You may drop in here to clerkmanifesto once in awhile to see what it's like living in a vacation paradise.
It's very nice, thank you.
The ocean sparkles. You sit down somewhere in your neighborhood and look over at some tableau you've passed hundreds of times now and suddenly realize:
Whoa, that's like, incredibly charming!
Which is fun.
People say that when one moves to some fantastic vacation spot as a retired immigrant, there is an amazing honeymoon period that lasts for, I don't know, a few months. Everything is strange and beguiling and better, so much better! The food is amazing! And it's such an adventure. Winter is a joke compared to where you came from. Getting around is a charm and car free. Life is just vacation all the time somehow.
And then suddenly it all comes crashing down, you have a fall, your spirits sag, and oh the work of it all, the daily struggle, the fact that you're in your sixties and have all the pains and struggles of any human. The incredibly slow pace of language learning and the constant confusion and challenge of talking to people dogs every interaction. You can't get a decent corn tortilla or a taco. And suddenly you realize you only know a few people in the whole of your huge french country. Everything is bewildering and uphill.
This lasts for awhile, definitely longer than phase one.
And then, according to this standard charting of the experience, one slowly starts to adapt, to become part of life in your new wonderland. Light slowly starts to seep back in to this dark adventure and one can truly build one's new life over. You begin to understand the language. You accept the place on its own merits. You learn to take the bureaucracy in stride though maybe not with affection. It's just life, but now maybe in a little bit more liveable place than where you came from.
This takes, I don't know, the next twelve years?
I read about this scenario a lot when we were planning to come over. I thought it sounded inevitable.
And it's not entirely wrong.
But, also, it's entirely wrong!
Which, I admit, is weird. The thing is, none of it goes away. It's all here at once. Nothing about the utter delights of where we are has ever crashed. Nor was the adventure ever not terrifying and difficult. What it really is is that I am still me. I can wake up in the middle of the night with some pain that terrifies me, and that makes me feel that we are spinning a million miles out in space connected to nothing, dreading everything we may soon have to deal with. And then by eleven in the morning I can be being served a cappuccino and a pain au chocolat facing a quaint market that probably started a quarter of a millenium ago and suddenly feel like the luckiest person on the planet.
We're all lucky and damned.
It's just sometimes you can see it really clearly here.

















