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Moving home after 50 years: Thomas Ekvall

Moving home after 50 years in 11 different countries

It is a life that never settles. It stretches across borders, across decades, across versions of yourself that no longer recognise one another. From the outside, it can look like success: a career built and a materially good life assembled. From the inside, it can feel empty.

You are told you leave once. In reality, you keep leaving incrementally for the rest of your life.

At first, it is straightforward. You adapt. You learn how things are done. You observe, adjust, soften your edges. Over time, you become fluent in tone, gesture, and expectation, in what passes for normal. Work progresses, routines take hold, and social exchanges become convincing enough.

Then you return, not for good, just long enough to remind yourself where you began. But the place does not match the memory. The streets feel narrower and louder. Conversations move too quickly, circling references you do not understand. You notice it in others as well: a flicker of recognition, followed by something more uncertain. You are from here, but do not belong.

Language is the first fracture. Words you once carried effortlessly now feel slightly out of reach. Expressions have shifted; meanings have drifted. You hesitate where you never used to. The changes are small, but they accumulate until they form a considerable distance.

Meanwhile, your life elsewhere continues uninterrupted. You have learned your role. You know when to nod, when to laugh, how to project a version of ease that does not invite further scrutiny. Most days, it may even feel genuine.

Work helps. Structure helps. There is something peculiar about moving through systems that never fully align with you. You learn to carry that lightly, not because it is light, but because the alternative is worse.

And then there are the children. They belong in ways you never could; multicultural, multilingual, unburdened by the need to choose. They move between worlds with an ease you never mastered. They may be the strongest argument in favour of the life you built.

Regret does not arrive cleanly. It sits alongside pride and alongside the fact that life does not offer revisions. You do not regret what exists because of the choices you made. And yet, at times, there is the uneasy sense that something essential was exchanged without fully understanding the price.

It is a life lived in between. It resists a single, coherent narrative. It asks you to hold contradictions without resolving them. Some call that richness. Others call it loss. Most days, it is neither. It is simply the shape your life has taken.

You wake up, speak the language required, and move through the roles available. You build, as best you can, something that never quite roots.

And gradually, almost without noticing, you come to understand: you no longer belong anywhere.

Comments

  1. Dear Thomas,
    There is something quietly powerful in how you have articulated the way belonging becomes less a place and more a tension you learn to carry. It doesn’t read as emptiness so much as the cost of a life lived expansively. Not everyone is asked to hold that many versions of “home” at once, or to make peace with never fully returning to any of them. There is loss in that, yes, but also a kind of depth that only comes from having seen, adapted, and endured so much. Sikander Khan

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  2. I think many of us share this experience, or some variation of it. It is only natural that, after a lifetime spent abroad, one no longer carries quite the same sense of belonging as those who have remained rooted in the same village or town throughout the years. Their stories are quite different from ours, shaped by continuity rather than departure. Our own stories, by contrast, have been marked by distance and by the accumulation of insights that might never have come had we stayed home.

    Perhaps that is also why we have this forum, a small shared space for voices touched by a similar fate. Not to linger over past glories, but to share the kind of reflections born of sometimes parallel and often diverging journeys. At least, that is how I have come to think of it.

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    1. Exactly Detlef - and I have not retired and moved home yet - so can’t say if I would differ from Thomas - we are nomads with some insights. Not ever leaving home is a fast way to narrow most minds- but not something you can say outside of this group. I am grateful for expanded horizons

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    2. Correction: I have retired- but not yet planned to go “home” - in my adult after uni only 8 years in US and 33 in developing countries- I barely know the place. It scares me. Hence, we travel.

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  3. Very beautifully written! I fully relate to the feelings and thoughts! Thank you for sharing. Dita

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  4. Hundreds of millions around the world would love to be in your boots

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