Some people grow up very conscious of their roots. I have had people tell me that they travel far and wide but are always aware that, when they came home to the place they were born and raised, it really feels like homecoming, a sense of belonging to the land.
Others, and I myself belong to this group, grew up without real roots. As a child, I lived in six different locations in the world during the first five years of my life. And even after that, I didn’t live more than five years in one place until I was well into my 20’s. Circumstances can push children into a similar rootless existence. It doesn’t necessarily have to be a difficult life. Expatriate author and publisher Jo Parfitt often describes happy moments in her books and blogs about moving to different parts of the world.
However, it can leave a subtle mark. For a long time I was puzzled by my own restlessness. Am I an American at heart? After spending any amount of time in the wild places Stateside, I’m often overtaken by a yearning to base my life there again. Do I belong to my adopted Netherlands? This cultivated, under sea-level country I’ve lived in for the past 44 years? And why does visiting New Zealand suddenly fill me with the urge to go live there?
Leaving a place that has made me feel welcomed and at home can be very difficult. I’m not good at lingering goodbyes. A little voice inside me taught me to shut down and leave quickly, so I wouldn’t be overcome by grief and loss as a little girl. That voice still takes control whenever I need to leave people or places behind.
And so I have recently begun to consciously teach myself to put down roots, no matter where I am or how long I will stay. To take my cue from the trees. During my recent stay in the Sonoran Desert, I found Mesquite trees, stubbornly putting down their gnarled roots in stony barren land, even in rock crevices, pulling up nourishment and growing against all odds.
If they can do it, I can. And I allow myself to take my time saying goodbye these days. I allow myself to feel any grief or pain that it might bring. Because, allowing myself to feel grief and pain also means allowing myself to feel love and joy. And so I can carry all the places I’ve been and the people who have meant something to me in my heart.
I’m curious as to what putting down roots has meant for you, please share!
March 28, 2014
March 22, 2014
A new approach
I have been searching for a way to deepen the content of this blog without losing its accessibility. A few weeks in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona has given me the impetus to work the changes.
As a central theme, I would like to use the image of the Talking Stick Circle, also known as Council. The sharing that is done in this traditional way of sitting in council with others is based on four clear intentions:
1. Listen with our hearts
2. Speak from our hearts
3. Get to the heart of things
4. Speak spontaneously
(I have borrowed the description of these four intentions from the book Soulcraft, by Bill Plotkin.)
For me, this embodies the way I would like to be in the world and would like to communicate with others. In a blog, it can be a bit tricky. In spite of my encouragement to react to posts, most of the articles I’ve written have not been commented on (though some kicked up a lively discussion on Facebook). I hope that this can change and that we can start a dialogue going on any and all themes that you feel drawn to.
Another change is that I am going to try to just write in English for a while. Most of my active Dutch readers react to the English texts. And English, my mother-tongue, is the language of my heart. Feel free to react in Dutch, however!
If either of these changes seems a bit too much for you, dear reader, please react and I will try and fit your wishes into the changes.
I hope that we will enjoy a deeper connection to life's lessons through this blog together!
As a central theme, I would like to use the image of the Talking Stick Circle, also known as Council. The sharing that is done in this traditional way of sitting in council with others is based on four clear intentions:
1. Listen with our hearts
2. Speak from our hearts
3. Get to the heart of things
4. Speak spontaneously
(I have borrowed the description of these four intentions from the book Soulcraft, by Bill Plotkin.)
For me, this embodies the way I would like to be in the world and would like to communicate with others. In a blog, it can be a bit tricky. In spite of my encouragement to react to posts, most of the articles I’ve written have not been commented on (though some kicked up a lively discussion on Facebook). I hope that this can change and that we can start a dialogue going on any and all themes that you feel drawn to.
Another change is that I am going to try to just write in English for a while. Most of my active Dutch readers react to the English texts. And English, my mother-tongue, is the language of my heart. Feel free to react in Dutch, however!
If either of these changes seems a bit too much for you, dear reader, please react and I will try and fit your wishes into the changes.
I hope that we will enjoy a deeper connection to life's lessons through this blog together!
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