Monday, September 03, 2007

The third continent

Let me break the facade again, for some matters from my otherwise boring personal life do affect me sufficiently to be considered worthy of a post. This one entails the occasionally exciting, but usually terrifying prospect that awaits; a move to the third continent, where I am to seek out some sort of destiny. Naturally there is a part of me that wants to pour it all out, but that would descend far too quickly into the sort of maudlin, nostalgic writing that I would feel terribly embarassed about after a few days. Instead, let me just briefly wander around the streets of this town in my head.

I don't know what exactly constitutes one's formative years - I guess the answer depends on what exactly it is that is being formed. No doubt my moral compass and the like were very much a product of the early days (! how old I make myself sound!) in that wonderful, paradoxical land that seems rather distant now. But a lot of what I now consider to be important parts of myself were definitely cultivated in this land, which once seemed so foreign, so impossible to understand and accept. The early days of the move here were the stuff of the recent culture-clash movies; while there were plenty of things I knew about from the open media in my childhood, to see them first hand was more than a little disorienting. Naturally, it created a pining for the homeland I fondly remembered sans flaws of any type. I don't suppose I was the first immigrant who found the early stages sometimes impossibly daunting, and unsurmountable. Tough times, I reflect now, but something I needed to go through to have some of the...hardier characteristics I now claim to possess. What exactly kept me sane in the early days I am now not that sure - there wasn't much in terms of a support structure I could lean on. An inner toughness I didn't realize I had? More likely the gradual chipping away of defensive walls I needlessly constructed, actually.

But now, things seem to have settled down, and what was once the impossible is now fairly close to reality. Not only is there a sense of some kind of comfort here, there are small things that warm the cockles of my heart (I am not foolish enough to try and share them here - they would surely perish under objective scrutiny!). A second homeland? Probably as close to one as I'll know. Again like the cliches in books and movies, I find myself unsure of where exactly I fit in, with the answer most likely being nowhere in particular. In that sense, perhaps another "homeland" will make for an interesting three-way pull for my affection; the task of trying to rationalize then will hopefully prove Herculean enough for me to give up, and instead look at things with a more practical eye.

I suppose the most amusing thing of the situation is that what once played the role of the scary, isolating fortress in the distance now is the opposite; it goes without saying there is a lesson in that for me. And of course, I realize the platitudes are all correct, and that familarity is usually a matter of time. But I hope it also goes without saying that such aphorisms, wise as they are, crumble under the weight of the matter. Actually, surprisingly little time has been spent reflecting on just how much I now take for granted, and what will happen when I find myself transplanted without these things - my nearly foolproof strategy for dealing with change, whose only downside is that it tends to delay thought (and fear) till the last minute, wherein the implosion is near-terrifying! (I am being a little over-dramatic here, but conveniently, I feel like I am more than justified!)

So. Whether the third continent is the last, I cannot of course say. I don't think I have it in me to get throught another move, but one never knows I suppose. But I mustn't fix my sights so far, for this move alone is challenging enough! I deliberately don't want to write a whole lot about my fears right now; normally I do find it to be a useful way of conquering them. But I feel that in this case, the nature of what lies ahead is simply too daunting for a neat categorization and analysis to solve all my problems. A far more successful strategy, I am assuming, is to take a hint from a maligned Doors song*.

There is too much else going on in my mind for this post to contain anything more of substance, so I shall pause for now. My heart is full - yet onward and onward, and onward I go.

(Incidentally, I have toyed with the idea of letting this blog be a place solely for time here in the land down under (can't you hear the thunder, etc.), and have not yet come to a decision. Fear not, gentle reader, you will be notified should I move nests digitally too!)

* Obscurity was very much a product of life and music here.

5 comments:

airy voices said...

Thanks for the last bit of comfort :D

It was surreal reading this, because my experience has been (and will be in the near future)disconcertingly similar. And although, I didn't move to a different continent the first time around, it might as well have been for all that was different. The only difference for me I suppose was that I was (thankfully)a little too young to consciously be aware of all the changes that I was slowly becoming accustomed to (and am now happy for, for the large part).

So good luck with the 3rd continent. I think I'm guessing right which one it is, but we'll keep up the attempt at anonymity :)

night and starlight said...

I wonder...are you talking about "Take It As It Comes"? That song works great for me when i am stressing out or disturbed over something.

AKM said...

airy: I figured you were treading a similar path after reading your parody of that test :) Good luck with your journey; it is naturally a little scary, but (hopefully!) such changes help one in the quest for understanding! At the very least, they do help to put some things in perspective, and perspective can be good sometimes (if you're familiar with Spinal Tap, though, you know of the limits that perspective must take :)). I'm not sure if they help one "grow", or things of that nature, but experiences outside our normal routines mostly have some good in them I think. Ok, I'm blathering now :)

Thanks for helping me keep up the pretense of anonymity, BTW ;)

n&s: Wow, a very good catch! You're absolutely right, 'twas "Take It As It Comes" :) I always liked it, even though people point to it as being one of the more mediocre songs on the Doors' first album.

Hmm, looks like I wasn't obscure enough...never fear, I'll try harder next time ;)

night and starlight said...

I don't think there is any mediocre song on The Doors' first album; the songs are all linked thematically - the ups and downs, temptations, trials and tribulations of life, but my favourite thing about it is that whenever you think it's the end, it's not as you break on through to the other side!

AKM said...

Agreed! It's still my favourite Doors album, and I still stick by the supposedly "weak" second side. It's safe to say I was pretty much obsessed with it not that many years ago :) I think L.A. Woman was their only other album with a really interesting overall mood, though that was more "mature" in some ways (not that the other albums didn't have loads of good songs too!) - somehow fitting that the first/last album should be that way!