Religion Magazine

The Treachery of Absorption

By Richardl @richardlittleda

When living away from home, and once you realise that the stay may be long term - things begin to change. You learn the language. You grow to love the food. You stop scanning the supermarket shelves for those things which you know you can't get here anyway. In short, you learn to fit in. To do so can be quite gratifying - a successful experiment in cultural adaptation. This is not where you meant to be, and it may not have been your choice to come here - but you are making the best of it.

And then, the moment of treachery comes. You are walking through your new-found neighbourhood, or talking in your new language with your new friends - when you stumble because you cannot remember the old ones. Perhaps you struggle for a word which was once so familiar on your lips and it just won't come. You're glad the people in that other country can't see you now, because you would feel ashamed.

There are days now, in this land of grief - where I feel like I am starting to fit in. I recognise that single man in the mirror and do not flinch. I look at on old picture in a new space or sit in a new chair in an old room and it feels...normal. Then there are other moments where that new normal feels like a treachery to the old. It feels like the person who has studied their new language so hard that when a newspaper comes in their mother tongue they can no longer read it. Absorption, which was such a laudable aim, feels like treachery in that moment.

At least one of the many cards I received on entering this new country quoted the phrase below. I was certainly surprised to see it on the side of a burger van in a safari park in the desert! It is, of course, true. However, I am learning that in this place I have to know not only who holds the futuure, but who holds the past.

The treachery of absorption
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