Okay, all you far-flung writers, need a jumping off point for a new essay? Here goes:
When you:
- are transplanted in a new country
- are launched out of your comfort zone
- are separated from those you love by expansive oceans and thousands of miles
- are incapable of communicating with those around you because you don't speak the language
- spend minutes/hours/days pantomiming even the simplest nouns (and feel like a cross between an intrepid explorer and a complete ass every time you do it)
- struggle to interpret new cultural cues
Me + (New Place) = ?
You can't help it. It's human nature. We're driven to define ourselves in relation to our surroundings. Especially those of us who are writers.
The first time I asked myself this question was back in October 2006, about six months after I'd moved from the United States to Shanghai, China. I was back in the U.S. on my first trip home and was feeling completely overwhelmed by the number of choices I faced in the cereal aisle at the grocery store and a number of other things. I wrote about it here (at my old blog).
Since then, I've mulled over this very question again and again...verbally and in my head...but I haven't yet (re-)tackled it on the page. It's time...I feel it coming. The distillation of who I am in China.
And you? Have you tackled this question in your writing?
If not, give it a shot. It has all the makings of a great essay.
If so, what was your answer?
I think it'd be a good essay, but right now I'm trying to figure out who I am in my current place. HAHAHA!
Cheers,
SLC
Posted by: Spencer L Casey | February 02, 2010 at 10:05 PM
Let me know if you figure it out, Spencer. A good place to start. :)
Posted by: Kristin Bair O'Keeffe | February 03, 2010 at 06:11 AM