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A postcard from Lake Ainslie sent back to Ontario by my mother in 1967, during my first trip to Nova Scotia.  | 
Do you ever wonder what could have been? If you had made a         different choice, or followed a different path? If you stayed         put instead of moving on? Or if you said yes instead of no to a         new life challenge? 
       We are all making choices constantly in our lives. Small         choices, like what to have for breakfast. Or big life choices,         such as changing jobs or changing life styles. It's all the         constant decisions that we face that can sometimes become         overwhelming. 
       We made a big decision ten years ago, and started making         plans to move from Ontario to Nova Scotia. I had lived in         Ontario for all but one of forty five years, and my husband had         lived there for most of his life as well, albeit he moved around         the country with his job for many years. Friends asked us why we         wanted to move, and most assumed we made the choice to be closer         to a son and his family. But that was not the case, as we were         leaving a daughter, son, and grandchild behind. You can't make a         choice between children. 
       No, my longing to live in Nova Scotia was buried deep in my         psyche, something that I had carried in my heart from early in         my life without any explanation. Maybe it started when I         traveled to Cape Breton with my parents when I was six. I have         no memories of that trip, but perhaps I'll be able to find some         evidence when I go through my father's slides. When I was         eighteen, I convinced a friend to take a road trip with me and,         with our parents' permission, we drove from London to see  the         "Gathering of the Clans" in Nova Scotia and PEI. I had visions         of thousands of people gathering, but that wasn't the case. We         saw some highland dancers and a few bagpipers, but most of our         trip was driving from place to place just absorbing the east         coast atmosphere. We had some adventures that my parents didn't         hear about until we got home. The flat tire in Montreal on the         day we left home, and replaced by a spare that we traveled on         for the rest of the trip, horrified my dad when he heard about         it. We didn't realize that a spare wasn't the same as a regular         tire! 
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Thirty years after my first trip to Nova Scotia, I vacationed in Cape Breton with my husband and son. It would be ten more years before I could make my dream of moving to Nova Scotia a reality.  | 
 Recently, we took a trip back to Ontario, something we have         done quite a few times since moving. And that brings me back to         the question I opened with. Do you ever wonder what could have         been? We did a lot of that during our recent trip. What if we         had never moved? What would we be doing now? 
       Of course we'd be seeing more of our Ontario family. We         would still be living in the same house, and our son would feel         like he was coming home when he visited instead of coming to an         unfamiliar place with no memories. We have two grandchildren in         Ontario who we would be spending more time with and seeing their         changes.      
      But there is no going back, especially when your heart belongs somewhere else.
As we battled the traffic and hustle and bustle of a big Ontario city, my husband commented that it reminded him of ants on an anthill. A swarm of activity that we were no longer part of. We have no desire to move back to the place where we spent so much of our lives. I would much rather have the time to talk to the cashier at the grocery store, to acknowledge and chat with people when I'm walking my dogs. No matter where you live in Nova Scotia, it's just a quick drive to the coast. The ocean is my grounding place, the place that makes me feel at peace. I feel like I belong here, and that's a good thing to focus on.
Published in the South Shore Breaker - May 3, 2017


This is a lovely post.
ReplyDeleteAnd, very true... sometimes there's no going back.
Boy I really needed this post.
ReplyDeleteAs my daughter plans on moving back to Ontario from Nova Scotia I keep running through this in my mind.
Where do I belong ?
Nova Scotia is such a very special place and I understand entirely your love of this magical friendly province.