Touchy

I grew up in a culture that embraced physical touch. Then I came to America.

An all-around sad story. What a line, though: โ€œA home is lost twice: first when you leave it and then again when you return.โ€

I grew up in a place that I never really considered home but it was as close as I had. I had roots, even if they were poisoned. Now when I go back I feel no connection to it at all; itโ€™s just another spot on a map. Thatโ€™s a real loss. I still carry with me the secrets of the river I knew so well, and treasured so dearly, but itโ€™s no longer my river. It has passed to others now, including a me that exists no more and is dispersed across the universe via whatever echoes we leave as we go about being.

Every bend I knew then is still there, but as with Heraclitus I cannot step into that river again because I also cannot step into my past mind where that magic still lived.

Iโ€™ll never again see the mist rising above the water as dawnโ€™s first tremulous proposition awakens the sky, tannic water sliding by my small boat with the sound of secrets unknown since the foundation of the world. I was there and felt it but the past remains as always where we can never reach it.

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