For the last few days I have been visiting the town I used to call home. Although it isn’t where I was born, it is where I grew up. It is where I ticked off many milestones on my journey to the place I am today. When I am not there it is a just a memory, albeit it a fine one, but I have little time in my life for yearning. When I am there, however, it is much more. Seeped in memories, they ambush me at every turn. These are mostly happy, but a few are sad. I am melancholic for things that have been lost, regretting that I didn’t appreciate the privilege of growing up here, sadness at leaving special people who will always be in my heart. Ghosts lurk at every corner. Some taunt, some comfort me.
Things have changed over the years. Of course it is still beautiful; surely no one could sully the fabulous beaches, the jaw-dropping views out to Mrs Woolf’s lighthouse or the coastal moorland of Man’s Head, the stiletto snapping cobbles and of course that famous luminescent light. Now it is far more affluent and the season is long and unremitting. The shops of my day are becoming sparse, in their place expensive boutiques, eating establishments and jewellery stores. I was saddened to see that the chippy where my younger brother worked in his youth had closed. He would return from his toils perfumed with Essence de Chip Fat. The cafe which has replaced it looks lovely. I would imagine that they steam their vegetables.
So we roamed the streets with best of them. We stayed in a proper grown-up hotel with views across to the harbour. Nightly the waves crashed against the rocks not 10m below our room, driven by a raging wind, the sound both welcome and soothing. We gasped at the sight of dolphins and seals close to the shoreline. We went to the opening of an enchanting pottery exhibition and met some fine earthy folk. We ate haddock and chips in a relic yet to succumb to the relentless march of healthy eating. We visited art galleries. We wandered through an exotically planted sculpture garden ducking into a bougainvillea sheathed shelter when the persistent rain turned up a notch. We met with old friends and laughed and recollected. We had a wonderful time.
On the way back I reminisced alone this time, remembering the many times I had sat on this train and cried. So fresh was the feeling of being wrenched away to another world, far from my power source, that another tear came to my eye. In my heart there is a ember which is dense as a black hole. This is where my home town lies. It takes only a gentle south-westerly to reignite this flame.
When we opened our front door I was pleased to be home. I was also sad to leave my home.
Beautiful words Gill and I cannot think of anything to top that as a comment. Your words moved me too…….
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Thank you Sue x
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Wonderful reminiscence – there is something about living on the water that leaves traces on your heart. Thank you for sharing it made me appreciate where I live.
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My pleasure. I agree, the water does something to your soul.
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Thank you Gill; I know that feeling of happy yearning. It is indescribable. the wanting to be back yet wanting to stay where you are. My home town turned out to be an island, for which I am forever grateful. Yours is a beautiful reminiscence.
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Thank you Kayti, somehow I thought you would understand x
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Your poignant words reminded me of a walk along the SWCP which we made some years ago, arriving in the town just in time to catch the bus back to Penzance Youth Hostel. Although I’m an Essex girl you have triggered many memories of Cornish holidays stretching through the sixties & seventies. Thankyou.
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We caught the bus from St Ives to Penzance and back again, another journey I have done many times but not for a while. Unfortunately it wasn’t a double decker, so I couldn’t peak over the hedges!
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I think the word you are searching for to describe your feelings is hiraeth.
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Thank you, what a wonderful word. I wonder if there is a similar one in Cornish? And do you feel it too?
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Apparently its ‘hireth’ and yes I do.
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You have written such a touching post tonight Gill. I hope some cheering sunshine is due your way in the coming week.
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Thank you Julie x
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Such bitter sweet memories, I think it’s something we can all relate to. Thank you for sharing yours and welcome back:)
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Thanks Maggie, hope to see you soon x
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Wow … that was beautiful to read – thank you! 🙂
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Pleased you enjoyed it 🙂
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Born and raised in S.E. London I could only ever dream of living somewhere wonderful, I only escaped to Hampshire 2 years ago (aged in my sixties), I have no fondness for my previous life, and could not have imagined the draw of ones childhood home, until now. I loved this post.
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Thank you Jackie, I am pleased that you enjoyed it. 🙂
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You described so wonderful, as usual, exactly what myself and, surely many others, feel when returning at their childhood home; the sweet and sorrow of going and coming back home…
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It seems to be a global emotion, something that links us and unites us.
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Lovely!Your writing is as good as ever.
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Thank you, hope all is good with you all x
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What a beautiful post you did on that dear Heavens’ place. It moved me too.
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Thank you x
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