
Where would I live, out of a million possibilities?
As a lifelong wanderer, I’d like to go home. We can’t go home they say. They’re wrong.
But my home is not a house, a street, or even a town. My home is on the edges of the ever-changing ocean. It sits on the side of the continent where the sun sets over the waters. I grew up watching that sun. Sometimes the sun disappeared behind the waves in brilliant oranges and reds, while at other times it glowed like an ember buried in ashes as the world rolled away towards night and the fog rolled in.
I’ve been wandering since 1983. I went back to visit the last time in 2014. They were most definitely wrong about not being able to go home again. I was home. The nightmarish traffic, the chaotic interchanges, the canyon roads, and then finally, the sea; it all felt as if I had never left. The home I grew up in was there. It had changed but somehow it was still the same. I did look around in amazement once there because I was surprised that there were so many trees. Many of the places where I had spent my youth were different, but after one wanders for decades that’s what you can expect to see. If it hadn’t changed that would have been too strange.
The ocean never changes. The beaches may come and go, the sand shifts underfoot while you stand in it after all, but the ocean still thunders. The salt spray still glazes your skin and hair while you make your way around the seaweed the waves gifted the shore for the day. Even if I were to be deaf and blind I would know that realm. That is where I am meant to be. The Western edge of North America, anywhere from Cabo San Lucas on the Baja peninsula in Mexico, and all the way up to Juneau Alaska would serve as home. The closest I’ve found in my wanderings abroad was Noordwijk Ann Zee in the Netherlands. But I have yet to see Portugal, Spain, or Italy, so who knows maybe any western edge along the oceans would feel like home as well.
But even then, those far shores don’t have the awful traffic of Los Angeles. And oddly enough, I feel at home in traffic. Someday I hope to return home to stay. For now though, the universe set me down near water – an acequia – on a street that carries the same name as a famous one I used to travel in West Hollywood. I guess that was the best available at the time and I will take it until I move once again.
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