I sit here thinking, thinking so hard. As you may not be aware, I have changed my ticket for the third and final time. I remain with precious little time here in this country I now call home. The time has come for reflection, final moments, good-byes.
Where do I begin? Where do I end? How did I get here, and how do I leave? I may have had mixed emotions when I arrived but what I’m experiencing now is more heart-in-the-blender type feelings. One hour I find myself breathing in excitement imagining the airport arrival, seeing those faces again, the whip of cold on my face as I step from the plane. Moments later I feel a deep ache, each time one of the boys does something sweet or funny; if I even allow myself for one second to imagine leaving them. It is okay to imagine being home, but not okay to imagine not being here.
I am not going to sift through the details of my decision to return home at this particular time. I am confident and resolved that it is the right decision, however. It was not an easy one, as choices tied so much to emotions never are. If I could find some way to live in both places at once, I would. I have promised the boys I will make every attempt to return by 2009 and plan to follow through.
As time ticks I think and think, about what I’ll miss and what I’ve been missing.
Bubble baths and sweet white wine. Downloading little-known indie tracks, cranking them in my car. Driving. Restaurants with unique menus. Cheese. Lulus and the gym. Snow, frost, icicles, mist, fog, dampness, single digit
The rush of wind past my ears on the backseat of a boda boda. Fried cassava, kikomando, rolexs at
And of course, the things I won’t miss and haven’t been missing.
Avoidant glances. Rules. Stress. Impatience. High prices. Disrespectful kids. Wastefulness. Materialism. Ungratefulness.
Dirt. Unwanted attention. Standing out. Blunt neo-imperialists. Chaotic driving. Traffic jams. The inability to find anything you’re looking for in a sufficient amount of time. Doing laundry by hand. Starving dogs. Inequality. Abject poverty.
I’m getting that strange prisoner-syndrome: fear of release.
My final e-mail will arrive to you from
~Nicole
3 comments:
Hi Nicole,
Great blog, though I guess dated a little. I'm going to be a year in Kampala, and am interested in serious Luganda study. You mention a center which offered classes. Can you pass me the name? Also-- can you recommend any text/resources/audio/etc?
Thanks for your help.
Patrick
email mpatricksweeney at gmail dot com
Hi Nicole,
Great blog, though I guess dated a little. I'm going to be a year in Kampala, and am interested in serious Luganda study. You mention a center which offered classes. Can you pass me the name? Also-- can you recommend any text/resources/audio/etc?
Thanks for your help.
Patrick
email mpatricksweeney at gmail dot com
Hi Nicole,
Great blog, though I guess dated a little. I'm going to be a year in Kampala, and am interested in serious Luganda study. You mention a center which offered classes. Can you pass me the name? Also-- can you recommend any text/resources/audio/etc?
Thanks for your help.
Patrick
email mpatricksweeney at gmail dot com
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