Today marks 20 months since I moved to Seattle. After the
first year, I stopped counting, stopped taking a moment to observe that it was
the 5th and counting back to July of 2013, doing the math. But I’ve never stopped observing that I’m here. I
still don’t take it for granted. I still have several moments each day where I
marvel to myself, “I’m here. For real. This city. It’s mine.” It starts when I
look out the living room window and see the sunrise, the mountains, the rain or
the fog. It continues when I walk to the bus stop, observing the contrast in
the colors between the water and the sky—blue, gray, sometimes with a hint of
pink—watching the boats move across the Sound. Then I walk onto the campus
where I work and am delighted by the smells—the flowers, the greenery, there is
something no matter what the season. I watch the sky change out the window all
day. Sometimes blue, sometimes gray, sometimes changing back and forth.
Sometimes there are rainbows. In the winter, darkness begins to fall before I
leave. In the summer, it’s still bright as noon at five pm. On my walk home,
sometimes I see the Mountain. I always see the skyline from the Jose Rizal
bridge. Sometimes it’s already dark, sometimes the sun is setting, sometimes
the sky and the Sound are unbelievable shades of blue, sometimes shades of
misty gray. Every time I think, “This is perfect.” Every time I take a photo. I
have hundreds of photos from my living room window, from my bus stop, my walk
home. I have hundreds and hundreds more
from our walks and hikes during the weekend, from the parks, the forests, the
mountains, the beaches. On the surface, they many of them may seem the same—trees,
beach, gray waves, blue sky, sunset, skyline—but look closely and each is
different. Each is perfect. I can’t pick a favorite.
Afternoon from my bus stop |
Puget Sound from Lincoln Park |
A gray but beautiful day at the beach |
From eighth grade through most of high school, I had periods
when I was so depressed that I saw the world in shades of gray sometimes. I
told people this and I’m pretty sure they thought I was exaggerating, but it’s
real. I have a bunch of gray memories. I also have a bunch of black holes where
memories should have been but I was too sad, too angry, too broken, so my brain
replaced moments and feelings with a scrawl of black ink. After high school and
into my early twenties, those black holes were my own fault; they were
blackouts. I worked through all of this. I worked hard. With therapists, with
pen and paper, with painful and uncomfortable conversations with friends and
family, with love from friends and family and the man who would become my
husband. Things got hard again in 2010. Life is hard. It throws things at you.
Sometimes all at once. There’s grief and illness, there’s money woes, there’s
major disappointments in your career. It happens to everyone. It’s hard to
handle for everyone. But when you are a person who saw in shades of gray, who
cut open her arms and/or drank heavily to cope, who is full of self-blame and
hatred, hard can start to feel really scary. Hard can start to feel like a trap
or even a death sentence. By 2012, I was desperate and scared. I was seeing
gray, feeling suffocated by my mistakes and self-perceived mistakes. I also
knew people were whispering about me, things like “Debbie Downer,” and it hurt.
I was mired in the gray and I didn’t want to be, but as anyone else who has
been there knows, it’s not easy to escape. I went back to therapy, to the
difficult conversations. I worked and I thought and I weighed out what I had to
do. I knew I had to take a risk. I don’t like risks. But I had to. So I did.
And here I am.
I am home.
Two years ago, I wrote about why Seattle. I called it my
heart city and tried to explain what that meant. I’m not sure if I got it quite
right. I seem to keep redrafting it in blog posts and essays and a chapter of
my memoir and maybe that’s sort of what I’m doing here, but just with new
terminology; now I am trying to explain why Seattle is home. I’m going back to
Chicago for a visit in a couple of weeks. Some friends and family members refer
to this as me “coming home.” I haven’t corrected them because I didn’t want to
hurt feelings, but a little voice inside of me always pipes up, “No, Seattle is
home.” Chicago is where I’m from. It’s where many of the people I love reside. But
Seattle is home now and here is why:
This year has been hard so far. Last month in particular.
Another one of those periods where things are thrown at you all at once. So
much stress on so many fronts plus the flu. That’s why I haven’t blogged in a
while, not here or even to my Seattle photos Tumblr. But in the middle of it
all, I took an afternoon to myself. I went downtown and saw this:
(*Whispers* This, all of this, is mine.)
I also noticed the daffodils in full bloom in front of my
building. In the middle of February.
The trees, too.
I had a mountain view from my window when I was sick.
Sometimes I even see eagles there. I can get out for fresh air and sunshine
without freezing to death in February. I can run year-round. I walk everywhere.
I am surrounded by so much natural beauty that it isn’t hard to pull myself out
of my thoughts and worries and say, “Hey, look around! This is yours. This is yours.”
Seattle has helped me find and practice gratitude. It has
helped me work on calm and inner peace. I’ve made friends here more easily than I have anywhere else or at any other time in my life. And that’s not just about the people (though they are awesome), that’s about me and what I’ve found within. I’m still shy. I still worry. I still get sad. But this city centers me. No, it allows me
to center myself. When the stress and the bad and the sad descend, I look out
the window, I breathe the air, I wait for the bus, I stare at the sky, the
water, the flowers, and I center myself. I say, “I am here, I am grounded, and
I brought myself to this place. I can keep going through anything.” It was the
missing piece that I needed. It was the challenge I had to set for myself to
find my own strength. Seattle has given me what the girl who saw in shades of
gray thought she would never have: happiness and hopefulness. That’s why Seattle is home.
4 comments:
I'm sorry that you've gone through such difficult times, though it also sounds like you are a very strong person. And it sounds like those people who made those Debbie Downer comments were really cruel and insensitive; they're the type of people that you don't need in your life.
It's great that you've found a good home in Seattle. I don't know much about the place, except that it rains a lot and Frasier Crane lived there. :) But I've heard that it's beautiful.
I can relate to how you feel about adopting a new city as your home. I'm not originally from Chicago, but after living here for several years, it feels more like home than my hometown ever did.
This post resonated so much. I'm considering moving to a different city sometime in the next couple of years away from where I was brought up and this was one of the things that just made sense to me. Home doesn't have to be the place that you were raised. And Seattle was the home of Frasier, which makes it great, anyway. And beautiful pictures :)xoxo
wwww.thelittleenigma.blogspot.com
Thank you both!I am glad this resonated with you. And it actually doesn't rain as much in Seattle as people think, we just have mist/rain in the winter. Funny that you both mention Frasier which I haven't really seen. Guess I'll have to watch it.
And yes, home definitely doesn't have to be the place you were raised. It's the place that speaks to your soul!
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