My niece Aly's geography project |
But the concept of an international move was not new to us.
In many ways, we had been considering it during our entire marriage, for more
than 32 years!
My husband Vince always traveled extensively for work, much
of it internationally. There were many opportunities in the past for our family
to move, lock, stock and barrel, both in the US and internationally. It was
just never the right time for one reason or another. Either my two sons were
happy in a school they loved and we didn’t want to disrupt their education. Or
my mother was ill and needed me nearby.
Or it was even that I was involved in a new job or a new endeavor of my own and
did not want to give it up. But mostly I didn’t want to move. I loved my house.
I loved my friends. I loved my life.
So instead Vince took apartments by himself in Zurich, Oslo,
Utrecht, Sydney and San Francisco over the years to minimize his international
commutes to Europe, Australia and Asia and we kept our home in NJ. It seemed
like a good compromise. We could get our toes wet, get a feel for what it would
be like to live abroad before we actually relocated (PS I didn't consider studying in Paris during college as truly "living" abroad.) The boys and I could
travel to some cool places and have an apartment where we could leave our
stuff. Many of Vince’s colleagues had similar arrangements with their families
so there was a support system for him. We had lots of friends and family nearby
so there was a support system for us at home. We lived in an area and our sons
went to a school where this kind of family arrangement was not so unusual. But it was not without a price. It is a
helluva way to run a family and marriage and put an enormous amount of stress
on both. But we both wanted to make it
work and so it did.
in Rio with my mother for my 40th birthday |
And then in the midst of all this soul searching, we sold
our family vacation beach house two summers ago. The house did not work for our
family anymore, but I was worried about breaking with tradition, about changing
our lifestyle. In the end, it was the best thing that could have happened. I
was pleasantly surprised at how good it felt. Not only did I survive it, but I
embraced it. I realized you do not have to give up cherished memories just
because you give up a cherished possession. And it felt great to lessen the
load, change things up, simplify.
I
started to look at our family home differently too after that. The house had
become way too big for just the two of us. The garden was becoming more of a chore than a joy for me to maintain by
myself. We had accumulated an enormous
amount of stuff that filled every nook and cranny and it was weighing us down.
I began to feel weighted down by our traditions too. I noticed I was doing a lot of the things I
was doing because that’s what I do - and not necessarily because that is what I
wanted to do anymore. We were entrenched in a life and a lifestyle that just
didn’t fit right anymore.
Nick's farewell sail on his laser in Barnegat Bay |
So when the opportunity came to move to South Africa, we
were already primed for the decision. Our external and internal considerations
had evolved. The time was right. South Africa is a country rich with geographic
and cultural diversity and the unlimited promise of adventure. The decision may have seemed
swift to some, but it was really 32 years in the making.
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