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This week has been a busy one. I took my first trip (since I moved here) to Toronto and got to see a bunch of people! It was so comforting to see people who have known me for more then 2 months - and at the same time incredibly unsettling. Since I hadn't seen anyone in person since I moved here it was shocking to realize how much I had changed while I hung out with them. Being here has changed me faster then I expected, but to be honest, as much as it was great to see them and to feel like part of the company again, I was really looking forward to going home to Waterloo by Thursday morning. This is not to say that I don't want my friends to come visit me or move here (hint, hint!), I think it just means that in the end, despite how miserable I was to leave everyone, I made the right choice for me, with the right timing.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, my new friends were covering for me in my absence. Not that I had much doubt, but they are turning into excellent friends and i'm looking forward to all the adventures we have planned in the coming weeks (did I mention October is going to be crazy??? I might not be in town for a full week until November!).

My second largest hope for the TO trip was to not have to think about my nationality for a few days  (since i'd be hanging with Americans). This turned out to be an incredibly false hope since my nationality was in my face more then ever. It became clear to me that after this experience I am going to have trouble "being an american" again .. . . but i'm not yet sure I want to pursue being Canadian. Kind of a pickle . . . that does have some time to work itself out. But I really do want to settle somewhere and feel at home. Unfortunately, as much as I try to downplay its importance, my national identity is a factor in how I feel at home in a place. Hopefully time will reveal more cards and my choice will become easier.

So I now have my first visitor in Waterloo! Which I will write about once she leaves, but after this glut of visiting/visitor I probably won't see anyone I know from the states until mid December. Feast and famine but what can you do. I feel like I see America more then I see the people I care about in it. Niagara falls back in Sept, the southernmost tip of Canada (and possibly Detroit) next week, who knows after that!
redleaf: (flags)
So my friends here have finally realized that I am not a very "good" American. Took them long enough. But I am obviously not Canadian either. Which brings me to today's topic: Identity

When you move to a new place you get the chance to tweak your activities and interests a bit - you don't already have commitments, and no one there knows what to expect of you (so you get invited to do a wider range of things etc). (You could also try to change something more significant, an aspect of your personality or something like being vegetarian - I'm not doing that here, the transition is disorienting enough without trying to change myself that much) I really enjoy this part of moving, because I get to try a bunch of new things. Some of them suck, and i'll never do them again, but some of them turn out to be super fun. This transition has made me embrace more social activities - probably due to the absolute isolation I feel regularly (who knew being able to text people would make you feel so connected to them!), but mostly it has made me embrace active activities again. Which is fantastic, I need the endorphins and the weather has been absolutely beautiful up here. I'm also hopefully learning to downhill ski this winter, so this should continue into not so nice weather :).

So if you could try three new things, what would they be?

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