The Homecoming
continued
devastation far
worse than this. I stabbed at my eyes with the useless handkerchief, trying to explain. . .
what? A reaction so strange, so totally illogical, that I didn't understand it myself.
In a well-meant effort to reassure me, my companion launched into an upbeat description
of England's postwar recovery. Below us, gang planks were hoisted into place. Satisfied that
he'd stopped the flow of tears, the man left to join the other disembarking passengers.
His kindness, however, was misplaced. The tears were not for sorrow but for joy. I was
crying because I was home at last.
Found
The sense of coming home to a place I'd never been. . .
Where could such a bizarre reaction have come from? It was my first trip anywhere
overseas. What I could see of the town was foreign-looking -- small houses, big gardens, cars
of unfamiliar make traveling on the wrong side of narrow streets. Yet I recognized the place
as though I'd been looking for it all my life.
Or -- as though it had been looking for me. In some unfathomable way, I had been found.
And till that moment I had not known that I was lost. . .
Since then, I've returned to England many times, and always with that inexplicable sense
of homecoming. Is it the books I grew up with, I've wondered -- Winnie the Pooh and Mary
Poppins, the Brontes, Shakespeare? Or could it be some kind of ancestral memory -- those many
times-great-grandparents who came from England?
How to explain it, even arriving by plane, herded with hundreds of other half-asleep
passengers through the anonymous corridors of Heathrow Airport: that swelling of joy, that
welling of tears. I belong! I belong! The apologetic demur to sympathetic strangers: "No, I'm
all right. Really"
The Preview
Really all right, in a way I cannot explain, but which I've come to feel, has a parallel
in the life of the spirit. It was so similar, that spiritual homecoming when it happened to me
many years later, so filled with the shock of recognizing a place I'd never seen, that I see
my experience on that ship deck as a kind of foretaste of a bigger reality.
Since then I've talked to others who've had a similar reaction to some unfamiliar
landscape. The explanation for all of us, I think now, lies not in the past, in childhood
books or family history, but in the future. I believe that everyone is given this mysterious
affinity for some physical place as a kind of preview of the true journey home. The place is
different for each of us, but the promise is the same -- you have a homeland. You will not
always be a wanderer. There is a place prepared for you, and when you get there you will say,
"I have lived here always."      
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