Of fog, family and familiar things
December 3, 2013 in North America, Travelogue, United States
I-94 around Chicago is shrouded in fog.
Not the pea soup kind that makes for white knuckle driving. This is the misty, ghostly kind through which leafless black trees reach their bony fingers. The soft, quiet, gentle sort of fog that feels womblike. The kind of fog that lets you see just far enough to have the confidence to carry on around the next bend in the road.
It makes for good driving and good thinking.
Today marks the midpoint of our six week friends and family tour. We’re spending within the quiet sanctuary of our truck, resting. The only sound is gentle tapping as various children write stories, or do school work. No one is talking. The Christmas music The Man kindly downloaded for me is playing softly and two little strings of ten LED coloured lights are glowing cheerfully. This morning I drove so Tony could work. When we stopped at Mars Cheese Castle we swapped. Finding time to work is the hardest part of the friends and family tour.
With the nurturing of a parade of people we love we’ve just about recovered from our reentry traumas. We’re feeling quite at home now and we’re enjoying all of the things we forget that we miss about America. Of course we haven’t been big box store shopping yet, I’m saving that special trauma to share with my mother-in-law! 🙂
The thing that is wearing us out is the same thing that always wears us out: media. The television, specifically. It’s ALWAYS on. Always. Everywhere. It’s inescapable. It tears at my nerves like a grater on hard cheese. The constant barrage of sound. The never ending horror story that is any news channel. Oh my word. I had no idea the world was such an awful place. This is why we quit watching TV a dozen years ago. It damages my calm. The advertising. It’s shocking. (If you don’t find it shocking, take a 12 year break and then have another look). No one else seems to notice. Perhaps it’s just me.
One of the best things about spending a period of time outside of one’s own culture is the ability to return to what should be “home” and see it through a foreigner’s eyes.
There is so much to love about America. It’s big, beautiful, loud and lovely. Sure, there are gaps big enough to see through around the doors in public toilets, every single thing seems to have high fructose corn syrup in the top three ingredients, and super size has become regular size (I got a “large coke” the other day… 44 oz, I kid you not!) but the gasoline is cheap (about $3 a gallon only!) Goldfish crackers can be had (unlike in NZ) and it’s home to half of the people we love!
It’s a country of dichotomies: gun violence is out of hand… but so is big hearted generosity. Healthcare is a train wreck, but there are more options for healthy choices than anywhere we’ve ever been. Public education is, in general, of marginal quality, but there are more educational options readily available than in just about any other country. Religion and politics are packaged in a uniquely American and capitalistic manner that makes me wince a bit. It’s painful to watch and more painful to be subjected to. Consumerism keeps the cogs turning, but to a lesser degree than one might expect. Anyone who has spent any time in Asia will understand the difference. America gets a bad rap on that front, but their version is so much tamer than… well, than lots of places we’ve been.
I forgot how much Americans, in general, smile and laugh and treat total strangers like old friends. I love that.
We were sad to hug Great Grandma Parker goodbye this morning. She sent us on our way with lots of love and a bag full of ham sandwiches (which is the same thing as love in her book!) She’s ninety four and as bright as a new penny. We played cards and ate enormous meals in endless rounds while she told us stories we’d never heard before about her youth and how she met Great Grandpa just after the war. Every visit with her feels like winning the lottery; how can we be so blessed as to have a Great Grandma who’s still “young,” active and energetic enough to take on her four great grandchildren? I’m so thankful for the relationships they have with her, even though we’re never with her enough.
Hannah is trying hard to curb her enthusiasm this afternoon. She’s fairly itching to squeeze Benjamin; her twin cousin, in a few hours. They’re the same age and spent several years of their early childhood under the same roof. They’ve always had a very special bond and it’s fun to see them pick up right where they left off and roll into a great big ball of brotherly love. Personally, I’m dreading hugging him. I just know he will have completely ignored my admonition to STOP growing and will be even bigger than he was last time, which seems impossible. It’s humiliating to be picked up and given a light swing by a child you once tied shoes for.
By tonight we’ll be tucked in under my in-laws roof; just as if we’d never left. It all comes full circle and no matter how far we roam we’re always drawn back to the places that are home for us.
This is the kaleidoscope inside my own head that I’m peering through in the fog as we drive today. The joys of rediscovering home. The things that look different than they used to. The loved ones who are making this road trip one long parade of happy.
Pretty much sums up the US! I know where you were…Mars Cheese…not very far from us at all…maybe 30 minutes away! Yup the fog as my son said is a …Halloween fog!
Thanks for sharing your view of “home”… I agree about the North American advertising cacophony.
I was puzzled by your comment of consumerism. That’s been on my radar these last months, and from what I believe I read in your post, you’re saying Asia has the US beat? (I’ve never been off the North American continent for any length of time, so I’m kinda clueless.)
Again. Thank you for sharing your experiences… I’ve been following since you were in Australia. I found you through the top 100 Canadian travel blogs, and for every post, I read a few lines out loud to my husband. Now he checks in with me to ask what ya’ll are up to…
Wishing you a peaceful time here on North American soil.
We’re now counting minutes…drive safe!
Off to my shower, see you in a few!
Wow you guys moved fast! Sounds like a great trip…. and I totally agree about the TV. We are down to about 1 hour a day, no news, no way. 🙂
Safe travels…
Sweet grandma! Last Sunday, we celebrated my grandma’s 92nd birthday. Just like yours, she is fully there, funny and so smart! She lived with us for 2 years when we had our little homestead and the girls were younger. It is such a treat to still have her around! But we need to make sure she gets a print off of our blog while we are away! 😉
Beautifully expressed, as usual! America isn’t perfect by any means, but I do love my country and am happy to have you all back in it.
Beautiful post (once again)!
I had to laugh though because you had noticed some of the same things that I had the last time we visited–gaps in the doors of the WCs, HFCS (I spend half my time reading labels in the grocery stores), and of course TV (which destroys my calm as well).
It IS a little surreal going back. But my grandparents’ house seems to be timeless, and I love how we can go there and feel immediately comfortable–surrounded in love.
Enjoy! <3
Thanks so much for reading along Lori!! Where in Canada are you? We’ll be in Ontario in January… YES… Asia has America beat, BIG TIME on the consumerism front, talk about “mall culture!!” oi vay!
Great post. Oh boy, those darn TV’s. They are everyplace in this country. It is probably my biggest issue with America. After spending the summer in Paris it was even more obvious when we came back. I hear you, it destroys my calm as well.
Jessica… it doesn’t take long “away” to see it, does it?? And it’s not like TV doesn’t exist elsewhere… and advertising with it… we aren’t exposed to much of it though, by our own choice… when we come home it seems like everywhere you go they are ON all the time, stores, homes, even screens over the gas pumps, and checkout stands in stores in some places! It’s become a hallmark of our culture. Not my favourite part.