Somewhere over the Atlantic ocean
Monday, June 29th, 2009
[/caption]I’m back in Paris now, after a week in Seattle and a week in Miami Beach. My visit home was a lot of fun, though somewhat marred by a very bad ending to things with Mike C. We won’t ever speak again. I hate bad endings, because it feels like they invalidate everything that came before. This one was particularly unnecessary as I live in Paris. But in retrospect, it was completely inevitable given his personality. I just wish I had evinced better judgment earlier.
In any case, that freed up a lot of time to spend with friends and family. My grandparents and Aunt Mary and Uncle Tim came out to Seattle for the weekend, and we got to go on a boat tour, see some different neighborhoods, and have a very nice fancy dinner at Oceanaire. My mom threw me a graduation party at Elemental, which my brother crashed in a surprise visit from California. I got to spend quality time with a bunch of great people and it made me really, really miss Seattle.
One of the hard things about moving, though, is I feel neither here nor there – stuck somewhere over the Atlantic ocean. Life in Seattle is moving apace. My friends are in new relationships and I don’t know their partners; frisbee has undergone a huge upheaval, rather difficult actually, but I haven’t been there to grasp the extent of the changed circumstances and emotions surrounding that; friends are leaving town, so the Seattle as I knew it doesn’t exist anymore. At the same time, I’m not quite settled here yet. I have some friends, but they are new friends, and we are not yet invested in each other’s lives. I have my team. I think after a couple more tournaments, and my intense French lessons, it will feel a lot like Viva. Most of all, I have my work, and it’s been dominating my life in a way that it never has before. I love it, but working a lot doesn’t make a city feel like home. My best times here so far have been spent with visitors. Somehow, I need to make my own space here, my own friends, a reality in which I exist and am missed when I’m not here. Three months is not enough time, but hopefully six will be. I begin French lessons next week; I begin running every morning tomorrow; already, I have a pretty full tournament schedule. It’s a good start.























