
It’s been two years since the first time we took a pretty big trip across the country. My children have seen 27 states (I think that’s the final count as of this time), 8 national parks, several mountain ranges (much to the chagrin of our RV’s brake pads) and have been to countless theme parks, playgrounds, pools, zoos and hiking trails. They have grown up knowing that every summer we will leave our home and live somewhere else. Sometimes one place, sometimes two, sometimes many, many more.
They never ask about their beds, their bedrooms, their toys. They never get nostalgic for the places that one would think they should. And I never realized it until now. In teaching The Odyssey to ninth graders, we discuss how the Lotus Eaters lose hope for home after eating the lotus. Maybe my children are lotus eaters every time they take a trip with us, forgetting everything before, never caring for much besides what’s ahead.
A friend asked, “Don’t your children ever ask to go home?” And I considered this. A question that should have an easy and clear answer. However, I couldn’t really say. They never ask about home, they rarely even talk about it. Everything is about what we are doing today and what ripe adventure is ready to be had.
Celia’s stomach was off on the first leg of our stay. I asked her what she thought it was and she said, “I don’t know Mommy, maybe I’m just homesick.” I laughed at her. The idea of being homesick when we were all jam-packed into this tight space together, forcing a in-your-face and not-so-fun family time. Turns out, she thought that maybe being out of the physical building of our home could actually make her sick.
Home is an idea. Not always a place. I have felt at home in many spaces this summer and some of them are certainly not my own home. In this RV, wherever it is parked and whoever is in it, it’s easy to feel attached to it, charmed by it, comforted by it like it is a home.
The dog has a specific place she sleeps under a chair, the kids switch couch-floor-couch-floor and fall asleep beside each other. When you lay down in the bed, you can feel when someone walks on the other end of the vehicle. It’s quaint in as many ways as it’s inconvenient and annoying. It’s adorable in as many ways as it’s absolutely insane. But it’s ours.
As vagabonds, however, we only get a B+. We have nearly everything under the sun in our big rig and one would be hard pressed to call what we live in “roughing it.” But, it’s indeed small, it’s indeed on wheels and it indeed does not have a washer and a dryer.
This trip we had some major belt issues related to the RV’s AC, a belt that caused us to lose power steering getting onto the ferry to this little island. With only two turns to get to the RV park off the ferry, we were able to stay and find a mechanic to fit it.
When we arrived, we were met with 5 pretty solid days of pouring rain which allowed for very little outdoor cooking and: A lot. Of wet. Towels. My feet were always damp, either stepping in a puddle or getting splashed by almost stepping in a puddle. I learned to love my black flop flops that I purchased just before I left at Target for 3.99.
And quite possibly more than once I wanted to go home. To a place where I could eat less sandwiches and hot dogs and maybe more vegetables. To a place where I didn’t have to “check the levels” before I used the restroom. To a place where I just threw stained clothes in the washer.
Travel does that to you. Makes you see all of those luxuries that you kind of take for granted, all of a sudden things that are inconvenient aren’t all that inconvenient.
And you adapt. The kids adapt. The golden retriever adapts.
A rooster crows all day near our RV park, my daughter learned to love an outdoor shower stall after the beach, I got up early and drove the golf cart to a coffee shop that had the best coffee I had ever tasted. We had a mechanic come to our RV for the first three days and work on the repair, sometimes just realizing he didn’t have the correct part. We adapted and kind of loved it. The RV did too.
Now we move on to stay outside bigger cities and not on a little island like these past 10 days. We will stay in nicer RV parks, visit other friends and family, have other minor snafus (knock on wood), but we won’t ever ask to go home.

































