Am I home sick for Gofstown adn America?
Am I homesick for Goffstown and America? The short answer is no, but I have warehouses
full of memories – some simple and sensory (the smell of cooking bread in our
house on Spring St. on a fall day), some tactile (baseball gloves and bats and
even new baseballs in a pizza-size box), and some, of course, are emotional. I’ve been out of touch with most friends and
even family for so long they would be more like strangers if we met now. And even if I could magically step over the
threshold of grief and see lost loved ones who have passed what would I
say? The moment would be cathartic and
I’m sure I for one couldn’t stop sobbing or hugging the dead – but what then?
When I was divorced and working in Saudi Arabia, I use to
come back to see my kids. The truth is,
however, I’d only get to see them for an hour or so a day because they were
busy with their own lives. The rest of
the time I’d lie on the bed of a cheap motel room looking at the ceiling. This
was in a southern town I hadn’t lived in long enough to make any friends - so I
just looked at the ceiling and counted the days until I had to go back. Somehow I think meeting the dead you dearly
love might end up much the same. Dunno.
And then there is this:
Scientist say the reason we do not experience the same fear
when we drive as we did the first time we drove a car is because of the subconscious. Over time the subconscious focuses on the
important things: brake lights, intersections, where kids might run into the
road – to the exclusion of everything else.
There might be a gorilla gyrating with hula hoop by the side of the road
and because the spot light of our subconscious knows it is not important to our
driving – we don’t see the gorilla. [You may laugh, but I’ve see experiments
doing just this. Afterwards they ask,
“Did you see the gorilla?” and the answer is “What gorilla?”]
Before we were old enough to drive we walked around Goffstown
in the middle of such a subconscious spotlight.
We negotiated school, played in the backyard, climbed in the train
bridge, walked up to the lemon squeezer all in the growing confidence of our
subconscious. But that light long ago
dimmed for me because I have been gone for so long and went out. If I went back now, I doubt there would be
even a glimmer of those old spotlights of confidence. On the other hand there would probably be a
lot of gorillas gyrating hula hoops.
When I was working overseas my son Peter asked me what my
favorite country was? America, I would
say without hesitation. It was a
no-brainer, and I would still say the same thing today. Yet, America is an idea, a state of mind if
you will excuse the pun and that idea has “drifted” in the past decades. It may
even be dissolving altogether as we watch multi-national corporations take our
treasure and move elsewhere. Once I was
sure of what America was and stood for – I’m much less so now. The saying use to go “Democracy is an awful
form of government, but it is a lot better than what is in second place.” I’m
less sure of this now than I was at the height of the cold war.
I do have some comfort food issues. The rural Thais eat the same (basically) one
bowl rice-and-something meals they have eaten for a thousand years. It’s good, but not the food I grew up on. Still, things are changing rapidly here. There are two companies selling frozen
entrees and some of these are western and pretty good.
When I first got here there was no bourbon,
gin, vodka, or rum just scotch (that’s why the tallest hotel in Bangkok had a 25-storey
picture of Johnny Walker on it.) Now you can get these and wine, too. So comfort food is less an issue. (When I asked Chunky, who is a good Thai cook
to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, she presented me with 1. Bread, 2. Peanut
butter, 3. Bread, and 4. Jelly on top. I
just had to add this.)
The Thais don’t play baseball, basketball of American
football. I miss these but I can follow
these sports on TV and the Internet.
Would I like to go back to Goffstown if time, money, and
health allowed – sure. But am I
homesick? I think not.
