Funny how the definition of home changes for you over time. Not the location of home, but what it means to call a place home. Because right now, I'm not sure what exactly I would refer to as home.
I suppose the confusion came on early enough: when I moved from Warsaw to New York, as a child, knowing that eventually I would be returning to Warsaw. (And not knowing that even later, I would be returning to New York.) So which was my home town? It sure felt at home in New York as a kid, but would call Warsaw home as a teenager, but quickly changed my mind as a young adult, even though I wavered a bit in more senior years, thinking that perhaps I know Warsaw too well to completely put it aside.
It gets even more complicated with actual houses I lived in. The village house where my grandmother lived -- that was home. Until she moved out and died, then it lost of traces of home, even when my sister reappropriated the place not too long ago. On the other hand, the apartment we lived in in New York never felt like home. It was a borrowed place (rented by the Polish government) and that whole chapter felt like I was reading about someone else's childhood. It was all so impermanent.
There is the song by Vanessa Carlton called "Home." I've always liked it for the theme it suggests She sings -- I've always known with you I am home. So, not a place, but where love is lodged.
But of course, Ed now lives at the farmette and I do not.
I visited the farmette today. As it happened he wasn't there, but no matter -- the utter familiarity of the place hit me with such force that I paused and just stared at the place. Walking up the irregular and chipped brick path that leads to the back door (which we use almost exclusively) had patches of ice on it still. And puddles. I knew where the puddles would form and I almost reached for a shovel to do away with the last ice bit -- do it now, while it's above freezing, or be stuck with it for the rest of winter. But of course I didn't do it. And I didn't throw away a piece of trash that was still on the counter (because Ed had had a meeting and was in a hurry) since, well, it no longer felt like my home.
When did that happen?? I had invested so much of me in that place! I see the plants that need a trim, the pots with dead annuals that need to be pulled and replaced come spring. And the clematis! It has to be cut back before the growing season! Am I really going to let it struggle? Snipping off the vines would take no time, right?
It's not my home.
But is the Edge home? Henry changed that for me: it wasn't until he came along. And now, well, it sort of is. Even though I'm almost certain to move come summer, right now it feels like... home.
A wet morning. It had rained overnight. My immediate reaction is -- great! Less salt!

Breakfast. I hide the poinsettia. I really can't look at it anymore. It's not a plant that you want to keep as your centerpiece in January. And yet, there it is -- bright and blushing as always. So I put it to the side, feeling somewhat guilty that I would treat something that is a work of nature so dismissively.

(The finches, though not yet calling this place home, sure spend a lot of time here now...)

Henry has doggie daycare. A necessity today because I have yet another appointment to consider my cough. Which remains "just a cough." With no end in sight. Come back if it doesn't go away.
This is why I stop by the farmette (plus the fact that I have some leftovers for Ed). I'm in the neighborhood. I can't not come here if I am in the neighborhood. Despite the fact that it is no longer home.

In the afternoon I get the kids -- first Sparrow then Snowdrop.


I know they both loved the farmhouse -- especially Snowdrop who knew it inside out for the first ten years of her life. I doubt that they regard the Edge as somehow their second "home" now. Their definition differs from mine. As I said, it changes with age.
We pick up Goose and Henry. The two big dogs go nuts when they hear and see us. (As do the kids when they see them!)
I drive them, their dog to their home.
Henry comes home with me of course. If anyone loves this place totally, completely, it's my pooch. If something is out of place, he notices it instantly. All his routines are rooted at the Edge, on this couch.
Maybe for Henry, who was truly homeless before he came here, home is where the couch is, so long as I'm nearby? Maybe.
with so much love...











































