Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Coming Home: Part 1

A few months ago, in a small Senegalese village, I was lying on the floor in a mud hut trying to avoid movement in order to minimize potential for heatstroke. Even at this remote corner of the world, accessible only by bicycle or foot, I was able to talk to my dad on a cell phone. As long as I didn’t sweat so much that the phone broke. In the course of this particular conversation I made a provocative leftist political comment, as I am wont to do, and in exasperation Dad responded, “I can’t wait until you come back home to the real world.”

An awkward pause later, my brain started to explode. With over half of the world’s population living on less than $2.50 a day, it’s obviously impossible to call West Bloomfield, Michigan—with a median family income of over $100,000 a year (as of 2007)—the “real world.” But then, it was my real world for the first 21 years of my life. So if Michigan is, in some way at least, my “real world,” but my Peace Corps life is the “real world” for the actual majority of people on this planet, then… whose reality…what’s really …what does it mean for a world or an experience to be “real” anyway?

Oy.

And now here I am again. A week and a half ago I finally came home… to my former real world… to West Bloomfield, Michigan.  I’m currently stretched out in my queen size bed, listening to the whistling winds of the outskirts of Frankenstorm Sandy, still awake at 3am trying to wrap my head around what it means to be home. People keep asking me what the strangest part about being home is. I’m never quite sure how to respond. Sometimes I talk about the magic of flush toilets or the miracle of microwaves. Sometimes I mention hot showers, potable tap water, or the ease with which I can do suddenly do pretty much anything my heart desires.

That’s all part of it, of course. But there’s something deeper I’ve been struggling to explain and haven’t quite found the words. Maybe I can get it out here…  

Sometimes it’s like waking up in an alternate reality where I’m the only one who sees anything alternative about it. Other times it’s like stepping into a play halfway through, terrified that I don’t know my lines, only to realize that deep down in a part of me I didn’t even realize existed, I already know the script by heart.

I know it doesn’t take a genius to figure out that I’ll never forget how to be the person I was for the first twenty one years of my life, but its somehow mind-boggling to feel how, even after all I’ve been through, I can step right back into my old shoes—or rather my brand-new Ugg boots—and I’m back to being a plain old American again. Or at least I’m able to pass for one in public.

I keep expecting someone to read it in my face in line at Starbucks. To see it in my terrified expression as I flee Target after an aborted attempt at shopping. I keep fearing—or maybe hoping—that someone will call me out on my bullshit attempt to pass as a “real” American when up until a week ago I had never heard of Honey Boo Boo and I still don’t know the words to Call Me Maybe.  

And then sometimes, maybe even most of the time, everything feels totally normal. Which makes the switch to unnormal feel even crazier. The borderline moments, the real insanity, comes when I look at myself in the mirror, spick and span wearing fresh new clothes, and get the eerie feeling that I’m staring at an avatar of myself.  Who is this person and why does she look like she belongs here?

There’s so much more I want to tell you folks, but it’s late and I’m exhausted… and I also want to take a moment for a quick disclaimer. A lot of you have been following my blog because you like hearing about life as a Peace Corps Volunteer. I don’t know where life’s about to take me, but for the foreseeable future this is going to turn into a blog about something very different from Peace Corps life. Along with my friends, the Zain calling plan, excessive amounts of yoga, running, reading, cooking and baking, Blogging kept me sane for the past two years. I don’t know why it can’t do the same as I take on the final and what many say is the hardest challenge of Peace Corps --  coming home. So, I guess what I’m saying is, after a long break during my travels (which I’ll try to come up with a re-cap of soon) I’m back if you’ll have me. And the glory of self-publishing on the internet is that I’m back even if you won’t have me.