Then, the other night, I had an epiphany. Debating idioms, someone told me, "We say it differently back East. You come from the West."
I come from Uintah cattle-ranches and immigrant football clubs.
I come from potato farmers and Mexican polygamist-colonists.
I am the product of fat handcart girls and hard-headed Danes, generations of half-mad people carving out a living in the blizzarding desert.
I come from ideals of freedom and diversity and friendliness. I come from ruggedly beautiful country.
I come from the place that people risk their lives to come to, where dreams shine brighter than the journey and are sometimes never realized.
I am from the West, the American West. And, for the first time in my life, I am happy to be so.
Where I'm from isn't who I am. But, at the same time, it is. I had to come to Wyoming to brush the Western chip off my shoulder and learn to love my big-sky, laborious heritage.
Still spitting politics. Still feminizing. Still me. But I'm now more at ease with my roots and myself. And it's a good place to be.
2 comments:
This is awesome. I am still rather ashamed to even be from California, so props to you!
Thanks! That means a lot.
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