Daddy traveled a ton when he was young. Â He played ball all over the pacific northwest, when I first moved out west he used to tell me all the towns he'd been through, many of which I was just then learning about. Â He hopped freight trains. Â He was adventure personified.
Mom traveled with her folks and Margaret and Sandy on vacations, they went to Niagra Falls and other interesting places they could get to by train. Â
While I was in high school and for either Christmas or my birthday, Mom and Dad got me luggage for a gift. Â I took it to heart.
I've been on the road a lot since then and I'm on the road now. Â Again.
What if the road is your home? Â What does that make my actual physical home, the place where all my stuff is, in Seattle. Â
I feel more at home in St. Pete than I do anywhere else. Â I feel more at home in Oregon than I do in Seattle. Â I feel most at home when I'm on the road. Â
I take a mini-version of my larger life with me. Â Every computer convenience. Â I'm perpetually packed so there's not much to throw together in the days before departure. Â I'm way more productive while on the road than I am when I'm in Seattle and I just love meeting all these marvelous people who don't live in Seattle. Â I love seeing different parts of the world and realizing, all over again, that it's all really the same, but different. Â
So, here I am, in Chattanooga, staying in the basement apartment of the neighbor of the studio owner who hired me to teach workshops at her studio this week. Â The host family, a lovely family of 4 from Germany, said, sure, she can stay with us. Â The mom and kids are in Germany for the summer so other than hearing the occasional early morning footfall of Arndt, I feel alone, safe and quite hidden from anyone who might be looking for me. Â
After 6 long hard days of teaching here, I'm off to Charlottesville Virginia where I hope to see Monticello before working 4 hard days of teaching there. Â I fly back to Seattle 2 hours after I'm done with my last session and before I know it, I'll be back "home." Â
But not for long. Â Never for long.
I see an Airstream in my future. Â Didn't Margaret Ann & Don have one of those a long time ago?
Love and Prayers from Here to There.