When
we moved to Cambridge almost eleven years ago, we had no clear sense
of how long eleven years are. To begin with, we even considered
keeping our house and renting it out until we came back. We didn't
contemplate that a lot can change in eleven years.
When
we had settled in the house which I felt was the first and only home
I truly loved, I thought I would like to stay there forever.
Cambridge is a wonderful place, physically and intellectually, and
when people asked whether we planned to go “home” after my
retirement, we replied, no we planned “to stay home”.
Everything
changed with the referendum when it initially felt that we might not
even be allowed to stay, and later that we probably didn't want to
stay in a country that didn't want us. Yet for various reasons we
didn't necessarily want to move back to Sweden, so we discussed other
options: an EU country with a pleasant climate, good health care and
low living costs.
But
all these deliberations are irrelevant now, and all decisions are
governed by totally different forces. When I left Milton, I hoped
that subsequent decisions were not too urgent, that I would have time
to think, recuperate, calibrate. But for a number of reasons things
moved on much quicker than I could predict, and even before the house
sale commenced I had to consider my options. Even if it had been
financially viable, I was confident that I didn't want to live on my
own in the house where so many happy hours were spent. The house was
too big for two and far, far too big for one. Selling the house and
buying something closer to town? Not with Cambridge house prices.
Selling the house and buying a smaller one in a village further away?
But here the crucial question of networks came in.
If
you live in a village, you are dependent either on a car or on public
transport. The latter isn't always reliable. Our Milton bus doesn't
run on Sundays. I don't know how many more years I can drive. I have
already stopped driving in the dark. My optician says I am fine for
now, but how much longer? Thus, in the near future, isolated in a
village.
Hearing
this argument, my colleagues said: But you have so many friends here!
True, I have friends, some closer than other; but most of my
connections are work-related. As long as I come to the office every
day, chat to colleagues and students, have lunch in college,
occasionally go out for a drink or dinner, I am part of a community.
But how often do I see friends outside work? Admittedly, I have
become better in taking initiatives since I moved to Gatehouse: I
suggest lunches, teas, walks, concerts and movies. Still, I probably
meet my two closest friends once a month, and the rest more seldom,
some as seldom as once a year. It's inevitable: people are busy, they
have families, interests, obligations, and even if I make a point of
coming over from my hypothetical village as often as possible, how
often can I realistically count on meeting up with someone? In
two-three years all students who know me will be gone. That leaves a
limited circle of potential lunch companions. And how many will take
the trouble to come and visit me in my village?
But
surely I can come to events in my old workplace: lectures, seminars,
conferences, open days..? Yes, I certainly can, but do I necessarily
want to? I would hate to become a prop who turns up at events, to
everyone's irritation, just to remind the world of their existence.
Frankly, I am done with academic life. I want to do other stuff.
And
certainly I can do other stuff in my hypothetical village. When
people ask me what I plan to do after retirement, I have a long list
that
I have already shared here once. It hasn't changed much.
The
past six months have shown that I enjoy solitude and would probably
feel fine. And yet there is an emotional reason that has eventually
tipped the scales. I believe I would feel more lonely in a place
where I once was happy.
So
after long and painful argument with myself, I have decided, and the
decision felt like liberation. After all, I have children and
grandchildren, and although, as I always claim, we have been seeing
each other more during these past eleven years than when we lived in
the same city, they might want to meet up every now and then. I have
friends in Stockholm, with whom I keep in touch on social media. If I
meet one a week, it will take me at least a year to reconnect with
them all. I can even make new friends through my new networks, such
as miniature making.
I
will be able to do all the stuff I have been planning to do –
except falconry which is banned in Sweden. I may find other things I
want to do. I will most likely not have a proper garden, but I have
just discovered that there is such a thing as balcony gardening, and
it's big! There is scope for imagination, as Anne of Green Gables
would say.
The
nice thing about these future plans is that I can always come back to
Cambridge for a while. And friends who want to see me will have to
find time to do so.
Balcony gardening: an option
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