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20140802-153718-56238227.jpgIn the photograph that accompanies this post, I’m on the ferry that runs between Edgewater, New Jersey and the far west side of midtown Manhattan.  I’m a tourist visiting her hometown, though native New Yorkers never describe “the city” as their hometown.  At least that is true of those of us from Manhattan; I can’t speak for those from Brooklyn or the other outer boroughs.  Brooklyn isn’t an “outer” anything anymore, but when I was growing up in the ’70s people from Brooklyn referred to Manhattan, where I lived on the upper west side, as “the city,” as if Brooklyn were a provincial outpost.  Of course it was, then.  My parents grew up in Brooklyn and my grandparents lived there, so I maintain a nostalgic fondness for the Brooklyn of my youth, which has little in common with the contemporary borough.  Not that I’ve been there, but one hears; one reads.  As a tourist who drives from Ohio to New Jersey, where I stay with family, and then takes the ferry to Manhattan in good weather, a car in bad, I never go to Brooklyn.  I barely get out of midtown.  This drives me nuts, but my wife and son want to see the tourist attractions.  I just want to walk down Broadway between Columbia and Lincoln Center.  If nothing else, I want to feel the heartache from seeing how much has changed since I last lived in the city.

I left for college in 1978 and never spent more than a month or so sleeping in my childhood bedroom after that.  I’ve lived in Middlebury, Vermont; San Francisco; Madison, Wisconsin; and Hartford, Connecticut.  For the past 19 years I’ve lived in the Cleveland area.  I’m happy here, a shocker for someone who grew up thinking Ohio was just a place where you stopped for gas en route across the country.  I came here for a job, and if I leave it won’t be until I’ve lived here for at least 34 years–the timing is based on retirement dates for both me and my wife.  I won’t ever live in NYC again–even if I wanted to attempt to go home again, I couldn’t possibly afford housing.  I’d sell my house in Ohio and be lucky to find a walk-in closet I could afford in Brooklyn, let alone Manhattan.  Anyway, I’ve lived in a suburban house for too long now to give up space for all the stuff I’ve accumulated because I could, and I have no idea how people buy groceries or run their other errands without a car.  I’m not interested in alternate-side-of-the-street parking or paying for a garage, but neither do I see myself crowding onto the subways where I used to sleep standing up on my way to high school in the Bronx.  (It was cool to leave Manhattan when heading to the Bronx High School of Science–or so those of us who made the daily commute deeply believed.)

So I live in Ohio and New York is no longer home, but it’s Vermont whose border brings me to tears each time I cross it.  I’m a sap for most of the New England states (I have no feelings in particular about Rhode Island and was unhappily employed in Connecticut), but it’s Vermont that comes to mind first when I ask myself this question: where would I want to travel if I found out my cancer had returned?

It’s easy to point to various appealing features of the Vermont landscape (mountains, lakes, farms) and culture (this is, after all, the state that keeps electing Bernie Sanders), but none of that explains my visceral response to the place.  I first fell in love with Vermont from the window seat of a Greyhound bus taking me from the Port Authority in NY to an interview at Middlebury College, where I wound up matriculating.  I was already attached to New England and the idea of attending a small, liberal arts college there.  I’d grown up spending my summers in the Berkshires and reading Louisa May Alcott.  By the time I’d declared an American Studies major at Middlebury I was half convinced I had been born a mid-19th century New England WASP.  Repeated reading of Emerson, Thoreau, and their pals in my American literature, philosophy, religion, and history classes did little to dispel the illusion.  By the time I’d graduated the limitations of my education had become clear to me, and I spent much of the next two decades catching up on the literature and history created by the many demographic groups omitted from the major I’d chosen, ironically, because it was interdisciplinary and therefore wouldn’t tie me down.

In my fifties, I love the idea of being tied down.  I want security, community, reliably fantastic restaurants and great medical care.   I want to be able to relocate once I retire, but when I think about all that I would be leaving, I hesitate.  I don’t get teary-eyed thinking about the Cleveland Clinic, but I do like knowing its main campus is ten minutes from my house.  I love the bakery around the corner, where people don’t only know my name , they know how to spell it, and what kind of Challah I always reserve for Fridays.  I love all my communities here–the people I know through work; the people I know through synagogue; the people I know from the neighborhood; the miscellaneous groups of like-minded people with whom my family has bonded over the years.   Of course I will never be a native of Northeast Ohio, but after 19 years here people no longer treat me like I just got off the boat.  I don’t know what will happen when I retire–or even if I’ll live long enough to retire.  I do know that if I leave Ohio I will be leaving behind a place that has come to feel damned near like home.

4 thoughts on “Home

  1. Great beginning!Looking forward to following your entries on your blog.
    Unfortunately they say we can’t go home,but it looks as if you have found a new very dear home.
    Throwing bravos & wishes for much good luck.
    Bunny&Jerry

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