I've lived in the midwest, the northeast, the deep south and Europe.
[...]
mended, I think we're the same person.
Strange I've not noticed before now...
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When people ask me where I'm from (and I have reason to believe they don't mean which country), I say Minnesota, though that's not technically true.
I was born in the south. Except for a year or so somewhere out west while I was an infant, we lived in a suburb of a big southern city until I was nine-and-a-half. Then we moved to a medium sized southern city about couplfe of hundred miles away. I went to college at a state Uni a couple of hours from there. My parents moved to a tiny town in the middle of nowhere in another southern state the week after I left for college. After graduation I was nomadic, living in a variety of southern cities and towns for about four years before landing in Minneapolis. My parents now live in yet another southern town, where I know no one but them, and my sibling in another still.
I had always hated hated hated the south -- the heat, the hayfever, the obsession with the Confederacy, the "Praise Jesus"-ness, etc. Minnesota was and is far from perfect, but I quickly grew to love it and it is the only place I've lived up to now that I describe or have described as "home". I was there longer than I've lived anywhere else (nearly fifteen years) and went through three major life-changing events while there. It will always be "home", even though I do not expect ever to live there again. To the extent that I have a regionally-identifiable accent, it is Minnesotan. Ja sure, you betcha. When I thought I would probably have to move back to the US, it was the primary area I planned to focus on for a job. It was the only place I thought I could move back to and the only one I was emotionally willing to consider.
But I've been gone eight-and-a-half years and it isn't really home anymore. For that matter, neither is the US, even though I've only been in Europe three-and-a-half years (this time -- I had an earlier, shorter stint a few years back). For two months I've been in a new city and country and in many ways it feels like home already, even though I only speak two of the four most common languages (and I don't speak the most common one). My soon-to-be-wife is also a transplant, but she has been here fifteen years and admits that England isn't home to her anymore, so I expect we'll stay here. We talk about retiring some day to Oxford or Stratford, and we might, but the strange little kingdom in which we are now building a life together has many charms.