Home.

Home is a relative term. If you’re in your hometown and someone asks where you live, you will perhaps give them specific directions. Say I see you at Food City in Seymour, I would tell you I live behind the high school. If I’m in Knoxville, home is Seymour. If I’m in Atlanta, home is Knoxville. If I’m in Asheville, or Savannah, or Charleston, I might care to explain I’m from a small town near Dollywood. People from away are always fascinated that I’m from the same county as Dolly Parton. If I’m on the West Coast, home is simply “Tennessee”. 

If I were to travel to Ireland, “home” would be the United States. I’m arrogant, but not so much that I would expect them to point out the South on a map of the world. And if aliens abduct me, planet Earth would be close enough for me.

So if you move away from where you’re born, but leave behind your family to cleave to your beloved, of perhaps to just a new life, then you hopefully have two homes. Hence the phrase, “Going home for Christmas,” the same as going home after a long day at the office. Home is where the heart is. For years, home was where my horse was, because my heart was my horse. I’ve been home with Johnny before and he has lost me and texted or called, asking where I am. I’ll answer “the bottom garden” or “the laundry room” or “the mailbox”. To pinpoint where exactly in our small corner of the world.

Whenever home is to you, I hope this Sunday finds you well and rested. We are home, with our books, football on TV & biscuits on the stove. My heart is snoring on the couch. 

Reading All the Light We Cannot See has got me feeling melancholy.