I am home.
My sleep patterns are still foreign, but I am moving closer to EST.
I downloaded over 1200 photos tonight. Looking back at them, it was like watching a recap of a favorite movie. The buildings, the food, the wearing of a new scarf, the steps, the train, the goddess sculptures, the landscapes, and the changing me.
I can see the softness come over my expressions over the first 2 weeks. I see the smile pop up late in week 3. I see the confidence and playful smirks in week 4.
It is after 2am and I am sitting on the couch wondering how I did it. Did I really travel to Italy for a month? I did.
I am tickled with what I have accomplished. I have come home with more than a ton of photos and pretty Italian towels. I came home full; Full of life, full of beauty, full of respect for myself.
I do not know where the courage to take this trip came from. I spent months not letting myself think about it. One statement echoed through my mind all the time, "I'm going to Italy".
I cry thinking about what I did. I left my 2 sons, I left my home, I left all I knew because I had to break free.
I went far away to be able to get close to myself again, close to the tides of life, close to my heart which I couldn't hear anymore.
I had no agenda set for this trip, other than to show up. There were times when I crashed and anxiety washed over me, there were times I didn't know what the hell I was doing there. But I stayed, I showed up, I took one tiny step at a time, I took a breath, and walked over the known edge. I fell, but there was no crash landing. Instead I moved down, deeper into an abyss of sorts. It was where I needed to go. The landing was a soft one, but it was dark and I had to trust my instincts as my senses were of no use.
I wandered. I told myself I could breath. I reminded myself that in the moment, I was fine.
People talk about finding themselves, I don't know what most people do, but for me being in a strange land where hardly anyone spoke my language, living from my center, I heard myself. I experienced myself. I heard things that aren't true or things that I no longer believe. I let them go.
I got lighter and lighter. I cast them off as you would pull off a sweater or a pair of itchy socks.
Soon I was out of the tunnel and there was light. My senses were of use again.
I walked up and down and I looked, just looked. I beheld the beauty of life, even in its ugliness.
I have felt led from the beginning. Maybe not led, but embraced. I learned to be still and then go with the wind-like gentle energy without thinking it over. I moved with it. It felt comfortable, cozy and real.
I am heading back into this world tomorrow. I am meeting a friend for lunch. The changes and experiences I had go with me. I am not going to announce all that happened, nor am I going to act like my old self. I will be me, I stay open so I can feel the breezes, which move me.
It still feels surreal to me, even sitting here tonight does.
Am I back? Yes and no. I am here, but I left many things in Italy, across the ocean. Things that no longer serve me or any healthy purpose. I left my strict, cruel judge who was always telling me how fat and ugly I was. I left behind the need to appreciated and liked by other people. I left behind the sense of not belonging, of being a misfit.
When I left for Italy, I was a mother, first and foremost. Now I am a human being, first and foremost.
I have been deeply moved by the hundreds of statues of women I saw, angels, goddesses, cherubs, etc.
I am part of a powerful and honored gender and I will no longer apologize for being a woman. I also refuse to accept any blame for sin or for what men do.
What I found that was so special in me, I know exists in everyone. I need to remind myself of that, especially when I am impatient.
We are all capable of incredible growth. Some of us get to do it and write about it.
I am home. I am in known territory. This is the beginning of something wonderful, something new, and I am prepared for the journey.
I hope you will continue blogging now that you are home. I have really enjoyed following your story. I am a fellow member of Slow Travel Board member.
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