Here’s the thing about moving to another country. It involves living in another country.
At first, living in Australia felt like being on a tour organized by a sadistic travel agency. Looking to visit Western Australia? Step out of the guidebook and live like a local! Try to open a bank account! Live with a broken water heater! Enroll your children in school! Learn how to drive on the other side of the road!
Ten weeks into The Ultimate Australia Family Vacation, I began to feel the obnoxiously privileged exhaustion of too much vacation. This has been fun and I’m grateful for the opportunity. Now I want to go home. Then my head spun around exorcist-style when I realized, blimey mate, this is home.
There are clear signs we live in Perth. We get personalized junk mail. The doorbell rings often – friends wanting to play or teenagers selling candy bars. Weeds are sprouting and need to be pulled. My daughter says “G’day,” and it sounds authentic. The butcher knows me. I no longer stare at the coins in my wallet wondering which one is ten cents. I have strong opinions about neighborhood redevelopment plans. I whip in and out of tight parking spaces.
I have started to experience the joy of completely normal days. There is less what am I doing here and more I am here doing things. My brain has finally plopped down in a comfy chair and stopped racing around like an imprisoned Tasmanian Devil at the Perth Zoo.
And Operation Friendship seems to be picking up. We had our first adult dinner party last night, after a day spent marinating chicken and putting books back on shelves. Our guests brought housewarming plants and champagne. They gobbled up guacamole and told stories of pharmacy break-ins, celebrity encounters, and pre-teen angst. At one point, the Aussies at the table were debating whether or not the dingo did in fact eat the baby (verdict = yes it did). We drank too much and ate strawberries with fresh cream. It was ordinary and extraordinary.