Oh the places you’ll go and where I have gone these
last 8 weeks! From a city flat in
Madrid to a 19th century bed and breakfast in Saratoga, NY; from a timeless
Adirondacks camp to a dorm room trapped in time; from trendy loft apartments that
house my sons in separate cities to the empty house of a friend willing to
accept some weary road travelers; from a lake house filled with family memories
to the living room of a friend who graciously offered one last visit.
So many stories to tell, and yet every time I felt pulled to put pen to paper or fingertips to phone, a voice within gently advised, “Just be. Wait. Tales have time enough to be told, but this moment, this next line in this traveler’s tale is happening now. If you stop to write about it, it will have passed.” Now nestled near a fire in an old lodge with a hound at my feet and rain gently falling outside, there is time.
All these different places, each with its own unique style and individual flair, generously opened their doors and graciously welcomed me into the hearts of their homes and, despite some of their appearances, their hospitality never wavered. I could almost feel the wisdom in the walls of the 130-year-old Victorian mansion as its stately entry greeted my weary bones late one dark, rain-soaked night. The boathouse walls’ great logs still swelled with pride as if they were even now the young trees that had covered the Adirondack mountains in the late 1800s. A modern city flat in Madrid’s sweltering summer heat provided a warm and wonderful respite to reunite after 30 years with college housemates that time and miles found their way in between. Then, onto a wine- and tapas-laden trip to a family home in Spain’s Asturias region where old memories were shared and new ones created as ocean breezes cooled our nights and warmed our hearts with the hospitality this small seaside town extended.
The darkened wood paneling and hints of avocado green that draw me back to my Brady and Partridge family-filled youth of the 1970s, surround the walls of the Wisconsin lake house that has offered itself as part of our family. Like the heavy rains they have endured up north this summer, the memories begin to flood my mind: the endless laps on this little lake that began with a ripple and a tightly held inner tube, to full speed ahead as our boys circled their fingers asking for one more lap, one more wake to jump, one more chance to drop a ski or knock their brother from their tube. So, when it came time to drop my youngest back at school, I found comfort in the retro 70s style of his dorm as I looked up to see myself in the groovy mirrored ceiling that has reflected decades of hotel guests entering this now dated lobby. Several flights up, this old Howard Johnsons now serves as my son’s sophomore abode where an aging bathroom and lofted bunk give way to a tree-filled window offering a sweet glimpse of green in the heart of the city of Boston.
The exposed brick and trendy locations of the loft apartments my two sons lay their heads in each night (nearly 400 miles apart with Canada in between), give me a peek into the role their surroundings play in their daily lives. I fondly recall that time in my life where I just wanted to be in the heart of it all. I somehow absorbed the wisdom the walls encircling me offered with their storied history of long-ago tenants—those who came along well before me and my boxes-turned-end tables and my oversized bed that barely fit in an old dining room. I experienced so much joy in witnessing these moments first hand and feeling the pride and sense of place these lofts provide for my sons stepping strongly in adulthood.
After a long day’s drive and without the stamina to mush on the rest of the way, an empty suburban home of a friend served as our gracious innkeeper for the night. With a garage code in hand and the phone on speaker, we laughed together as we made our way through her house as she guided us towards our individual rooms to sleep, all the while seeking our opinions about which walls to paint and how to spruce up her 90s kitchen. There was such joy in her voice as she gladly shared her space and wine options knowing we would rest comfortably surrounded by her happy walls—something a quick overnight in a hotel could never provide.
One precious friend found the strength to greet me at her door despite the fact that cancer had left her so thin, so frail and yet still strong and beautiful at the same time. Her brother and mother were working among her gorgeous flower beds that I had always admired and, as always, a puzzle with the pieces spread were on the living room coffee table and her spirit was as strong as ever. It wasn’t easy for her and I knew her circle had tightened and was nearly closing as her days grew fewer, so I was overwhelmed with gratitude for these precious moments she could muster as we laughed about my travels that she loved to follow. Talk of her children and the thin veil she would be crossing gave way to laughter as we wondered how she might show up in this world when her body no longer walked among us.
Each roof that gracefully covered my head, each night I was away from home had its own story to tell and just like a good book, each one opened its pages to a place it was saving just for me as if the sentences prior were written just waiting for my arrival. Creating a beautifully designed home isn’t always about how you fill the space, but how the space holds you. Each stop, each stay, each conversation, was an open invitation to be present, to be held in each moment. It’s not always about how comfortable the chair is but how much comfort is felt around a table—in the laughter, the conversations, and the words not spoken.
Holding space for someone is one of the most generous gifts you can share whether the kitchen ever gets done, the floors refinished or the furniture replaced. Moments shared and freely given despite your design, your diagnosis, your daily duties or dramas, are one definitive way to create a home that has meaning. Sharing your home means so much more than opening the door; it often requires opening a window into your soul, creating a bit more space in your heart. So, all the while I was traveling, a hound ran happily in the fields of Finchville, Kentucky, patiently waiting for my return while her loving foster family held space in their home and their hearts knowing my heart had room for one more hope-filled hound.
You can reason away or try to make sense of it all when trying to perfect your house as if it were one to grace the pages of the latest design magazine, but understand a real home isn’t perfect just like any one of us, so go ahead, open your door, open that window, hold space for the next guest in your life. Just be, take time to look out that dirty window and find something that brings you awe, even if it’s your own breath that fogs the glass.
When my weary wheels finally rolled me home just hours after my dear friend’s passing, I couldn’t help but leave my bags at the door and go to my windows just for a glimpse at my trees and a moment to grieve. As my eyes looked out, there she was, slyly looking up at me in the form of a fox, holding space for my heart to heal and my breath to be taken away at the wonder and awe of it all. There truly is no place like home.