Today I'm pleased to share the work of author, Tiffani Burnett-Velez. Maybe Pliny the Elder had it right all along!
My mother used to hang an antique wooden, heart-shaped,
wreath in the kitchen in all four houses we lived in while I was growing up. It
had the words, “Home is Where the Heart is” hanging from another piece of
circular wood and a tattered strip of twine in the center. I remember thinking
that the saying was not true, because childhood is not always an easy thing,
and home was just bricks and wood. Home was not always where my heart was
growing up, though my mother and stepfather loved me and provided well for my
physical needs. My biological father was in the military, and sometimes I did
not see him for two years at a time. This hole always left my heart a bit
wanting. My heart, it seemed, was in more places than one. So, how does one
find home when affections are split into several pieces?
I went through childhood, high school, and college kind of
feeling out of place, feeling like I was not really part of anyone’s home or
culture. And then I met the man who would become my husband. I remember the day
clearly. I had returned home to Pennsylvania (a state I had only lived in for
one year and had not yet embraced) from my freshman year of college in Georgia,
and my mother immediately insisted that I attend church with her. I refused at
first. This was the last thing I wanted to do on a weekday evening at age 19,
but my mother was strangely persistent.
“You might meet the boy you’re going to marry there,” she
said, and I chided her for talking like a character in a Jane Austen novel.
“If I’m lucky,” I said, “I won’t meet anyone.”
But, sure enough, the first human I saw walking down the
aisle (of the world’s most incredibly boring church) was a handsome, quiet
Puerto Rican all dressed up in a suit and tie. I remember thinking his attire
was far too hot for a warm May evening in southeastern Pennsylvania, only
minutes from the Mason-Dixon Line. I told my mother, “He’s too shiny,” too
clean and well put together. As a girl who had grown up on the edge of the
southern California surf in Ventura County, I didn’t take well to young men who
looked like lawyers long before they had even graduated college. But there was
something about this one, and over the months, we got to know each other even
though he already had a girlfriend.
The girlfriend was a peculiarity to me, because she never
had anything intelligent to say, and the boy and I could spend hours talking
about things she’d never heard of, and before long, the girlfriend left town
and ran away with a high school dropout to North Carolina. It was only a matter
of weeks before the boy (Leonardo) and I started dating. We quickly formed a
bond tighter than any I had ever known.
Leonardo is an only child, and his parents moved from Puerto
Rico to the United States in the late 1960’s. Though U.S. citizens, they very
much had an immigrant experience, and Leonardo had a “first generation”
experience that many children of immigrants do. Many times he felt alone in his
American life. Meeting me, a girl from California who had been raised in a
neighborhood that was overwhelmingly Hispanic, made us a perfect match. I spoke
fluent Spanish, though a different dialect than his, and when I heard him
speaking to his parents’, Leonardo’s language offered me a sense of grounding
and familiarity in a world that was largely Pennsylvania Dutch (German).
We shared interests and political views. Our artistic
talents were similar; he was a musician enrolled in a prestigious Music
Education program, and I was an aspiring writer and English Literature major.
Within two and a half years of that first meeting, we were married. Our parents
were mostly furious with the news of our engagement, urging us to finish
college first and warning us that “life was hard and young marriages like this
often don’t last”. But we ignored them all, good intentions and all. Nothing
can quite supersede the happiness of two people who love each other and want
nothing more than to spend a lifetime together.
Our first home was a
sad looking one bedroom apartment with a kitchen sink that stank of sulfur and
rotten eggs, and the bathtub was full of centipedes and spiders, but we were
happy, because we were together. Our grocery budget was $10 a week, and we
worked hard for that even. We didn’t have cable, we never went out to eat, and
we didn’t have new cars, but it was one of the happiest and freest times of our
lives. The sufferings of newlywed poverty were not a disappointment to us, as
we saw ourselves together forever and with plenty of time to build up a home
that would not look like a Soviet cinder-block high-rise and reek of the burnt
curry from the neighbor who shared our paper-thin apartment walls. Our plans
would be immediately tested when I became suddenly and gravely ill.
Within seven months of marriage, I became completely
paralyzed with a rare neurological disease called Guillain-Barre Syndrome,
compounded by an additional neuromuscular disease called Myasthenia Gravis. My
respiratory system completely shut down and I was unable to breathe on my own.
The entire disintegration of my nervous system took only three weeks. I was
pregnant with our first child, and doctors were not certain that either of us
would survive. Leonardo and I would have to lean heavily on our shared faith
and the family we had created for one another. Suddenly, the old apartment no
longer mattered, only home did and that definition had already moved beyond
bricks and wood.
I obviously survived GBS, and the ensuing weeks and months
of recovery, as did our son. He turned 18 last September and was recently
accepted to the Boston Conservatory to study Music Composition. He is a fair
proportion of his father and I – half music/half writing. Over the years, we
had three more children, each of them adding to the bond we began on that hot
May evening in 1993. We have owned three homes, and lived in countless
apartments (some better than others), but we are settled wherever we go,
because home really is where the heart is,
the one we formed into one connected unit years ago.
For many, “home” is a delicate issue, even a painful one.
For me, it was always mysterious. What did it mean? Where does one actually
find it? It is a feeling, a safety net, a place where one can be his or herself
without judgement. I hope Leonardo and I have created this for our children and
for our friends and extended family who spend time with us, because home really
is a state of mind, an offering of love from one person to another.
Tiffani
has been a freelance writer since 1996. Her nonfiction work has appeared in
magazines in the US and Europe. Her first novel, Budapest, was featured at the
NY Book Festival. Her WWII era novella, A Berlin Story, is an Amazon#1
bestseller in its category, and her contemporary women's fiction novel, All This Time, was released by Booktrope in March 2015. You can read more from
Tiffani at her blog, This Writer's Life.
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3 comments:
What an amazing story! Thanks for sharing this, Tiffani.
I love this wonderful story! Thanks, Tiffani.
Thank you, Eleanor :)
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