
My mother always said I'd appreciate the traveling someday because it would make me a more well-rounded individual. I'm now fifty years old, and culturally, I'm about as well-rounded as I'm ever going to be. I'm still working on the appreciation aspect of living my life on the go.
A few years back, my husband and I ventured to Belgium on a nostalgic little pleasure trip. We rented a car and spent a day buzzing around town to all our old haunts including the local grocery store, where we hoped to stock up on some of our favorite international snack foods. Within minutes of entering the grocery, I found myself standing in front of the butcher's window, tears streaming down my face, overcome with emotion.
At that precise moment, I'd become aware of just how hard it had been, living in a foreign speaking country. It was a thought I'd never allowed to creep into my brain during our entire tenure in Europe. If I had, I most likely would never have left my house, and our entire life would have ceased to exist. It was the ultimate sink or swim situation. After all, I had three wary, very wide-eyed children depending upon me. Any show of weakness and I'd upset the whole apple cart.



I hope the other square pegs see it the same way.
Brooke, Bridget and Brittany at the Country Riding Club in Brussels, with Niki and Baby Cool, 1995
Brooke, Bridget and Brittany at the Country Riding Club in Brussels, with Niki and Baby Cool, 1995
so now you're mrs. green jeans? or did I just miss that detail! ha!
ReplyDeleteI think I'm rather square as well. just not as well traveled!
I just love the photos...made me smile too. As your eldest offspring I feel that I can be described the same way as you described yourself. As much as I loved living in Belgium I feel that I suffered the worst with the moving part. Moving 5 times during your high school years and being painfully shy will do that. But I wouldn't change it for the world.
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