occasionally, i will share an "editor's corner" -- a note to my community found first in the pages of the Harbor Light Newspaper. i'm a lucky girl, to be part of a team who believes deeply in the word "community" and it is a treat for me to include you all in this part of my world. if you'd like to read more of our weekly paper, please do! visit www.harborlightnews.com ~kate
Truth: I wanted to move last week. Away from my community, my state, my Midwestern upbringing. An unfamiliar urge to uproot and slide into the gypsy skin of my youth hit as I took in the deep blue soul of Lake Tahoe, the towering ponderosa trees, the switchback mountain passes.It’s been years since such a trip resulted in scouring real estate websites, imagining a cross country move perfect for our family (highly romanticised, but imagined none the less).
Each night during our stay in California, I went to bed repeating “I love Michigan. I love Michigan.” And every morning, I’d wake up a little shaken at how quickly that mantra faded, distant as the very rocks I turn in my hand each summer along Sturgeon Bay.
Yes, yes, I know. It’s called vacation for a reason. There’s no question this was part of our (the whole family was struck with Mountain+Lake Fever, see below for proof)
sudden pride in “local” Tahoe knowledge: the whereabouts of the authentic Mexican joint tucked behind a 7-11, name recognition by a cashier at the food co-op, even a broad-stroke ability to recite the history of the ill-fated Donner Party’s journey (cannabilism is a surprisingly frequent conversation starter).
The Donner Memorial shows how high-- 22 feet-- the snow was during the winter of their ill-fated attempt to cross the Sierras. Needless to say, we did not have such fears during our time in Tahoe.
But the thing is, we were having dinner with an old friend and his family, listening to the passionate way they described life in the Tahoe region, and I was like “Sold! I’m in! Where do I sign the papers?”
Especially when my friend’s wife, whose family had a cottage on Ann Street growing up, sighed with the memory of Gurney’s sandwiches, Tom’s Mom’s Cookies, nights at Yummy’s....I sipped a dark red Tahoe microbrew and thought I too could remember those things fondly, while reaping the spoils of a place so different than Harbor Springs.
Driving back from that very dinner, it was my son Noah who looked out the window at the oh-so-close stars and sighed.
“I love it here. I could live here someday, but I’m not sure it would ever feel like home. I mean, it would take a long time to really know this place.”
It was this phrase, this concept of knowing a place so well it becomes part of us, that carried me the last few miles to our door. So despite unpacking to do, groceries to replenish, phone calls to return, I walked inside my house and kept right on going, through the sliding glass door into my backyard. There, the snow was marked with the tracks of our dogs. A chickadee fluttered up three branches, its frantic wings a whispered reminder. So much was familiar. There was no need to walk in the woods at the moment, because I could do so in my mind. Retrace the steps to the kids’ deadfall fort-- avoiding the tangled root, the place where trout lillies will emerge in a few short months, the towering birch tree to the right.
Yet, when I clicked my headlamp on the next night and hauled a sled toward my family, the shadows of our yard seemed new. The way the light bounced off the path to the fields and woodlands behind us, showing black branches and pockets of reflection in the darkness, proved just how much of our own place we still have yet to know.
Reading Tom Bailey’s Q&A this week about the work of the Little Traverse Conservancy reinforced this fact. There are countless preserves still to discover. Thousands of acres of wild lands to get to know. On an even smaller scale, thousands of ways we’ve yet to bear witness to the beauty in our backyard.
Yesterday I drove into town. Got a cup of coffee. Stopped by the lake. Took M-119 for no reason other than to drive a bluff without hyperventilating. Called friends and talked about our children in the way one does when raising families together, dreamed ideas for empty storefronts in town, made plans for future (local) adventures.
I don’t know when it happened exactly, when the feeling of home settled back into my bones. I just know by the time I sat in front of our woodstove last night, there was no place else I wanted to be. No other community I wanted as my own.
I’m writing all this to say, in my long-winded way: I get it. I get why folks come here a few months a year and go elsewhere during the winter...and spring, and fall. I get why the call of snow capped mountains or oceans or big cities may be more enticing than this small little no-stoplight town. And yet. I have a new understanding of what it means to grow roots in a town like Harbor Springs. Perhaps my near evangelical zest for northern Michigan was deflated this trip, as I fell so headlong for northern California. But in that empty space, something much more real and true emerged. Something beyond the abundance of natural resources, the sense of place, or the resolve of settling down. I can’t put it more eloquently than a friend who understood well the untethered feeling of being away. Her words spoke to the essence of our community, whether you call it home for six weeks or 12 months a year.
“Our homeland has roots - so when we venture away to other lands and are lured in by their beauty, we'll always know how to find our way back.”
We do, don’t we? We find our way back. It’s the kind of truth some folks search for and never find; to be able to say-- with conviction-- how lucky we are, to live where we do.
*A post script-- ANOTHER part of loving my community is, of course, the friends I have here. They like to keep it real-- so I have to share what my pal Jenny had to say after reading the newspaper version of this blog post-- "you forgot the biggest reason you aren't moving:: Your mom and dad live ONE DOOR AWAY and she would TRACK YOU DOWN." Truth: grandmothers who've had instant access to their grandchildren for, um, the entirety of said cute beings' lives? Yeah. A cross country move would so. not. work. :)