During my preteen and teenage years growing up on a chore-filled small farm in rural Colorado I longed to be anywhere else. The world was full of sophisticated lifestyles and exotic locations and I was sure that I was missing out on all of it As an avid reader of all kinds of books I knew that the world was turning fast everywhere else except in my little farming town. The commonness of my hometown was suffocating my soul and my greatest promise to myself was to find a way out as soon as I could.
When I was 22 I managed to save enough to go to graduate school, and as luck would have it, there were only two or three schools with accredited programs in my field. The cheapest one was in Hawaii. I could afford the plane ticket, but not the place to live. As my faithful readers know, I became an au pair to a nice middle class Jewish family on the island of Oahu and was able to attend graduate school at the same time. Poor though my life was as a grad student, living in Hawaii was a phenomenal experience and fulfilled my earliest expectations on the rewards of seeing a 'distant' part of the world. If you must be poor then the Pacific Islands are most accommodating to such a frugal lifestyle. My story continued with even more distant travel upon graduation, lucky soul that I was, and my regular readers have heard tales on this.
I sit here this afternoon and listen to music from the Beamer Brothers. Music is wonderful for taking us away and this one puts me on a slow moving outrigger canoe within sight of a beach. The music is like soft waves on a distant shore.
My winter has been mild but still cool and while I love my woods, nothing is big-leaved green and exotically fragrant and the ocean is not in view filled with lovely colorful fish and exotic shellfish. Fresh ripened fruit does not grow on nearby trees year round. People who live on the Pacific Islands this morning wake up to a very different lifestyle. Warmer air, sweeter smells, perhaps a slower pace for some islanders, and I am envious and I would live there in an instant during the cold winter days except for my loves that live nearby and hold me fast with a chord that is stronger than anything I can imagine.
Is there another place on this great earth that sometimes calls to you and that you would live if you could?
(This was written before the news of the recent earthquake in the South Pacific, and I would still live there.)
When I was 22 I managed to save enough to go to graduate school, and as luck would have it, there were only two or three schools with accredited programs in my field. The cheapest one was in Hawaii. I could afford the plane ticket, but not the place to live. As my faithful readers know, I became an au pair to a nice middle class Jewish family on the island of Oahu and was able to attend graduate school at the same time. Poor though my life was as a grad student, living in Hawaii was a phenomenal experience and fulfilled my earliest expectations on the rewards of seeing a 'distant' part of the world. If you must be poor then the Pacific Islands are most accommodating to such a frugal lifestyle. My story continued with even more distant travel upon graduation, lucky soul that I was, and my regular readers have heard tales on this.
I sit here this afternoon and listen to music from the Beamer Brothers. Music is wonderful for taking us away and this one puts me on a slow moving outrigger canoe within sight of a beach. The music is like soft waves on a distant shore.
My winter has been mild but still cool and while I love my woods, nothing is big-leaved green and exotically fragrant and the ocean is not in view filled with lovely colorful fish and exotic shellfish. Fresh ripened fruit does not grow on nearby trees year round. People who live on the Pacific Islands this morning wake up to a very different lifestyle. Warmer air, sweeter smells, perhaps a slower pace for some islanders, and I am envious and I would live there in an instant during the cold winter days except for my loves that live nearby and hold me fast with a chord that is stronger than anything I can imagine.
Is there another place on this great earth that sometimes calls to you and that you would live if you could?
(This was written before the news of the recent earthquake in the South Pacific, and I would still live there.)