream stronger, to make my own little bubble.

Date: 2005-04-12 08:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mooism.livejournal.com
Building my own bubble sounds a bit like what I’ve been trying to do for the last couple of years.

Date: 2005-04-12 10:33 pm (UTC)
ext_34769: (Default)
From: [identity profile] gothwalk.livejournal.com
Have you read Amnesia Moon by Jonathan Lethem?

I haven't, but I'll keep an eye out for it, or bother [livejournal.com profile] wyvernfriend and see if she has it.

What I'm talking about, though, is not necessarily so much location as social circle - preferably virtual, rather than physical, because until you establish the place, the physicality remains difficult. Shared projects, zines, online meets, letter exchanges, all these kinds of things begin to form floating seeds that can later put down roots.

Otoh, that may be what you're talking about - floating bubble, not floating seed...

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