I’m
traveling through time. Over one body of water, from one piece of land to
another. I’m high up, in the air, where there is no time, where there is no
ground, and I’m thinking about how I know not what’s next, except for the
obvious, the concrete, the empirical.
While
it’s impossible to become someone you’re not, it is possible to re-invent.
Perhaps you were stuck where you lived before you traveled, and after doing,
what you had always done, you wanted to do something new, and getting the
upstart to kick a transformation into gear felt like molasses stuck to an
elephant walking through swampy mud.
Risk.
Adventure.
Spontaneity.
Making it up as you go along.
Got
dusty? flattened yourself in a ravine?
No
matter.
This
is what transformation is about. It’s about the sun being so high in the sky,
shadows appear to disappear. You are your shadow. Your compass is broken.
The
people you love are left behind. They write and you write, they call and you
call, they plead for you to come back, but you stay.
Some
chapters are better saved before published, indexed before edited. Some
chapters are better written by hand.
People
ask you, when you go to New York, 'Are you moving there?'
You make a joke. {You
think it’s really funny.} You say you don’t know if you’re moving to New York.
You say you’ve asked g-d, but he hasn’t replied. You say that if anyone who has a
direct line to g-d, can you please let me know, because as far as you know, {the only thing you know} is you
are moving, Officially,
To
Limbo.
O.
And there are a few complicated pieces. Secret Lovers. Old loves. Loveletters.
A flat you secretly rent in a place you’re not supposed to be living. A {restaurant} kitchen you’re not supposed to know as
well as you do.
Because
you’re going back to the place you’re from, you plan on looking for work.
Postman’s Holiday. You can’t wait to work there again. It’s been over 10 years.
You never meant to be away this long. In fact while you were living on the
completely other coast, in the most rural setting you had ever come across, you
lost your desire to live in a major city. You decided to make Northern
California your permanent home, and even called it that.
Until
you moved to London exactly one year ago. And everything changed.
The question is: am I going from my future to my past;
my future to my future; my recent past to my stopover, and then back to my past;
my past to my past; or my question mark to my question mark?
I
don’t have any answers.
Just
questions.
Change is good. Scary but good. When I left San Francisco for Boston I had no idea what was going to happen. It made me feel younger to start on a new adventure. It has been a wild ride.
Posted by: Janis Tester | 06 November 2009 at 01:50 PM
Good luck in New York, I hope you find what you're looking for!
Posted by: jennywenny | 06 November 2009 at 01:57 PM
FYI, I'd love to meet up and talk/babble and enjoy good food together... Keep me posted (i'm sure i'll read your occurances as you tweet them...) But let me know :)
Posted by: Mike | 06 November 2009 at 02:45 PM
Oh Shuna! You make my heart leap every goddamned time.
Posted by: Janice | 06 November 2009 at 02:56 PM
Welcome back to NY! If you stay, let us know where you are cooking so that we can come taste your food!
Posted by: Alexis | 06 November 2009 at 04:59 PM
Even if the big change is desperately needed, it can still be painful to uproot, so it was good to read your words today. Congrats on heading back to NYC!
Posted by: Kristin | 07 November 2009 at 01:12 AM
Most times it's so much more interesting to have just questions and no answers. Waiting eagerly for your further adventures. (btw, I said something about the recipes vs. intuitions but was having problems with the comment posting, so I think it just got swallowed by the interwebs).
Posted by: Hilda | 07 November 2009 at 08:36 AM
Your prose gets me everytime. I hope you find what you are looking for wherever you go be it NYC or London or wherever you go. I can't wait to see the beauty that comes from your new experiences.
Posted by: Helen | 07 November 2009 at 10:41 AM
I know how you feel. I just moved from my home, SF, to Baltimore...Im in the "what the hell did I just do!" stage. The next question is where am I going to cook!?...When you get the direct line to g-d, let me know!
Thanks for your sharing...
Posted by: Gabriel | 07 November 2009 at 11:26 AM
Once an ex-pat always an ex-pat. I don't think you can leave London really Shuna...you are part of the community here now!
x
Posted by: msmarmitelover | 08 November 2009 at 01:39 PM
Welcome back.
Posted by: Victoria | 08 November 2009 at 09:32 PM
Wishing you all the best.
Posted by: Malini | 12 November 2009 at 11:55 AM
shuna, another "welcome back to nyc"! i concur with the comment above: hope you find a job here as i'd love to taste your cooking. speaking of which, chocolate + licorice?!?! wow. that's a combination that's never occurred to me, yet are two of my absolute favourites - sounds phenomenal. happy travels in that airplane seat.
Posted by: sonya | 15 November 2009 at 08:46 PM
Lovely. My husband and I, both men without (emotional) countries, feel the urge, the need to move to reinvent (exactly) every 5 years. Run, change, experience. And our time here is up and we don't know who to become next. Good luck with yours. And I say worry neither about the past or the future, just live the present.
Posted by: Jamie | 02 January 2010 at 02:17 AM