I renounced my citizenship in the State of Maine twenty-eight years ago, when I moved away after college. Locals will tell you I’m not a real Mainer anyways; I was still “from away”, having lived there only 24 of my first 25 years.

When I left, I was eager to leave the land of poverty, ignorance, and racism behind me and start a new, adult life in Boston. I did my best to sever all ties with the land of my youth; but there was always one obligation that kept pulling me back: my parents.

For more than two dozen years, I continued making regular trips north to visit. Going back to Maine was always uncomfortable for me, like perpetually picking at the scab covering the many reasons why I’d left; it never fully healed.

That obligation to keep returning came to an end in January, when my mother passed away. My only remaining duty was last week’s interment ceremony, and the brief family gathering in her memory.

So now I can turn my back and leave Augusta for what might well be the very last time, and say perhaps my final farewell to the State of Maine.

I suppose it’s a major life passage. I left three decades ago, but this is truly the final severance of my ties to Maine. It’s the cause for a little bit of melancholy, but a much larger sense of closure, relief, and joy.

Don’t get me wrong; I don’t really hate Maine… I carry treasured memories of some of the people and places and experiences of my childhood. But that chapter ended thirty years ago, and there’s no point in lingering in the vicinity of long-past adventures.

It’s futile to cling to people and places that have already undergone three or four decades of change; what’s truly important are the memories I have of them, not the present reality. And unlike the present reality, I can carry those treasured memories with me, no matter where I go.

It’s also ironic that my trip home from Maine involved driving to Boston and flying out of Logan airport. You see, my mother’s death also removed my biggest reason for coming back to pass through Boston.

So this trip was a farewell to Boston, as well. Unlike Maine, Boston is a place I dearly love, where I feel at home, and have lots of recent history that I chose to create. So I’m hoping there will be reasons to visit that bring me back in the future; I just won’t have the convenient opportunity provided by flying in on the way up to Maine.

But even in Boston, a lot of what I loved here is history, and many of the people have moved on. I guess it’s one of those lessons that only comes when one has lived long enough: that clinging to people and places from the past is futile, and the part that matters most—your memories of them—can be taken with you, wherever you choose to live.

Even if you were never to return again.

Well, hasn't this been an interesting month? Unfortunately, you haven't heard much about it, because I don't tend to go on about day-to-day stuff, and the stuff that was significant required the approval of a bunch of people to share, so I just bagged it. It's too bad, because some of it was truly amazing, but those emotions are gone now.

It all started out amazingly well. First I got to see my favorite reggae band, Culture, with my buddy Atticus. Then I made a weekend trip to Detroit to stay at a B&B on the shores of Lake Huron with four very close friends. The intensity and intimacy of the connections we forged were absolutely humbling. I would have written a great deal about this amazing experience, but I felt limited by my friends' privacy concerns. Let's just say that it was pretty mind-blowing.

Even through the middle of the month, things were pretty damned good. Inna and I took a two-day foliage trip through the Berkshires that was really marvelous. And the very next day I got to meet one of my magazine's newer writers for the first time, which is always a treasured experience. We got along pretty well and had a good time together.

But the nights got longer and colder and we had our first light snow squall, and things really seem to go to hell. The intense connection I shared with my friends in Detroit completely soured when I discovered one of them lying to me. From there, things rapidly spun out of control, until the whole group is now making completely baseless accusations about me, telling me what I think and feel about them. And their little fantasies are complete fabrications of their paranoid insecurities. While I think it'll blow over, it's causing me endless frustration and anger, which are emotions I usually have no difficulty controlling, but not so right now.

At the exact same time, I developed a large fluid swelling in my right knee that was diagnosed as pre-patellar bursitis. While it's not an immense inconvenience, it does limit how much walking I can do, and prohibits me from doing any cycling at all. Now, two weeks later, the symptoms haven't changed at all – if anything they've gotten worse – and I find that, too, frustrating.

Today was, of course, also my 39th birthday. Happy birthday, indeed! Between having class in the evening and the limitations my bursitis places on my mobility, I wasn't able to do anything special. That, of course, left me free to dwell on my close friends' betrayals and our ongoing disputes.

And my usual end-of-year angst plays into all of this. The holidays are always the most painful, difficult time of year for me, mostly due to the obligations of family, friends, work, and school. And having a Halloween birthday, this is the official start of the holidays for me. I'm feeling pressured by my obligation to go to Maine to visit my mother, and I have just two weeks to do all four of my projects for my Quark class. As Inna has helped me see, I have a very dysfunctional relationship with "obligation", so the holidays and end of semesters really stress me out.

But I guess it's not all bad. I turned in a pretty good art project tonight (which only one other student out of ten completed), and I cracked open my Craggymore 12, which will soon be followed by a CCIC chaser. Party on. <shrug>

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