roots


Getting off the American treadmill to live the Irish dream

How a small Irish village taught my wife and me about life


Picturesque shop front in Adare, County Limerick
Picturesque shop front in Adare, County Limerick

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I was born in Chicago, lived there while attending law school, and stayed there to start my work career. My wife, Karen, was born and raised in Manhattan and continued to live in the city into early adulthood during the beginning of her career.

My first wife and I moved to San Francisco where I started my career as an attorney, working for a “downtown” law firm. I was constantly battling deadlines, satisfying client demands, meeting partner expectations, going to court, and researching and drafting legal memoranda — working late and often on weekends.

At the same time, Karen had also moved to San Francisco with her first husband. She became a partner in a company that exported mining equipment and other goods to the Far East. She would spend her days receiving purchase orders from copper mines in the Philippines, shopping world markets for the best prices, purchasing goods, hedging foreign exchange rates, and issuing bills of lading. This was long before the modern forms of instant communication, so typically she’d return to her office after dinner nightly to read incoming telexes from mine sites in the Philippines, since her evenings were their mornings. She’d remain there for hours to organize her work for the next day.

Each of us was a city slicker on treadmills of our own making. We made good money and acquired things — retirement accounts, cars, jewelry, houses, and more — but had no real time to enjoy these trophies. Life was slipping into the past without us even noticing it. Almost as a parody of our work lives, city life was filled with traffic jams, honking horns, crowded elevators, jack hammers, and smog.

Sixteen years after we first met and twelve years after my divorce (Karen had divorced years before I did), Karen and I were married. Karen (who is Irish Catholic, whose paternal grandparents had emigrated from Ireland in the early 20th century, and who, decades earlier, had been to Ireland to trace her roots) decided that we’d earned the right to take two weeks from our insane schedules to go on a horseback-riding trip in Ireland.

That decision changed our lives. I still remember our first time flying into Shannon, being mesmerized by the 40 shades of green in the quilt patchwork of the pastures beneath us, taking a deep breath, and wondering if the country could be as calming as that visual. It proved that and more.

That first trip we rode at Castle Leslie in Monaghan and in Sligo. The riding was exhausting, challenging and exhilarating. As a bonus, suddenly we faced no traffic jams (unless you counted being stopped by a bunch of cows crossing a road, heading from one pasture to another), no honking horns, no elevators, and unless you considered the smell of fresh cut hay as unhealthy, no smog.

Having dipped a toe into Ireland, we were hooked. We returned fourteen times for increasingly extended stays over a twenty-year period.

In the late 80s, the food was pretty terrible — overcooked meat, overcooked vegetables, two kinds of potatoes and, yep, a side of potatoes — but the riding made up for it. So did the conversation.


Nster.com


12 Comments

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So Harvey, enjoy your new adopted Country, don't let the door hit ya where the good Lord split ya.
koleary, learn some European history before you claim what European countries were and were not free. Amazing you Yanks are taught nothing in your schools.
Koleary, immigrants coming to Ireland are none of your business! When you come to Ireland, YOU are a foreigner! If you moved to Ireland YOU'D be an immigrant! Maybe you should put some effort into learning about the Native Americans etc instead of worrying about what happened here over 150 years ago. Ireland has moved on from then. We are not a catholic society anymore. Please, move on. Searlit, Im sure there are many more things we agree on! I LOVE argument and debate. I think its essential which is why I like this site plus I get to tell Americans who believe in leprechauns that they are full of nonsense!
Getting off the American treadmill that allowed this couple to accumulate enough wealth to live in a foreign country with no worries about financial woes, what a tough burden to escape.
This time I agree with you ciaradexy. Ha, ha. If you post on here long enough, it can happen.
The reason I don't like more immigrants coming to Ireland is that Ireland has not been a free country for even 100 years...unlike the other European countries. Can't you give the Irish people a chance to run their country by themselves for at least one century? Also, more immigrants to European countries just dilutes the culture. Will the children of the immigrants care about the famine, the discrimination against the Irish Catholics in their country, etc. And when I visit my ancestral homeland, I want to visit Ireland...not a country of hundreds of cultures. K. O'Leary
After my comment and reading your 'piece', seriously well written and making me long for another Holiday as last year's was, without losing my $ at O'Hare even b-4 I boarded the plane for Dublin and on to Galway.
Harvey: I'll pay a buck 26 to sleep in your closet.
"Rather than bemoaning that the coffee was terrible, we simply switched to good Irish tea. We came to enjoy the more important aspects of Irish life — an unyielding sense of humor even in the face of adversity, an appreciation for the physical beauty that naturally adorns the country, a love of music, dance and the arts generally, and the fabulous craig." I am so jealous! I would uproot my life in a heartbeat right now and live there for the very same reasons you mentioned above. Good for you!
Like the author of this piece,I have made several trips to Ireland and find it the most relaxing time I ever spend.Also like the author I found Adair to be the very best location for a relaxing as well as fun filled location.Adare Mannor was beyond description for golf,relaxation and fun times.The people of Adare are very warm and friendly and the night life in town is just right.Return trip already in the works.
Nice to see you can be condescending on both sides of the arlantic, you are and always will be the couple from Chicago.
''talking the craic''? Nice to see youve made up your own phrases.
 




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