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Saturday, September 17, 2005

There's No Place Like Home

Erickson would say that I am experiencing a normal life challenge, give me a reassuring pat on the back and go on his merry way. Yet he is long since dead and thus I am left to wonder how I got to where I'm currently located.

It all hit me quite suddenly at the beginning of last week. I was driving to work one evening and everything was going as usual. As I peeled onto Interstate 75 northbound and squeezed into the far left lane, I glanced up at the sign. I read it everyday, and it really should have no particular effect on me, but for whatever reason it just struck me differently. I blinked as if to clear a blur in my visual field and grabbed one last glimpse on the sign reading Chattanooga. Chattanooga, Tennessee. Have I lost every shread of sanity that I thought I once possessed? I live in the South! Just why exactly I was so dumbfounded I cannot say. This really was no new epiphany for me. I am fully aware of where I reside. But why?

On a more hilarious note, someone else asked me the same question a few days before this occurance. I was at the grocery store to buy a few things to make some dry beef gravy. I searched up and down all the aisles until I was so overcome with frustration that I found a sales associate and asked for some help. She very nonchalantly informed me that dried beef was in a can in the canned meat aisle. What? Why that was proposterous! I had never heard of such a thing. But sure enough, she escorted me down the aisle, and there it sat in all its beauty on the bottom self, in a can. Rather embarrassed, I headed for the check out. The cashier was rather young, some poor soul who was stuck working in food service until she graduated high school.
As I pulled my wallet out of my purse to pay she complimented me on the wallet itself. I kindly thanked her and then replied to her question of where I purchased it. I proceeded to tell her that I am not from here and that it was something that I got as a gift that was bought in Philadelphia, which is where I am from. She then leaned forward and whispered in a rather shocked manner, "What are you doing here?" I then told her that I went to school here at one time, which promted her to ask if I liked it here to which I said yes. Of course there are some things that you just will always miss, like the fact that our dried beef comes in a package and not a can. But to each his own. She still seemed a bit taken back that I was still living here or that I considered to come here at all from what she considered to be such an aewsome place. Of course I had to pop my collar as I left the store because I was filled with such pride to be able to say that I am from Philadelphia, but I digress.

Point being is that I am not so sure that I fit in here. I am not sure why I am here and if this is where I belong. I know that I have settled into a job and an apartment, but does that really mean that this is where I am supposed to be. Of course it does not help that Mom keeps trying to tell me that I need to come home and "This is where you belong. . . . . ."

Sigh. . . .I just don't know anymore, and quite frankly I'm too tired to try to figure it all out. Maybe you can help me. . . . .

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I also am puzzled why you have settled in TN. Are the men more attractive there or what? I have no intentions of ever living in Tennessee. I was just telling Peter yesterday that I have no respect for people who living in Collegedale. It's a big cop-out of real life. Come home to Philly, where the cheese steaks are greasy and lisa's pizza is run by the mob... and mom will drive you crazier than every before- oh yeah. maybe that is why you live in Tn. ;)

10:25 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I too want to be more than 2 hours but less than 10 hours from home. The decisions are tough when you graduate. There's opportunity everywhere, but I don't want to be too far from a city. Couple of jobs out in Indiana, but it's literally the middle of nowhere. At the same time I don't understand the obsession of people in the country with the city. I think they've just watched too much Friends.

-Raja

7:24 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

oh man! I'm listening to this song right now and let me tell you, it is doing things to me that not even EJ and philly freedom can do! I wanna go running between dead cow carcasses! I wanna go running through russian snow! i wanna put a mouth guard in and and wear american flag shorts!


Eye Of The Tiger
Survivor

Risin' up, back on the street
Did my time, took my chances
Went the distance, now I'm back on my feet
Just a man and his will to survive

So many times, it happens too fast
You trade your passion for glory
Don't lose your grip on the dreams of the past
You must fight just to keep them alive

It's the eye of the tiger, it's the thrill of the fight
Risin' up to the challenge of our rival
And the last known survivor stalks his prey in the night
And he's watchin' us all with the eye of the tiger

Face to face, out in the heat
Hangin' tough, stayin' hungry
They stack the odds, till we take to the street
For the kill with the skill to survive

It's the eye of the tiger, it's the thrill of the fight
Risin' up to the challenge of our rival
And the last known survivor stalks his prey in the night
And he's watchin' us all with the eye of the tiger

Risin' up, straight to the top
Had the guts, got the glory
Went the distance, now I'm not gonna stop
Just a man and his will to survive

It's the eye of the tiger, it's the thrill of the fight
Risin' up to the challenge of our rival
And the last known survivor stalks his prey in the night
And he's watchin' us all with the eye of the tiger

The eye of the tiger
The eye of the tiger
The eye of the tiger

7:19 AM  

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