In Welsh: Dw
i 'n licio cwrw.
Instead of packing or preparing for Christmas or cleaning or doing laundry I'm drinking in bed listening to Welsh language clips. This summer, after building a tiny house, downsizing and moving twice, I'm going to Wales to the fathers' home - a modest two story stone structure turned Esso station sometime before 1957 when my father took a trip there himself.
Following my grandmother's handwritten directions he took a train from London to Swansea and a bus to the town. In a letter back to her he described walking to the site of the old colliery in the rain along the narrow road. From the doorway of a tiny cottage a familiar face
looked back at him. In this moment of mutual recognition he found a
cousin who later drove him around.
They visited the ancestors' chapel and cemetery, the family home turned gas station and the nearby woolen
mill where he bought a blanket I still have. They visited the River Towy where Reinalt and Douglas fish, in season and out! They visited multiple pubs and talked of Welsh Nationalism and the "Welsh National Party." My father told his mom:
As a foreigner, I took no sides, but it seemed to me that they have so much to argue with, all the way from the true presentation of a unique culture, to the manifest exploitation of natural resources. This, I might, explain, has to do with the establishment of a dam somewhere in Northern Wales, flooding certain sections (including villages) to provide hydroelectric power for England's Midlands.
He concluded the letter saying:
The land is beautiful and green and enchanting and I felt like home. Not as a stranger at all, and that is strange.