MelissaBaby
Wordy Bitch
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2017
- Posts
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all that i know about maine i learned from stephen king.
seedmsw like a lovely place to visit.![]()
It is, especially Salems Lot.
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all that i know about maine i learned from stephen king.
seedmsw like a lovely place to visit.![]()
I don't miss much from my previous home state. I guess I miss all the water, living by the river was fantastic but I don't miss it enough to move back. Home is here, wherever here is.
People were joking about the saying that "home is where the heart is", but it really is true, isn't it?
I think so. I'm stubborn and maybe it's because I took the leap to move but this is home now. Ask me in 5 years and maybe the new will wear off, I doubt it though. I know it's right when I look forward to walking through the doorway every evening.
I've never been to Maine, I think your testament to missing it makes me want to experience it.
I quoted these because they all rung true for me. Some places I have lived I have never been back to not by want but because of practicality or difficulty getting there. Some I have so much entered a different phase of my life I am not sure I could revisit and have it be a good experience.
Every place I have lived has been home. I like new places, I like differences, even subtle, in culture.
However, When we moved here I said 'I am never moving again'. It's not the house ( g likes it a lot more than I do, I could take or leave it) or the area....it's a good area but I would like more trees. It's been some where that has been ours and a steady, static base.
Where is home? Home is where I can close the door and rest, with control over my environment and have my loved ones near me should they choose. It could be anywhere .
The steam that comes off his back on a cold morning.
I had forgotten the steam rising from the body as he cools. Mostly because I don't lunge as the whole workout so they don't get that sweaty until under saddle. By then it's usually warm enough to hose off afterward so no steam.
It's interesting that people think it's a chore or work to be out in the round pen early in the am. It's not. The sound, the feeling, that SMELL of all the growing things on the morning air. Not much traffic, no lawnmowers, sirens, and few, if any, other sounds of humans.
Just me and him. And that soft thud thud thud. It soothes my soul.
(I started writing another book a few days ago. As a teaser; these things are going to be in there.)
Home can also be more than one place concurrently.
I think it must be incredible to have one place, one spot in the world which is 'home'. I think it must be a remarkable, comforting feeling. But home will always change because that place will be different in thirty years or sixty years potentially. The places that do not change are few and far between and by nature home to very few indeed, so that experience is extremely minority. Home being unchanging and always the home you knew is, I think a fallacy.
It's good to see beyond home, even if home is where you return. Home has some perspective the more you see.
Wood smoke.
Low tide.
Pine trees.
The steam that comes off his back on a cold morning.
Beautiful.
Where is that, pink?
The one with the bridge looks like something from Lord Of The Rings.
Multnomah Falls, Oregon.
I'm heading back in Sept, leaving Ohio. Going to be living in Washington.
That's great. I hope you'll be very happy there.
Hey, you're missing something, bro!
The sound, the feeling, that SMELL of all the growing things on the morning air. Not much traffic, no lawnmowers, sirens, and few, if any, other sounds of humans.
Just me and ...