I'm sitting in the Toronto airport.
It's 6:15 am in my home time zone.  I've been up since 11:00 pm yesterday in my home time zone.  I slept two hours before that.  And I slept for two hours or so on the plane from Newfoundland to Toronto.
It was a good weekend.  Filled with friends (family, really), laughter, love, prayer and hugs.  Some harder things too.  But good.
And now, now I'm ready to be home for a while.  To settle into life.  To rest.  To pray and think and write.  To sort out several major decisions that need to be made.  To begin the process of seeking a community of believers in my own city to call home for a while.
I'm looking forward to my own bed, my own house, my own car (assuming we can get George started after the non-starting debacle that immediately proceeded my weekend away.)
I'm near tears, the good kind and the not so good kind.
I spent a lot of time this weekend in the arms of a dear friend, one of the few people in the world with whom I feel totally safe, and free to be myself.  It's always hard to say goodbye to her, and this morning was no exception.  But it was such a treat to be with her and be held by her and to hold her even for a few days.
It was great to watch two friends get married.  It was great to sit in a tiny cafe by the Atlantic Ocean and laugh and talk over a shared breakfast with friends.  It was great to sit in a pub, and a house, and various other locations and share laughter and food.  It was good to hike by the ocean.
But now, sitting here in Toronto, half-way through a 2.5 hour layover, I'm waiting for home.  I'm looking forward to seeing whichever family member greets me at the airport.  I'm looking forward to hopefully getting George jump-started, and then taking him for a drive towards the mountains to charge his battery.  I'm looking forward to cooking my own dinner, and then a nice early arrival in bed - in my own bed and bedroom.
One hour to go until my flight boards.  Then (hopefully) a couple hours of sleep on the plane.  Then Home.  A safe place.
Home is a good thing to have locationally.  Home is a good thing to have in general.
I have a locational home in Calgary.  I have a spiritual home in Jesus, and in the company of some of the friends with whom I shared the weekend.  I have an emotional home in the arms of a friend.
Places of safety all.
It will be good to be home.
(And to those of you who are Canadian, Happy Thanksgiving!)
Monday, October 13, 2008
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