Home is where the heart can rest

by Alice

Because “home” is not a place but a concept, I miss it even though I’m having the time of my life

written by : Alice

From almost the day we got engaged to the day we left for our 82 days in the US, we’ve lived together in a 10m-square “apartment” in Paris. I had lived there by myself for a year before Simone joined me. Except that it could get extremely cold in the winter and extremely hot in the summer, and that the “shower” got the best of my nerves a couple of time, it was great. By myself it was a palace, as a couple it was our cocoon. We never felt the need for bigger than that (Simone would have loved a bigger kitchen and me a bigger shower but that was about it).
Now, we’ve been married for 6 months, and we haven’t had our own « home » for a little over 5 months! Sure, there were places where we stayed a bit longer, sometimes by ourselves, but it isn’t the same.

home is where the heart can rest

I love traveling, I will do it for the rest of my life. I have the incommensurable chance to have found the love of my life in the form of a hungry-for-travel man, who I know will never find any reason to tie me to the ground or to stop me from being at least a little bit of a nomad. Even with an infant, even with a child, even with several of them. Even with a house at our name, a business we own, or any job we could have. We might calm down, we might spend months – even maybe years – at the same location, but we will travel again. And I cannot believe that we wouldn’t make up for it by taking a weekend here and there to see the beauty of what’s around the corner. I don’t want to stop traveling, he doesn’t want to, we’re good. That’s a given, that’s settled.

Even though ‘home is where the heart is’, the heart needs a home

No, what I mean is that even though ‘home is where the heart is’, the heart needs a home. A home doesn’t need to be your indefinite location, your hometown, the country where you were born or grew up, where family and friends are. No, it’s the place where the heart can rest. And your tired, beautiful, damaged, grown or growing body can settle down without a care of being misplaced. Home is where you can have the freedom to be silly, beautiful, horny, tired, sad, happy, ecstatic, sick, without a care. It’s where you don’t have to smile or where you can speak your own made-up language – made of weird noises and grunts in four different languages including « baby tongue ». I don’t mean to say that you cannot, are not able to, or shouldn’t do that anywhere else, I do, we do. But home is the place where you are free to do it at any given time without even thinking about it.

Home is where – at any given time any given day – you can scream in ecstasy or agony, where you can make noise when you walk, when you can wear your pajamas or look like a queen, where cuddling for hours is the rule, leaving the bed isn’t one and being dirty, grumpy, immature, melancholic or spinster-like is not the concern of anyone not belonging to your sanctum.

Home is Freedom

Home is freedom. And this is why even though I’m roaming the world, I miss “home”. But in less than a month we should have one back, and I cannot be more excited to be able to let my mind, body and heart rest in that place I don’t know yet.

The privilege of missing home

Although if I left a home to discover the world and learn about it, some are less fortunate. In another note, less light, less self-centered, more actual but of timeless importance, this feeling also helps to ground me to reality. To remind me that allowing people who lost their home – for any reason – the chance to find a new one is so important. Because if we, a privileged couple in good health can miss home so dearly, I cannot imagine how people who had to travel – from a home to the street as well as from a country to another – not for leisure and not by choice but in unspeakable circumstances to flee the hunger, war, poverty, misery of the place where they used to live, can feel when they’re denied the chance to get a new home. I cannot imagine how someone who’s lost everything, who cannot – for any reason – get a job, get a shelter, get psychological, physical or financial help, must feel when denied that solace.

dscn1771

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24 comments

Lara Dunning 13 November 2016 - 2 h 46 min

Beautiful sentiment with lots of truths and honesty. Thanks for sharing.

Reply
Alice & Simone 13 November 2016 - 22 h 57 min

Thank you Lara !

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Paul 13 November 2016 - 3 h 54 min

Beautiful post and very true. Every time we travel we know that there’s no place like home and that it is a place where you feel that your heart belongs!

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Alice & Simone 13 November 2016 - 22 h 57 min

Thank you, I’m happy you can relate !

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Eva | Travel The Whole Wide World 13 November 2016 - 12 h 19 min

For me home is a place where I know that I can always come back to. The place where I was born and grew up will always be my home, but that doesn’t mean that I won’t be able to find other places that I call home in the future.

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Alice & Simone 13 November 2016 - 22 h 56 min

That’s a beautiful feeling to have. Due to my history I don’t have that yet, but I fully intend on building it so I get this place where I can always come back to!

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Brianna 13 November 2016 - 15 h 48 min

Great thoughts about the concept of “home”. I think home is defined differently by different people, yet feels the same among all.

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Alice & Simone 13 November 2016 - 22 h 54 min

I love the way you put it, I think you have the truth of it! Home is definitely a particular concept.

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Lisa 13 November 2016 - 16 h 36 min

Love your insight in this post…so true! I always enjoy the places I visit and think to myself sometimes “I could live here” but, I always come home. To more future happy travels to you!

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Alice & Simone 13 November 2016 - 22 h 53 min

Thank you ! I go through the same experience as you all the time, this feeling of “I could live here” ! and I’m sure I will/would, as long as it’s long enough for it to feel like home 😉 Happy travels to you too !

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elisa 13 November 2016 - 19 h 20 min

Beautiful post, I can find my same thoughts on it. I was also long term traveler and now that I have a real home again I am missing to be where you are 😉

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Alice & Simone 13 November 2016 - 22 h 51 min

Thank you, I’m happy you could relate 🙂 I definitely understand that you miss traveling, hope you can still get some going around !

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A Traveler's Reading List 45/2016 - Travel The Whole Wide World 14 November 2016 - 0 h 05 min

[…] myself, but it is good to see, that each one of us has different ideas!  I loved Alice’s reflections on the concept of home, it’s something I have thought about a lot myself lately. Daphne from […]

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Mike 14 November 2016 - 5 h 59 min

Well written and spot on! As an avid traveler I’ve called a few different places home and am about to embark on another home changing journey in March. But even if I’m moving to the other side of the world I’ll have a few temporary homes along the way.

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Alice & Simone 16 November 2016 - 11 h 54 min

Thank you Mike ! Good luck and all the best for your upcoming journey !

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Castaway with Crystal 14 November 2016 - 13 h 34 min

I love what you’re saying here and couldn’t agree more. So happy you found such a great love. Keep travelling! X

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melody pittman 14 November 2016 - 18 h 21 min

I could not agree more. I have traveled my whole life, at least 1/4 of the year or more even while raising children with a full time corporate job, but nothing is as good to me as coming to my home when I am done. Great read. Happy for you. 😉

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Mary - A Mary Road 16 November 2016 - 11 h 58 min

This piece is so beautiful. Totally expained how I am feeling today. Thank you so much!

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Claire Summers 18 November 2016 - 11 h 47 min

Beautiful words and really interesting perspective. For me home is the place were I feel safe and secure. My right now home is my aunt’s couch where I’m spending my time writing and planning my new nomadic life.

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Itinera Magica 28 November 2016 - 11 h 04 min

Beautiful, heartfelt post and I fully agree with this sentiment!

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Alice & Simone 2 December 2016 - 17 h 05 min

Thank you, I’m glad you feel the same 🙂

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Sandy 26 February 2017 - 6 h 49 min

So so true! 😀

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Alice Cardy 27 February 2017 - 20 h 07 min

I’m glad you agree 😀

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Isadora Koller 5 March 2017 - 3 h 36 min

Beautiful and really strong message. “The privilege of missing home” sometimes we don’t think much about it, about how lucky we are.

Reply

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