Have
you noticed?
Our dwellings are integrally entwined with our Rites of Passage.
When we choose, or when we are required to reassess our life's direction, we also tend to change where home is, and more importantly, what home is for us.
- We redefine it.
Think
back. Remember that big move out to the
first place? To college, the first apartment,
a shift to a new city for a first job, or a marriage. We
discovered not everyone did things the way our family did,
so that move gave us permission to rethink how we wanted to do things....that move offered each of us our first choices as an independent
adult.
- Making choices about the physical space was as much a part of
that step of becoming as the move itself.
But
then too, redefining oneself by one's space happens at later moments. Maybe it happened with your first child. Was it pregnancy that raised new thoughts inside you about
having your own home? And like me, did the things you did to
your home become a part of defining how you were a parent? Did you envision that
babe playing in a grassy backyard, or crawling across a different family room off your kitchen?
When
I became an instant mom by my marriage to both my son and his dad, I
built a tiny, low swing off a minature fruit tree in the backyard. His Dad and I built a 6x6
sandbox around the tree for him with a perimeter of concrete blocks. In
each block cavity, we planted carrot seeds so it was also a garden. I can still see my new 2-year-old harvesting tiny carrots and
munching them while he twirled on his swing.
My
downstairs laundry room became an art class for my own and my
employee's daughters some time later. I transformed a utility space into an enrichment
space. As it turned out, it became an unplanned employee perk as well. My colleague Julie told me having her kids
with her at work after school just as she became a single parent was one
of the most important things to her. So what happened in my space
served as her Rite of Passage too - into single motherhood. Changing space
is so powerful.
What
about retirement? Without the kids, and the assorted educational
systems that structured our life for decades, we finally get to choose
our own rhythm and our own spaces. What did you want? Bigger, smaller,
later, earlier, slower, quieter, more rural? You were making a statement
about yourself at last.
And then, the loss
of a love perhaps, like me: "What do I want now that I'm alone?"
That takes time.
For
me, with two younger children and an unfinished home on 10 acres, there
were many choices I faced about my place. But even if your children are
fledged, I think we all assess what we need from a place as a
reflection of the new place we ourselves are emotionally entering:
:
Might it be the
small "escape" to the
sea to write as we live out our own final chapters? A place in the sun
by a large window close to adult children and family, or a small urban
aerie that's walking distance to the many things we want to do? Perhaps a
residence where we shared and were touched by others?
These
big life changes always revolve around place. The scale of it,
the feel of it, the environment around it. The life we want. We know it's important to
reassess where and what our home should be in order to support the next step in
our personal lives.
So
what this boils down to in my mind then is that we can work this
forward and not wait for some major force to make the choice for
us. If we want a life direction change now, then we can make it happen
by altering where we live, or how.
But
if no Rite of Passage is forcing the issue, then we've got to figure
out what we want in order to make the house help take us there. We must
clarify. Then we can redefine home as we see fit.
So I'm thinking some online and face-2-face tools to help us discover what
we're after, and what will make our steps clear sounds like a good thing. What would help? Would would you need?

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