INSPIRATION

Saying Goodbye to Mum

move to italy checklist

Someone asked me a while ago if we were ‘Renovating Italy’ long distance.

How can I pour so much of my heart and soul into Italy when I am sitting writing in Brisbane? When are we moving abroad? I really can’t answer, it’s not that I don’t love Australia. I do with all my heart. It’s my home, the air I breathe the birthplace of our children. My home, one I am immensely proud of.

Yet there’s always that travelers cry “I want to see the world” not only see it but live it!

So I am here, longing to be there.

It’s only at this very moment that I am able to accept my life just as it is and just as it isn’t.

Others have told me that there is some reason why we are being held up from moving abroad.

Some mystical force that knows what’s coming and is keeping us here through tough family times. “See you aren’t meant to leave yet” or ” the universe has something in store for you here” which (and I mean no offense to those who have told us these comforting words) reminds me of comments like “God needed another angel” or “he was sent to teach you something” or “he wasn’t meant for this world” and I just have to agree to disagree!

The funny thing is people are telling me we’re always delayed here because of some terrible thing that is coming our way or worse heading straight for our loved ones…like Cancer or Dementia.

I really don’t believe in fate, never have and I know and love many people who do.

It’s just that I don’t.

Our son didn’t die because he was “meant to die” he died because the hospital staff were negligent in their care.

We aren’t here in Australia because our parents are now sick, we’re here because the housing market dropped and we can’t sell our house and move abroad just yet.

Nothing mystical about it.

When the market picks up and we can sell we’re off.

And that’s what’s causing me so much anguish, the thought of leaving loved ones especially aging loved ones. Especially my Mother who is almost eighty and suddenly showing it.

It was a huge shock when I visited Melbourne for my Uncle’s funeral over Christmas. Suddenly she is elderly. She is recovering from surgery and still fiercely independent, tells me I’m naughty for buying her punnets of fresh raspberries and blackberries. Won’t ever ask for help ( a bit like me) and thinks she  is invincible. She isn’t and we both know it.

How can I plan and dream of a life in Italy so far away from her now when she might need me the most?

Leaving aging parents isn’t something I thought I’d have to deal with as I never thought my Mum would get old.

She is eternally young, takes classes and meets her girlfriends for coffee and a natter.

Not old, not my Mum.

There are so many things that will need to be put in place if we are to leave for Italy and leave our families behind. I’m sure many of you have been through this, or worse had something happen to a loved one when you were moving abroad.

It was always our worst fear when we were in Italy, we kept money aside for urgent travel home.

I often write about our hopes and dreams, about our love of Italy and the life we long for there.

Tonight I just had to get some of this dark side out in the open so I could step back and take a look at my blue spell up close. Start taking action, create a plan, and look at the future with my Mum here and now! Moving abroad to Italy is a huge decision and one that will affect my family left behind.

There is only this moment and this moment! So forgive me if I seem confused, a bit blue and uncertain of time frames…xxx

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and the gang x

26 replies
  1. VS
    VS says:

    It was my dream to move to a western country, and I did it (moved to Canada). But, I could stay there only for 2 months. My parents got sick and I missed everything about my home. I just couldn’t stay longer there.
    I think the decision to move or not depends on your culture and the way you are brought up.
    I’ve lived with my family for 29 years. I thought that I was brave and will easily stay in Canada. But I realized that I was wrong.
    I’m unemployed today(after working for 4 years), but I’m glad to be back with my parents again.
    I didn’t want them to suffer while I enjoy.

    Reply
  2. JK
    JK says:

    I lived in Australia for 4 years where I graduated and came back to Canada to see my parents and do my internship. However, when I bring up going back to Australia to work it’s the end of the world and I have been struggling all last year and this year as to how to deal with this. This was just meant to be a long visit but now I find myself resenting my parents whom I love a lot and I don’t know how to tell them that I plan to apply for my visa latter this year…..:(

    Reply
    • Lisa Chiodo
      Lisa Chiodo says:

      It’s so hard to be everything your parents want yet still follow your own dreams, perhaps talk with them about what it means to them that you will be so far away. Hoping you can resolve this together with your family and sending love lisa x

      Reply
    • Claire
      Claire says:

      JK i know exactly how you feel. I have been in Australia for a nearly year and i am going to do the work towards my second year visa then try to stay out there on a sponcership. Im from England and it is just me and my mum. Its a very hard decision to make expecially when you think that you have to stay out there 5 years primarly to get citizenship. I cant bear to think about what i would do if anything were to happen to my mum in this time. Life is bittersweet! x

      Reply
  3. ML
    ML says:

    yes, an Englishman in love of Italy 🙂
    MLxx

    Reply
    • Lisa Chiodo
      Lisa Chiodo says:

      He sounds perfect! When you get back to Italy let me know I am part of an expat group called Italian Reflections and they are a great source of information re the ariturismo and will keep your husband in touch with England. Ciao for now lisa

      Reply
  4. ML
    ML says:

    Ciao Lisa, I just wanted to let you know that I love how you described your feelings, it’s really touching what you wrote, and so true.
    I’m Italian and live in UK, miss my family a lot though they are only 2 hr flight away, I can imagine what it means for you leaving your Mum and go to live so far away.
    I wish you good luck for your project (I wish I were so brave) and keep following you.
    Love
    ML

    Reply
    • Lisa Chiodo
      Lisa Chiodo says:

      I’m sure you know exactly what I mean, it is so hard to be away from family and loved ones. I lived in the UK in my 20’s for three years, in West Sussex and that was before emails and facebook. I’m also two hours away from my Mum at the moment yet it still seems like half the world away. Where are you from in Italy? Where are you in England, there must be such big differences for you. I’m sure you are very brave!! ciao love lisa x

      Reply
      • ML
        ML says:

        I’m from Rome, 7 years ago I decided to move in the countryside near Rimini where is my grandparents’ house. I really enjoyed that experience because I discovered the treasures of a fantastic inland. One year ago I eventually moved to London to live with my husband :), but we are planning to go back to Italy and start an agriturismo, another big change!
        love
        ML

        Reply
        • Lisa Chiodo
          Lisa Chiodo says:

          Well you sound like wanderers just like us! Moving from Roma to the countryside would be a big change and lovely to be in your grandparents home. Sounds like you have adventures awaiting you back in Italy with the ariturismo. So is your husband English? ciao again lisa x

          Reply
  5. Vicki Archer
    Vicki Archer says:

    I understand so well what you are writing about here.. I have left and faced all those sad goodbyes that you mention and there is not a day that goes by that I don’t think of my family so far away. Sometimes I feel so selfish yet I do believe we must live our own lives not live for others, we make choices and they have consequences. It’s a part of life… reunion and separation… but it’s not easy…. xv

    Reply
    • Lisa Chiodo
      Lisa Chiodo says:

      Vicki as a Mum now myself I can understand how my Mum struggled to both hold me close yet let me fly. She never let me know how much she worried when I backpacked and lived in England in my 20’s. The thought of that goodbye is something I try not to think about yet it is something we all must do. I will go through the same worries when my children are old enough to travel by themselves. Just part of life as you say. xx

      Reply
  6. CarolynB
    CarolynB says:

    Beautiful post. Just found your blog (via Carla and twitter!) and look forward to reading more.

    My journey has been different from yours yet many similarities — I’ve found saying good-bye with all the back-and-forthing to get harder with time and age (parents and my own) — always painful, with associated guilt and sometimes second-guessing myself. Moving a block away from my mother in New Jersey might solve one problem but I know it would create more … . we make our choices and I think if made in good faith, we will be okay. Not free of guilt or regret, but okay. ANd sometimes joyfully so.

    Cheers and all the best with your Italy dreams!

    Reply
    • Lisa Chiodo
      Lisa Chiodo says:

      Carolyn thank you for that, Carla is a great inspiration. It was after reading “Italian Joy” that I started blogging (with the thought of one day turning it all into a book). You have certainly moved around, and I’m so sorry to hear about your first husband. When I first waved goodbye to my parents when they returned to Australia after our 10 weeks in England and Europe I had no sense of guilt it was all too exciting. Mum was much younger and without medical issues and still with her partner of 35 years. Now of course time has moved on and we have all aged and the worries and guilt have grown and changed also. I like the thought of being “okay” yes even joyfully so!

      I lived in West Sussex for two years in my twenties and did a lot of backpacking. A brief time in America which I loved, and the time in the UK was incredible for a 21 year old girl from the suburbs of Melbourne. All my life I wanted to travel, I think my Mum just knows thats part of who I am.
      so cheers, and best for your French dreams!!!
      ciao lisa

      Reply
  7. Lisa Wood
    Lisa Wood says:

    Lisa that was such a beautiful honest touching blog. It touched deep within – you are very strong and brave to keep on going with your dream to travel. Sometimes things happen in life and its not till after we realise “Why” or “What” it was that happened and to help us to understand.
    Life is a journey – sometimes the ride is good, sometimes the ride is a roller coaster…up and down and every which way in between!
    Go with the flow, and “Be” in the moment. Take your time and you will find your way. Your dream to be in Italy is a fantastic journey, but maybe at the moment you are meant to be where you are? Mabye the universe has other ideas for you and family at the moment.
    All I can say is that I love following your journey, and I love how you have kept your dream alive. Imagine how much fun you all are going to have once your dream comes true.
    Wishing you all the best xxxx
    Cheers
    Lisa

    Reply
    • Lisa Chiodo
      Lisa Chiodo says:

      Lisa I know you of all people understand about keeping the dream alive and following it against all odds. As many of the members of our families age it gets harder to think of leaving them behind. There is no reasoning with death, my Dad at 39, my Brother at 50 while mowing the lawn, our little boy only a day old. I know Sam worries about this as well yet we both agree to live our lives and know our family wouldn’t have it any other way. I saw a wonderful video of Oprah talking about acceptance, which really spoke to me. Here’s to all the dreamers, love lisa xx

      Reply
  8. Carla Coulson
    Carla Coulson says:

    No need to ask to be forgiven Lisa I am constantly torn being away from my parents and family but it is the life I have chosen and they understand this (although my Mum would tuck me back in the womb if she could)
    So do not beat up on yourself it is wonderful that you can express what you are feeling……keep your passions alive and Italy in your heart..it will happen!
    Carla x

    Reply
  9. Henriette
    Henriette says:

    I understand completely Lisa, just like others considering the comments.
    That alone must feel as a comfort in ‘blue’ times!
    In the end..you are where you are, life is what it is, no matter whether you know or not how you got where you are. There are many things we commit to whilst not knowing how to do it, whether it’s the right thing to do or where it’s gonna lead to. We do it anyway and throw our hat over the fence (think marriage? Having children? Take on a new job?)

    It’s the heart that leads you moment by moment. And that’s also where your loved ones are, no matter where you are, independent of place and time. And for them knowing they have that place there in your heart, is a wonderful feeling and fundamentally all they need.

    x enjoy, wherever you are

    Reply
  10. jan
    jan says:

    Life does put obstacles in our way. Putting things you long to do on the back burner is hard to take whichever way you look at it. This post will hit the spot for a lot of people!

    Reply
  11. sally
    sally says:

    I love what you wrote, because even if for different reasons, we are going through the same feelings for our moms. There are so many things I’d like to do, so many places not far from where I live that I’d like to see but that maybe would need a couple of days away from home, and projects I have in mind I’d like to start, but all these things will just have to wait. Nothing is more important to me now than staying and taking care of my mom. This includes also staying healthy myself to be able to take care of her. That’s important Lisa. I often ask myself . “What’ll happen to her if I suddenly get seriiously ill”? I’m sure she’ll manage, the Comune will take care of her, but…….iit’s ME she needs not a stranger. I know the fact that she can still live only one day or 20 years, but I want that all those moments she has left to be as precious as possible for her but for me too.Three years ago something strange happened to her: she suddenly seemed to become sort of crazy for some days and then went into a coma for 3 months and stayed in hospital for 5 months. No doctor, no specialist has ever found out why it happened, no serious illness could explain it. But then she suddenly came back to life. It was as if she was tired and needed to rest for a while. It took me months to get her back to a normal life, to recognise me (she thought I were her doctor 🙂 ) to eat, walk and think straight. But she made it after about 6 months. Just back to normal as if nothing has ever happened. After all this, I’m grateful to have her back, and I don’t even care anymore to find out why it happened. What’s important to me , my brother and our family,is that she’s still here with us to enjoy our lives together.
    I still have time to do all the things I have in mind, and well………if I don’t for some mysterious reason, maybe it’s just not meant to be.
    Big hugs coming your way!! XXXOOO
    Sally

    Reply
  12. Janine
    Janine says:

    I hear you Lisa!! A big hug straight up. You’re very courageous to write so openly about such a tough reality. You seem so quietly determined. I really sense you digging in your heels and get you my wholehearted support and admiration. Hang on to your dream!! Keep the faith. I’m here I think, rather than there, because of my own very Sicilian sense of duty to family (which I’ve now realised is utterly overblown. I totally understand but I think you know what you have to do. Listen to that voice. The one calling you to Italy. If it’s anything like my own it won’t be quietening down any time soon. Jx

    Reply
  13. Toni DeBella
    Toni DeBella says:

    Lisa,
    It is the weirdest thing. I am just writing a post about my angst and fear of succeeding in my dream of living abroad and balancing it with what I have to leave behind. Like your Mum, my mom is 82, in great shape, busy, happy and active, but none of us will live forever and we are very, very close. The other person that I must leave behind is my wonderful and amazing son. He is living , studying and working – completely independent and happy with his own life, but being far away from him is painful to think about. They have been the reason that I have taken so long to get to where I am about how to structure my “dream”. I am leaving in 3 weeks to be in Orvieto again until April and maybe beyond, but if it weren’t for my Mom and son, I would have sold everything I own and been there full time years ago. I just can’t completely cut my ties right now. I love these two people and can’t imagine not being with them part of the time. So we make concessions. I think I know how you feel. I am like you…I don’t believe in fate, but I believe in myself and the strength to keep pushing ahead and working towards what I want in life. That’s my “higher power”. Don’t ever give up – I will pull you along, if you push me forward. Hugs. toni

    Reply
    • Janine
      Janine says:

      Hi Toni,
      Just wanted to let you know how beautiful and moving your comment was for me. By some strange miracle it seems to me now, my little girl is the reason I’m not in Italy right now. But it’s so hard. So looking forward to hearing more from you from our dear Umbria.

      Reply
  14. Debra Kolkkz
    Debra Kolkkz says:

    I love my life in Italy, but I also love my life here in Brisbane, so I won’t ever live permanently in Italy. I think 6 months in each place is just about perfect. I miss my fiends when I am not here in Brisbane and there are things I love to do here that I just can’t do in Italy.

    Reply
  15. melissa
    melissa says:

    Ciao Lisa, it is ok to feel blue. I think as women and mothers we feel things very deeply…our love connections to friends, family and children can be quite overwhelming at times and it is very easy to feel the pangs of guilt because we can’t be everywhere we want and need to be at every given moment. It is natural that loved ones pull at our heart strings, even while we are yearning for new and personal adventures. So very complicated to be us sometimes! Having just lost my dad and having my mom on the opposite coast is difficult for me, I might as well be living in Italy. My kids are also growing up so fast too…sometimes I wish I could squeeze them tight to keep them little and the way they are right now. But, life just keeps moving ahead and our lives keep evolving & changing. I think our feeling “blue” is us having mini grieving spells about all these inevitable changes that we can’t control. But, then being women and resilient, after a good cry we get sunny again and learn appreciate the good things that the changes keep bringing about. Un abbraccio virtuale! 🙂

    Reply
  16. Ingrid
    Ingrid says:

    A lovely post Lisa – these are the things we think of and don’t think of all at the same time when we live abroad!! Perhaps it is just serendipity – my favourite word at the moment. Time will take it’s natural course and suddenly you will find yourself ‘there’ wherever that is and wonder how you got ‘there’! Hugs x

    Reply

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