Where Home Awaits

by a guy who has learned that distance measures miles, not meaning

Here I am in Houston, Texas—two thousand miles from a little house in Virginia—and the night feels just unfamiliar enough to make a man think.

It’s quiet in a different way here. Not the kind of quiet that wraps around you like a blanket, but the kind that sits beside you, waiting. The hum of the air conditioner, the distant rush of cars that never quite stop, the soft glow of a room that hasn’t yet learned your habits. And somewhere in all that… a thought slips in.

I miss home.

Not just one. All of them.

The first one comes gently, like it knows it doesn’t have to try too hard. A small house under a canopy of trees that seemed endless when you were a child. The kind of place where mornings had a rhythm. My mother moving about, making sure we were dressed right, as if the world outside required a certain readiness. My father at the table, eating quietly before heading out, already carrying the weight of the day. And my grandmother… always there, in the kitchen, doing something that didn’t need explaining. The smell alone was enough. You didn’t question it. You just knew you were home.

Back then, time didn’t rush. It wandered. Afternoons stretched. Evenings settled slowly. And happiness… it wasn’t something you chased. It just showed up, unannounced, and stayed awhile.

There was England too.

A different kind of home. Colder, yes. Wetter, definitely. The kind of place where you learn to carry on despite the weather, or maybe because of it. Rain tapping against windows like it had something to say. Snow that didn’t wait for an invitation, just arrived and changed everything for a while.

But it wasn’t the weather that made it a home.

It was the people.

And the noise—good noise. The kind that doesn’t knock before it fills a space. Little kids running through the house like dreams, feet thudding against old floors, laughter spilling into every room. Doors opening and closing. Someone always calling out for someone else. A kettle somewhere in the background, working as hard as the radiators that fought the winter cold.

And those radiators… clanking and hissing like they had their own personality, pushing warmth into rooms that needed it. But even they couldn’t quite match what was already there. Because inside those walls, love burned hotter than anything metal ever could.

Coworkers who stopped being just that. Conversations that started over work and drifted into something deeper, something that lingered long after the day was done. Evenings where you stayed longer than you planned, not because you had to—but because leaving felt like cutting something short.

Laughter that settled into the furniture. Stories that lived in the corners of rooms. A house that didn’t just stand—it held everything together. Messy, loud, alive… and full in a way that made you forget about the grey skies outside.

That was home too.

And then Virginia.

Ah… Virginia.

That quiet. That deep, settled quiet. The kind that doesn’t need to announce itself. Close enough to the mountains to feel grounded, near enough to the sea to feel open. A place where history sits patiently in the background, not demanding attention, just existing.

That’s where I found a different rhythm.

Walks with my dog, Georgie, who never once questioned where we were going, only that we were going together. The same paths, the same turns, the same park where time seemed to slow down just enough to let you breathe. Evenings where nothing much happened—and somehow, that was everything. The television humming softly, the world outside dimming, and a kind of peace that didn’t need explaining.

That was home too.

And now… Houston.

At first, it felt like a stopover. A place you pass through while thinking about somewhere else. The streets unfamiliar, the air heavier, the pace just slightly off from what you’re used to. You walk around and everything works, everything moves, but it hasn’t yet found its place in you.

But something’s been happening.

Quietly. Slowly.

The kind of change you don’t notice until you do.

I find myself listening for the door in the evenings. Waiting for her to come home. Thinking about the stories she’ll bring with her—the little things, the strange things, the moments that made her laugh during the day. And when she walks in, and the room shifts just a little… it feels different.

Warmer.

Lived in.

And in that moment, something settles.

It makes me realize that what I’ve been missing all this time wasn’t just the houses, or the places, or even the memories tied to them.

It was the feeling.

That quiet certainty that you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be, even if you don’t have the words for it.

I miss my childhood. I miss England. I miss Virginia.

I miss the versions of myself that lived in those places, the people who filled them, the moments that made them what they were.

But sitting here now, in a place that didn’t mean much not too long ago, I’m beginning to understand something I probably should’ve known all along.

Home isn’t where you started.

It’s not even where you stayed the longest.

It’s where your heart learns to rest.

And maybe… just maybe… that’s what’s happening here.

Not loudly. Not all at once.

But surely.

Because as much as I miss those homes… I think what I’ve really been missing is this feeling.

And tonight, in this quiet room in Houston, waiting for the sound of the door, I realize—

Home isn’t behind me.

It’s right here.

Waiting.


Quick reminder.

Hidden Alignment is available now in paperback or Kindle for those interested.

So if you fancy doing something slightly more productive than arguing with strangers on the internet, the link is below… along with the QR code


https://a.co/d/0enjFI6f

23 responses to “Where Home Awaits”

  1. danu40k Avatar

    And as young Dorthy said, “There’s no place like home.”

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Joey Jones Avatar
    Joey Jones

    Aww, lovely post

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thank you Joey ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Mags Win Avatar

    What a beautiful post.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thank you Mags!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Brian Scott Avatar

    Great words. I’ve lived all over this wee country and sometimes called that place home and for a while it was. I always had itchy feet, like a clock unwinding, time to move on, often not just the location but the person, the people. Now I think I am where I was meant to be, physically and emotionally, the person and the place, until time and age tell me differently.
    Best of luck 👍

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks Brian!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. David Avatar

    A very thought-provoking post. Personally, I have been very static, apart from a flurry of flats when at university and the start of my working life. I grew up in one house and my parents lived there for about 40 years before moving. After university I moved back to my home city of Wellington, New Zealand, for work. New Zealand is not a very big country, and working in IT my options were limited to the biggest city, Auckland, or the government centre, Wellington. As I had a scholarship and a job offer with a government department, and I had grown up in Wellington that was the obvious choice. After a few years more flatting, I bought a house in Lower Hutt, a city-suburb of Wellington and stayed there for 22 years before circumstances dictated a move to a larger home we had build on the same main road through the valley, 4 km closer to the Lower Hutt city – that was 23 years ago and we are still there. I love the feeling of stability, and the satisfaction of living somewhere where I have put down roots and made it my own place.
    But while I have not move, I have travelled widely in new Zealand. It suits my personality to have roots in one place and take trips away for days or weeks to explore other parts of the country, especially since NZ is small enough for this to be a realistic way of seeing the whole country., which I have almost done.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      I wanted to see New Zealand all these years. They say it can out English, England ☺️.

      Like

      1. David Avatar

        I consider New Zealand a beautiful, relatively peaceful place, with warm, friendly people, which I love. However, but more recently there seems to be a government-sponsored move from the relatively reserved English culture with an overlay of colonial independence, to an interesting mix of revivalist Māori culture where everyone is whanau (extended family) sprinkled with spiritual environmental and lifestyle messages that I am sure were not part of the pre-European Māori view of the environment, and a more American “performing social interaction energy” culture.

        I found it very challenging when just before I retired, when the culture requirements for my IT job in a Government Department shifted from getting the job done as a Business Analyst to being a team player. This was rather fun to watch since the only team player in our BA team was the team leader. All the BAs were working on different projects doing their own thing, and liked that work style. We got on well but none of us wanted to “play team”, which was a bit career limiting. The culture also shifted from western behaviours like meetings starting with “good morning” then onto business, to a pseudo-Māori culture with an expectation that any meeting run by a manager would start with greetings in Māori followed by a karakia (prayer / spiritual blessing on the meeting), delivered in Māori, and then be run ‘the Māori way’, which seemed to be “Don’t argue with the manager’s popular view” There was then another karakia at the end. To be fair a lot of people felt this was over the top, but not supporting it was considered racist.

        As I had already planned my retirement and was past the retirement ago of 65, I had a lot of fun actively not participating in team-building sessions and arriving at meetings late to miss all the “religious brainwashing” – I have my views, that I do not share, and I resent people deciding they have a right to force me to take part in their religious ceremonies. I got into trouble a few times for being anti-Māori, and being racist, but when I pointed out my late wife had been Māori, which was why I no longer wanted to be in that circle, and my current wife was Chinese, and born in China, their accusations didn’t really fit.

        There is something really nice about being truly free from dependency on a job.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. AKings Avatar

        I think what many people struggle with today is not cultural recognition itself, but the growing expectation that participation in officially approved rituals and language must be treated as a measure of moral character. A healthy society should be able to respect Māori heritage, history, and traditions without making people feel pressured into performative conformity at work or in public life.

        What struck me most in your note was the freedom that came with retirement — the ability to quietly stand by your own convictions without fear of professional consequences. There is something profoundly valuable in that kind of independence, especially in an age where disagreement is too often mistaken for hostility rather than simply a different way of seeing the world.

        Like

  6. joannerambling Avatar

    Home is such a wonderful place, a safe and happy place

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      It is ☺️.

      Like

  7. Bronlima Avatar

    People somerimes ask me why i stayed in Lima. I don’t really know the answer…… but Lima is like a comfortable but well-worn pair of shoes. Some times they need fixing, but as always the sole has already made friends with my soul.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      I think I understand what you’re saying. That’s why even though I am an American, I always feel a unique belongingness to England.

      Like

  8. paolsoren Avatar

    I know home isn’t where you started. But where you started can be warmer and more welcoming that some of the stops along the way.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      I agree. I miss it everyday ☺️.

      Like

  9. Hazel Avatar

    Home is about the people indeed. The love we feel within those walls. Thought-provoking, Akings

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks Hazel. ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hazel Avatar

        My pleasure, Akings

        Liked by 1 person

  10. Spark of Inspiration Avatar
    Spark of Inspiration

    I can tell we are at the age where being nostalgic is top of the list. I try to shake that off, it doesn’t bring happiness, just a sense of sadness. We can’t go back in time. Anyhow… I got your book today from Amazon. So, now I have to find time to read it! Have a good weekend.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      I know what you mean, but I think nostalgia depends on how you carry it. For me, it’s less about wanting to go back and more about quietly appreciating that those moments happened at all. Like finding an old photograph in a drawer — there’s a little sadness in it, yes, but also gratitude. Some memories are proof that life was once wonderfully alive in ways we didn’t even notice at the time.

      And thank you so much for getting the book. That honestly means a lot to me. I hope when you do find the time to read it, it gives you a few moments of that same feeling — pausing for a while and seeing the beauty hidden in ordinary things. Have a wonderful week too. 😊

      Like

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