From the category archives:

vacation

It’s odd being home. Feeling familiar and foreign at once; sometimes thinking God, I’m such a poser, I know nothing about this place anymore. And other times, almost like a split personality: I do have a right to be there, dammit –I was born here, in that hospital right there, and it doesn’t matter how long I have been away nor how many changes have been made (plenty, and yet not really, if you consider it’s been 16 years) this is still my hometown.

It’s odd being home. Especially when it no longer feels like home. Did it ever really? When I went to school here, when my entire family and all my friends were here? This gives me pause. Because I cannot remember a time when I wasn’t craving more space, more freedom; when I wasn’t dreaming of walking down strange unknown streets while walking down those I had walked a hundred times; a time when I wasn’t wishing for adventure and the chance to explore a new place while looking around me and seeing all the old places.

I remember my favorite summer vacations being those when we went somewhere new, visited a new beach, explored a new stretch of coast, walked through a cute little coastal village. I remember my last summer here, when I wasn’t really here, when I went camping in Campania – the beaches weren’t as lovely as the ones back home, but it was all new, new people, new beaches, new camping, and that was good enough for me.

I remember looking forward to finishing high school so I could leave to go to University. I remember looking up the universities with the best language programs, and settling on Pisa. I had never been there, but Pisa had a good language program, the leaning tower, and Gianni, one of the friends I had made on vacation the year before – that was more or less the extent of what was familiar to me about the city. And yet I coulnd’t wait to go. Pisa had to be better than here; my days would be filled with school work and friends there just like here, but the rest of the time I could spend walking around, seeing new things and new places, walking new streets, exploring my new hometown, as I already pictured it.
I knew one thing: once I was gone, I woulnd’t come back. I wouldn’t be one of those who had the chance to escape this tiny island, this beautiful prison, with it’s blue-green waters instead of iron bars –I woulnd’t be one to have the chance to go, to be free to leave and build a life somewhere else, only to come back here, back to the nest, to live with my parents and try in vain to find a job, only to end up overqualified, underpaid, bored out of my mind, living my whole life wondering what could have been.

When I shared that, people treated me like I was a snob. Like it was a crime, a sin, to dream a little bigger, to want to accomplish a little more. Others patronized me, laughed at me, said I would grow up, like wanting or imagining or dreaming something more than what you have is silly, immature, a child’s unrealistic view of the world.

It’s not that I have an awful family – I don’t, and I know they love me, these aunts and cousins and friends, or at least most of them do – but I still feel like a bit of a circus freak, when they look at me, when they marvel at my unusual life, as if the mere fact that my life happens in another country is just so weird!

Maybe I’m imagining it, maybe I imagine it all, every time I visit – maybe I’m just a drama queen. And just when I feel like I’m going stir crazy, when I am oh-so-ready to bid everyone farewell and get the hell out of this small town, this island I used to call home… we decide not to waste another minute of this gorgeous day and spend it where we should, where it deserves, where it begs to be spent: by the sea.

And all of a sudden I’m not in such  hurry to leave.

All of a sudden I wonder how I stayed away so long. 

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Bostonians are lucky

by Elisa on May 26, 2009

in travel,vacation

No, not the shoe store people. Real Bostonians, you know, the ones who live in fabulous, gorgeous, fun Boston. I would love to live there. This was our third trip to Boston, and I still feel like I could go back another couple of times at least before we leave. I just love it.

Once again, we were only there for a couple of days, since Friday evening traffic was a nightmare, and the trip that should have taken us about 3 1/2 hours took 6.bloody.hours. I mean, not bloody as in horror-movie bloody, you know. Bloody in the “so frustrating to be in a car with a toddler and a 9 year old for 6 hours”  sense. Which is actually kind of as scary as a horror movie a little bit, actually. And my daughters are actually pretty good. It is beyond me why anyone takes road trips that long though.

Anyway, so we really just had Saturday and Sunday, but we got kind of lucky with the weather, so it only rained (albeit suddenly and quite violently) a couple of times on Sunday, and even then we managed to keep fairly dry.

Saturday: exploring  Cambridge a bit, where we walked around the Harvard courtyard (because I have this odd curiosity about ivy league school campuses and buildings – most un-European ;-) ) and decided to do the dorky souvenir thing and get the girls Harvard t-shirts (shut up, they are cute that small.)

Stella, in the Harvard yard, in front of the Widener Library

Stella, in the Harvard yard, in front of the Widener Library

We also went back to eat at Grafton Street, because we loved it the last time. Another thing I love about Boston: the fish and seafood dishes. Can’t get enough!

On Sunday we walked around some more, starting at Newbury Street, which is definitely one of my favorite shopping streets ever, and never fails to remind me of Milan, with cafés and boutiques and people eating outside. I think one of the reasons why I love Boston so much is that it has such a European feel. Of all the places I have visited in the US, Boston is the one where I feel the least like a tourist.

Of course we had togo to the Public Garden, which is the girls’ second-favorite spot in Boston (the first being the Boston Children’s Museum); and there we saw…

Ducklings!!

Ducklings!!

Shortly after it started thundering, and then within a couple of minutes it was seriously pouring rain. So we hurried out of the park, and ended up hiding into a Borders until it let out a bit and we could go get the car to go to the Children’s Museum… which is when we found out that it was about to close. Big drama, because we had promised the girls we’d go :-(

We reached a compromise by promising to take them to the Norwalk Aquarium this coming Sunday, and by talking about how we’d go to Cape Cod on Monday and barbecue and have lunch with hubs’ friend and his family, and how he has three daughters Sarah could play with… ah, the blood of the Roman orators runs in me ;-)

Of course, the fact that we then went to Quincy Market and found out that for the second year in a row we’d be able to enjoy the Outdoor Performer Festival… yes, that helped improve Sarah’s mood quite a bit :-)

Our favorite number:

So now Sarah wants to do go to circus class. Awesome. Looking forward to seeing my firstborn dangling from the ceiling.

So now Sarah wants to do go to "circus class". Awesome. Looking forward to seeing my firstborn dangling from the ceiling.

Monday we went to Cape Cod.

The waves, the sea air, the quiet... *yawn* lovely :-)

The waves, the sea air, the quiet... *yawn* lovely :-)

Then we drove home. I think dh probably had enough of road trips for a while. And yet, I’d go back to Boston for one more visit in a heartbeat. Probably because I wasn’t the one driving ;-)

signature-shoeplate3b

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Copyright Elisa Bieg, 2008-2009.