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i'm back home again. 3 years ago, coming home for my first time from college
was an experience to remember. i felt like a new, prized man who was ready
for work--yet there was no work to be done. i had lived fast-paced with only
the bare essentials for 4 months. i came back home, and life was slowed down.
i felt like a man ready for action, as if i had been in war. home life was so
easy. it was so comforting. it was so cozy and peaceful. well, 3 years later,
i'm still coming back home, yet these feelings of reverting back are becoming
familiar. i know what it's like. i know what to expect. i remember noting that
the primary differences between living environment of college life and home life
are those of having carpeted floors, being able to shower without shower shoes,
and being able to sit on the toilet without worry.
i still believe these are great differences. now, i observe that home life is fragile.
it's very protective. it's a secure little box isolated within a collective community
of other cozy-desired establishments. college, however, is the exact opposite;
college is a jammed-pack, temporary home for people with similar interests. college cares
to enforce safety and warmth, but it forces interactions amongst everyone so as to prepare
everyone for 'the real world.' you learn social skills. you learn about the human race.
home, though, doesn't care. home life protects you. home life doesn't care how
stagnant one grows. home life is priceless though. for this, i believe i could always
visit the home life for safety. it's not only priceless, though--it's TIMELESS. it's
static. i don't want to LIVE at home, though. i couldn't afford to live constantly with
this type of comfort--at least not now at the same place where i had comfort since i
was 4 years old. i don't want that comfort. later, i could tolerate establishing my own home.
but as for now, i'm not complaining: as i said, it's home is precious. this annual retreat
is nice. just, the times have changed.
now, i'm too geared for the seeming industrial, factory work of college. i'm used to that
type of living. i'm actulaly too used to that. for that reason, home life seems two
eras ago. it's still nice to wake up to the smell of mother made bisquits.
it's still priceless to drive through my crooked streets and see the same corners where
i've spent hundreds of hours playing baseball with kids who have sinced moved out
of the neighborhood... kids i'll never see again. but that's exactly what returning
to home is: it's the past... the faded memories that i'm looking at. i recall the past imges
of all the best friends i developed at the aptly-named best friend park. i spent
my childhood there. that's what i see when i come home--my childhood. i see my past life.
i see the transcending i've done. i see what i've left behind. but our houses
are all empty now. on each street i drive through, i can recall some miscellaneous adventure
that we've done while growing up... i see the street corners and neighbors who saw me grow up.
i see the fucking beauty. the greatness is almost overwhelming at times. it was all so
great. so yea, i aint complaining. just it's nothing short of exhausting to continue to
revisit the past. it's great that i can still hang out w/ my best friends jeremy, mark,
sean, john, and david each day. and although we've all well ventured into our own avenues,
we still get along together pretty well. it's not surprising though, for as we grew up,
we not only spent thousands of hours together, but in doing so, we SHAPED each other.
for this reason, we'll always have some similar roots, regardless of how far we branch off.
despite this soothing fit and peace of mind, when i look close enough, i not only see the
past, the memories, and the overall beauty of it all; when i look close enough, i see the
era for exactly what it is. i appreciate it for what it is, and more importantly, without
regret i see with ease exactly why i left this cozy place called home.
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