Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Erin Gee

GET UPDATES FROM Erin Gee
 

Home Is Where the Heart Is (But What if That Isn't Where You're From?)

Posted: 02/27/2012 4:24 pm

I've come to realize that New York and I are in an emotionally abusive relationship. No matter how many times she breaks my heart, I'm always coming back for more. And each time, it's worse.

I've been coming to New York pretty much annually since 2007, however my last two trips have been for reasons other than tourism. Oddly enough, it's been these two trips that have made The City feel like home. I have been able to live like a local and get a feeling of what life would be like if I lived there. I have also been able to make personal connections and friendships with like-minded and like-lifestyled people who work in an industry I would love to break into.

But why the melancholy every time I leave? Why the complete and utter aching of my body, the ill feeling in my stomach, the dread of returning to my "real" life? I'm a traveller through and through, so I'm used to leaving behind places that I love, but no matter what, as soon as it comes time to leave New York, I'm immediately planning my return. Forget somewhere new; I just want to be back there.

But why?

I am a born and raised Vancouverite. I love Vancouver -- the laid-back lifestyle, the mild (albeit, rainy) weather, the juxtaposition of ocean and mountains -- but I have absolutely no emotional connection to it at all. Yes, all my family and friends are in Vancouver, but that has never stopped me, from the day it came to applying for university, to consider moving and living elsewhere. At every opportunity to leave Vancouver, I am a willing (and usually a leading) participant in the plans.

What I love about travel is going somewhere new and exploring it to the point of familiarity, and New York constantly satiates that need and desire. But it has become more than that. Vancouver's laid-back lifestyle is a love/hate dichotomy for me. I love it because it's fun and allows you to be active. But at the same time, the laissez-faire attitude makes my go-getter nature come off as aggressive and abrasive. People at home fail to understand why I want to be busy all the time, why I get involved in so many projects and extra-curriculars. I do it to fill the time, to fill the void that the lifestyle (and job) gives me.

So, coming back from yet another amazing, life-changing trip, I can't help but know that the time is coming; the time where I need to make a decision about what life I want to lead, and it's not going to be easy.

 

Follow Erin Gee on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Erin_Gee

I've come to realize that New York and I are in an emotionally abusive relationship. No matter how many times she breaks my heart, I'm always coming back for more. And each time, it's worse. I've bee...
I've come to realize that New York and I are in an emotionally abusive relationship. No matter how many times she breaks my heart, I'm always coming back for more. And each time, it's worse. I've bee...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 6
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
11:37 PM on 02/27/2012
If you do not like Vancouver just leave. As a fellow Vancouverite it is brutal to hear you say this. This is one of the most beautiful places in the world and if you do not see that then that is your loss. Have fun in New York.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwgray08
11:17 AM on 02/29/2012
Beauty only lasts as long as your eyes don't become bored and stale from looking at it, and that usually happens once the clouds and dampness settle in for 6 long months of dreariness in this city. It's beautiful on a sunny day but those are surprisingly few and far between and there are dozens if not hundreds of places equally or more beautiful than Vancouver in the world.
07:48 PM on 02/27/2012
New York is the most "GOGOGO" city I've ever seen. It never sleeps, people run around at top speed and why shouldn't they: there are always interesting things to do. And being as familiar as a Vancouverite with getting overcharged at every turn, sticker shock is minimized. It is an intoxicating atmosphere.

That being said it's a subjective matter of social circles to say that people in Vancouver aren't pushing themselves to stay busy or there is a lack of things to do. It is a VERY active city and the mild climate and plethora of outdoorsy possibilities is too amazing to ignore. Clearly the author has different interests than the natural ones and she gravitates toward pursuits of the indoor variety, of which New York can offer the best in the world.
06:42 PM on 02/27/2012
Vancouver was prostituted to Asia to make a few people very rich.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwgray08
11:18 AM on 02/29/2012
Under the category of funny cause it's (somewhat) true
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwgray08
04:44 PM on 02/27/2012
It's because Vancouver lacks a heartbeat, a vibe, a culturally-rich atmosphere. It's kind of an easy city, neutral in most regards. It's just not a very interesting place, but it offers a lifestyle for certain types of people (and those who can put up with its depressing climate).