I am in awe of where the journey takes us, and even more so of how little we can prepare ourselves for the possible outcomes in each choice we make. I don't regret my choices. I fell in love with a Norwegian. I boldly chose to cast my world to the side in order to join his, to embrace his as mine. I have lived in Norway for over three years and can say without hesitation that living here, hardships included, has been one of the most rewarding paths I could have chosen. Funny analogy given my current state, but acclimating to Norway reminds me of marriage. It requires love and admiration, patience and respect, listening carefully, the cultivation of both what you are willing to give to it and what you need to do for yourself to be your best within it. It requires the choice to love it, all of it, even on the days when you aren't sure you can endure it. And when you think you have seen or learned all there is to know, it will surprise you with something new and beautiful, and you will fall in love with it all over again.
Norway is a beautiful country. It is a small country full of beautiful, interesting, and dynamic people who, at times, are difficult to get to know and, from experience, entirely worth the effort. Its culture is an ancient one, with a long and arduous history that peeks through the seams of society, a society rich in strength, patience, resilience, practicality, endurance, wisdom, experience, and a youthful sense of exploration. It is a country of trials, at least for someone coming from the land of the many conveniences I was blessed to experience. The weather can tug at your very being, from a darkness you can lose yourself within, a cold that can seep into your veins and seize your core, a steady rain that can, after days upon end, swallow you whole, and an awakening, a rebirth that can captivate your every sense and make you feel as if you just stepped through the gates of Heaven. It is a country of landscapes that take you high above the ground floor, both in actuality and in spirit. Norway is westernized, yet entirely different from the United States, full of nuances and subtleties that tell the true story of what its society, homes, families, attitudes, and beliefs are built upon. To me, it is nothing other than a love story.
I am a patriotic person and will always carry America with me, both in my passport and stamped on my heart, but I am also now tied to this beautiful, trying, and sometimes frustrating existence. Only I am tied to this existence with a key piece of my plan missing. Instead of a husband and a son and a large, closely-tied family, I am beginning a new journey with a beautiful son, a friend, and an extended closeness to a family I both love and feel I have barely gotten to know. It comes without explanation that I am sad. My heart hurts for those losses, for the changes I didn't prepare myself to endure.
I can't say that I transitioned well in moving here. All of us expats do it differently. I have friends whose waters barely rippled when they dove headfirst. I have others whose waves are greater than mine. My journey is my own and it is something I have to own, to take responsibility and accountability for, regardless of the advice I am given. And I am given quite a lot of advice. My family, friends, my ex, and his family all are wonderful and supportive people and, while I often feel lonely in the steps, I know I am not completely alone in those I choose to take. Their support, their advice, is always there for the taking. The decisions I make are not entirely mine either, as my friendship with my ex allows us the benefit of sound-boarding with one another, which we must do regularly and openly.
However, I am, due to various circumstances, under somewhat of a deadline to make a choice. It is not a lesser of two evils, but a decision between two great loves. I loved my career, independence, security, comfort and conveniences, support network, and the financial stability in my former life. I assumed those things would be founded just as easily in this new world and, as stated, didn't prepare myself for the alternatives. I didn't prepare myself for a 14-month long process of obtaining a residency permit. I didn't prepare myself for the immediate and ever-deepening financial strain that we would incur. I couldn't have known that my education and former career would offer me so little in terms of opportunity here. I didn't foresee over two years of being at home with my son, although I dearly cherish that I was given it. And I could not have predicted that a marriage I did not question would come to an end. As those things have all taken place, I am now alone, yet without a full sense of independence. I have acquired the language skills necessary to give me a place in society, but my comfort is far from fully-formed. I don't have financial stability or the conveniences that come with a career. I do, however, have a network of friends and family that make my existence here not only possible, but pleasurable. And I have a beautiful son whose laughter and joy gives my life a daily purpose and direction.
I don't want to be indecisive. I recognize that the choices I must make, namely whether to stay or go, must be mine to own. I do not want to be forced in one direction or the other, whether by circumstance or red tape or anything else standing in my way telling me that I can't or must. And when I take the time to review the options, the pros and cons, I find myself returning to the same questionable beginning and indecisive end. My son has only known life here. His father, my dear friend, is here. Their family, who are still a part of my heart and family, are here. The friendships I have built in the past three years are as rewarding and well-founded as any I could have imagined. I have very little other than that to secure a spot for me in the landscape. For me, given the option of returning to my family, long-time friends, stable career, mother-tongue, and vast modern conveniences, living here is choosing the path of more resistance. Yet I feel I have unfinished business. However mixed and muddled between love and pride, I cannot imagine my life with weakened and forever-distanced ties to this place. I haven't succeeded here by many definitions and sometimes I wonder if all the trials, both older and more recent, are signs telling me to return to my old life. My heart is not so sure that is true, in part because when I left the United States, I did so wholeheartedly, without question, and with a complete disregard for the possible worst-case scenarios. But I did it...and I faced some of those scenarios...and I am still here, still standing, still refusing to cave simply because I wasn't dealt an easy hand. Were I to leave Norway, it would be in no way wholeheartedly...not yet.
There is a reason Norway is considered, year after year, to be one of the happiest countries on Earth. I can't yet give you a list of all the reasons as to why that is, mainly because I have not yet been able to explore each and every benefit this country has to offer. What I can tell you is that living here enters your heart, it becomes a part of you. This country takes you away from many of the things you once thought you couldn't live without and it shows you what it means to live a pure, a rich, a less-complicated and simultaneously more-complicated life. It comes with faults and hardships and idiosyncrasies that, at times, are confusing and maddening. It pushes you, challenges you, both in its subtle and blatant variations, and when you conquer them, overcome, survive them, you wear a badge of pride. All of it, the good and the bad, comes with a charm that I find wholesome and enchanting.
Given all these wonderful things about Norway, I do miss home. I traveled with Baby C to spend 3 weeks at home over the holidays and was so happy, so at ease, so comfortable that I was actually frightened at how simple it would be to emotionally transition back into life there. Every comfort was at my fingertips, so much so that it was painstaking to board the plane and return to sadness, loneliness, and strain. My family, my friends, my career...are all just a choice away. Oh!, how I wish I weren't choosing something away in whichever path I take. How I wish "home" were an easier definition.
Given all these wonderful things about Norway, I do miss home. I traveled with Baby C to spend 3 weeks at home over the holidays and was so happy, so at ease, so comfortable that I was actually frightened at how simple it would be to emotionally transition back into life there. Every comfort was at my fingertips, so much so that it was painstaking to board the plane and return to sadness, loneliness, and strain. My family, my friends, my career...are all just a choice away. Oh!, how I wish I weren't choosing something away in whichever path I take. How I wish "home" were an easier definition.
I am asking for guidance, not from you per say, but from the universe. Writing to you, telling you about this plane of indecision, is my way of sending a little energy into the world and asking for guidance. In the meantime, I could use a little silent support as we move forward with choosing a future that will affect so many people, all of whom I love and cherish deeply. An old favorite came to me tonight...a poem I spent many years living by...and it seemed to fit.
The Road Not Taken
Robert Frost
Robert Frost
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I marked the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I -
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I marked the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I -
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.


beautifully written yet I know you're hurting. I hope that whatever choice you're going to go for is going to be a good one!I wish you that! and partially, I wish that to myself.
ReplyDeleteI'm an expat living in Belgium. Soon, I'll be married to a Spanish man too.Not a day goes by without us talking about leaving & going to either his or my country. But we stay. We fight. We push. Hopefully, our decisions are the right ones.
I also hope that yours will be good for you too.
Take care
B
Barb, welcome back! Thanks for reading again. And congratulations on the upcoming marriage. The decisions that come with marrying someone from another country are, as we know, never easy...yet are also utterly rewarding. I wouldn't have traded any of these years, regardless of how the decisions came out in the end. I wish you all the luck on your continued journey. -C
Deletethanks C, for your sweet message!
DeleteIt is hard to be with a foreigner,but I wouldn't have it any other way. I just love my sweet chico espagnol:-)
sending you positive vibes!
I am facing almost this exact decision myself...living in Northern Norway, missing the U.S., trying to weigh the many good/bad things that should guide me to a decision on my next move. My young son, my career, all the many benefits and challenges of life in Norway.
ReplyDeleteNice to feel a little less alone.
Thank You
You know, everyone has been telling me to make a "pro/con" list, weigh the good and bad. To me, I think it is all in how we look at it. I don't look at either choice as a bad one or as any of the factors in either lifestyle as "bad." Then again, I have been entirely indecisive in this process, because I am choosing to see only the good things about either choice. It may not get me very far in the short run, but at least I think I am happier arriving at an outcome. I hope that your situation, your choice, is as smooth and painless as possible. Thanks for sharing with me...and I really do wish you the best. -C
DeleteI come to a similar perspective from a different route...I agree the "pro/con" list is of limited help but in my case it is because I have no criteria for weighing the items on my list. For example, it doesn't much matter if being away from my son is the ONLY con if it is the one thing that matters most in my life.
DeleteI guess it becomes a philosophical question...is there anything I wouldn't tolerate to be near him. So far the answer is no...but it doesn't make for a settled, satisfying decision.
Thanks for your words and your kind wishes!
I agree. My son has really been the forefront of all decisions, regardless of any other benefits. I won't be without him and he has a wonderful father whom I don't want him to be away from either. Essentially, I think the decision is fairly clear, despite the logistics of actually getting my life started. Can I ask how long you have been here?
DeleteSure. I have lived here for about 2 and a half years now. I work in a company where all business is conducted in English and really want my son to be around English as much as possible...so my Norwegian is still pretty terrible.
DeleteIt is a small town which accepts "outsiders" slowly anyhow, so I will always feel like a visitor even without the language challenge.
At least the sun is back, even if we have many months of winter left to endure.
I really am a positive person...or at least I was!
Well, I completely understand everything you are saying. I can relate to it deeply. Just know that you are not alone in the difficulties. And I am here, if you need a distant and objective sounding-board. The sun is coming soon and not long from now, the heaven that is summer in Norway will show up and let us forget (for a while) how tough it can really be. Positive, happy vibes to you...
DeleteIt's funny how the world works. I moved to Norway in 2011, and I'm we've met at Cafe Fedora or SAWOL or something, but I didn't know you were a blogger. One of my blog's followers directed me to you in a comment today. Isn't that cool? Apparently he started reading your blog and mine at the same time last year. :-) Anyway, as a fellow American, I identify with so much of this post (as well as several others). Home. It feels good to go there, but the prospect of a full return still means some trepidation. It wouldn't be easy. But it would almost certainly be easier than it was to come here, or to go anyplace else. Sending you good vibes as you make your decisions.
ReplyDeleteYou know, I have been running across your name a lot recently! We have met at Fedora, actually. And I think we are both in the writing group (albeit haven't ever attended a meeting at the same time). Now I have discovered your blog and I am so happy I did. It is always refreshing to meet fellow expat writers :) I do hope we actually run into each other soon - maybe even at tomorrow's meeting! Would love to chat again in person. Thanks for coming to say hi :) - C
DeleteHappy to have provided the matchmaking service... and I'm sending along the silent support that you asked for as you choose a future for yourself and your son. May you both be happy in whatever decision you ultimately make. :)
Delete- Leroy
Hi C,
ReplyDeleteI am a Producer on the US travel show House Hunters International. I found your website when looking for expats who might be interested in being a part of the show, I hope you don't mind me contacting you?
I thought I would reach out to see if you or anyone you know have recently moved abroad and might be interested in taking part in House Hunters International?! Ideally they should be outgoing and fun, aged under 45 and have bought a property within the last few years or are renting a property.
House Hunters International is a half-hour TV show currently airing on the Home and Garden Television Network (HGTV) in America. The series is designed to de-mystify the international home-buying / renting process, by going behind the scenes of a house hunt where expats and their real estate agents tour 3 homes. At its core, House Hunters International is a travel show concentrating on the idiosyncrasies of the locales and what makes them special and different.
Here are some examples of the show that you can watch on Youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reYI3L3lC-c - Barcelona from LA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UOiump3__Mo - Vienna from California
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tblIVLw0coE – Panama from Pennsylvania
Please do get in touch if you or anyone you know may be interested in the show.
Best wishes,
Michelle
Michelle James
CASTING PRODUCER LEOPARD FILMS
1-3 St Peter's Street, London N1 8JD - +44 20 7704 3300
michelle.james@leopardfilms.com
www.leopardfilms.com