Archive for April 26th, 2008

Stranger at home

It was nice this time not to have to say goodbye to Axel at Logan airport and to go through security together for a change. It has been nearly two years since we last traveled together to Holland for the Vriesendorp family reunion. Now it is for a reunion of my maternal grandmother’s extended family. It was also nice not to have to worry about touching your neighbor when positioning your head for a try at sleeping. Not that it did any good; I think I slept less than I usually do.

As usual when I fly the Boston-Amsterdam route (or the return), someone else from MSH is in on board. This time it was Matt, on his way to our office in Dar es Salaam.

I had looked very much forward to the flight because it would be the first time in weeks that I could actually relax and read (for fun) rather than chipping away at my to-do list.

The virtual celebration that I had prepared for the course was well received. The best part was being copied on an email that circulated among the members of the first team that I had called to the front of our imaginary ballroom to accept the imaginary applause from the imaginary audience in honor of their very real accomplishments. Completing such a course for busy professionals is no mean feat. I totally get that. It was no mean feat for us facilitators either.

Yesterday was still a full day of work; cleaning out accumulated emails, responding to forgotten or postoned requests; there was another virtual event to close and one to attend, this time as a participant. OBTS had organized its third webinar, a one hour conversation with Bill Torbert from Boston College. He looks at leadership through a developmental lens which appeals greatly to the developmental psychologist that I am by training. Of the 20 people that attended there were three of us from MSH. I am not sure my colleagues enjoyed it as much as I did but it was worth a try to see if they would.

It is always a strange experience to enter Holland. I speak the language, I carry its nationality but it is not the Holland I left more than 30 years ago. “Count me the ways,” said Axel and I did, in my head. I am more of a stranger in this country of my birth than in my new adopted homeland.

We arrived at an empty house in Aalsmeer; Sietske is in France and Piet was in Amsterdam. The cat was there to greet us. We had some coffee and a few ‘boterhammen met kaas,’ bread with cheese before heading west out in our tiny rented car (a one size upgrade from what I had ordered – my big suitcase barely fit) to the middle of the country and meet the relatives, some I hardly remember, many I never met.


April 2008
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