<p>Last week I did one last run through of my family’s house on Sengekontacket Pond. I took in the view from my bedroom window, made sure the outdoor shower door was properly latched, ran my hand against the remaining lavender and crumpled a few buds between my fingertips.</p>
Last week I did one last run through of my family’s house on Sengekontacket Pond. I took in the view from my bedroom window, made sure the outdoor shower door was properly latched, ran my hand against the remaining lavender and crumpled a few buds between my fingertips. A few cherry tomatoes still lingered and I popped them in my mouth, promptly bursting golden seeds down my white blouse.
Typical and timely, I thought.
I was hitching a ride with a friend to the boat and she waited in my driveway. We were on a 1:15 p.m. ferry from Oak Bluffs, that time of day during the fall when the sun bounces off everything. I held back the tears until halfway down County Road, hiding them behind my sunglasses, then let it all out as we made our way through town. We were off to a friend’s wedding in New Hampshire. She would come back to the Vineyard and I would go on to New York.
My friend Mark recently summed it up nicely for me.
“You have your friends there, and you have your friends here,” he said. “You can have it all.”
I have lived on the Vineyard full time for more than four years now, a summer kid my entire life until a summer internship at the Gazette charted a new path for me that I wouldn’t trade for the world. A lifelong New York city girl in the country? I gave myself a year, two tops, and then I was out of here. No chance would I be able to live out the winters with a small group of friends and a handful of bars and restaurants to keep us occupied.
I’m still discovering how wrong I was four years ago. I return to New York a person I didn’t see coming.
During my time here, I’ve learned that the gifts of living in a small town go beyond leaving your front doors wide open and the car keys on the dashboard. That sense of security is matched with a sense of freedom, even if it is restrained to 80 square miles. How can somewhere so small make you feel larger than life?
The greatest gift of living in a small town, I’ve found, is the restoration and growth of your sense of self. It is a sense of self in the emotional, physical, maybe even metaphysical kind of way of knowing that you belong somewhere.
Living on the Vineyard was the first time I felt comfortable being all of me. Not just city girl or the country girl, the quiet girl or opinionated girl. I could be all of those things. And damn did it feel good.
My largest fear in leaving is losing this feeling. That somehow everything I’ve done here to become who I am today will melt away and I will become someone I don’t want to be. But I start my next chapter fortified with salt and ink in my veins and the Island close to my heart.
As a reporter you have the chance to meet people from all walks of life and become an expert on a variety of random topics. But in a small town your subjects are your neighbors, too, and I learned to respect that but also acquire a thick skin. I remember an email I received a year ago about “ruffling some feathers on the Crick” over an article I wrote. My editors always had my back, a gift and a privilege.
I’ve always found myself to be in tune with the seasons, but never more so than living on the Vineyard. The seasons grip you by the collar and hold fast. The exhale of fall, the routines of winter, the trickery of a New England spring and the anticipation of summer and the thrust of the high season.
The Vineyard will always be home and I’ll be back frequently. Last week on the ferry I bundled up and sat on the deck the entire ride, with the sun overhead and wind and salt air in my face. It was so clear out I could see the Gay Head Light in the distance.

Comments
Each and every time I get
Deborah MehneEach and every time I get onto the ferry to leave the island, I am beckoned and lightened to anticipate my return, where I will tumble back off the boat into the wide embrace of our island home. Thank you Remy for articulating your steel forged bond with the wild grace of the Vineyard.
have enjoyed reading your
cheryl holenkohave enjoyed reading your pieces, this one especially! good luck as you enter the next chapter of your life!
You made me cry, Remy! Sad
Aela Mass Vineyard HavenYou made me cry, Remy! Sad for myself and for the Island to see you go, but filled with excitement for you. Best wishes and big love!
We adore you Remy Tumin! We
Sara Mass CFMVWe adore you Remy Tumin! We cheers you from afar as you embark on your new adventure and we will cheers you in person when your return to visit your Island home.
Once you have that feeling -
Julia RappaportOnce you have that feeling - that feeling of being "comfortable being all of me" - you will not lose it. Sometimes it's harder to find, but you've got it girl and you'll hold it tight. Looking forward to your next chapter.
Love this Remy! Your
Morgan Lucero Napa, CALove this Remy! Your description of seasons on the Vineyard described exactly how I feel but never knew it had words! Best of luck to you in your next chapter….and always remember to keep clicking your heels! :)
I've enjoyed your reporting
Paula AquinnahI've enjoyed your reporting since the beginning of your work with Gazette, and this piece is typical of your command of the language, your sense of place, and your clarity of expression. Best of luck to you in the big city, but I hope you return to the island one day, for good!
Remy, As a writer and New
Ann Graham EdgartownRemy, As a writer and New York Girl who has chosen to make this island my home for the duration, I have been similarly touched by this special place. I wish you well on your next adventure in the big city or wherever your boswell may take you
I LOVE this! I spent 6 months
Mary Ring Madison, WII LOVE this! I spent 6 months on the Vineyard as a travel nurse and have missed being there ever since. I had worked with many locals, enjoyed the stories if many Island Seniors at Windemere. And yes, even marveled at my evcounters with island skunks and wild turkeys. It is an amazing place, filled with amazing beauty and people. I'm sure you will be missed and its a given that the vineyard left an indelible mark on your heart.
All the best Remy!! Loved
Dorothy OB and Naples, Fl.All the best Remy!! Loved your articles especially this one!!
Like you, every time I leave
Mike Cornelius, NCLike you, every time I leave this special island I tear up. So all I can add is simply.. I understand.. I understand..
Dear Sweet Remy, It sounds
Pamela Jacqueline Friedman Long Island - New York [email protected]Dear Sweet Remy, It sounds like the "Island" found you. Although we are always evolving, we never really lose our "core". You are confidently advancing in the direction of your dreams and the endeavors of one's life. Certain to meet with success, you are one of the Vineyard's "Darlings".
This NY-bred former summer
Shelley Christiansen Oak BluffsThis NY-bred former summer kid totally relates, Remy. You touched the Rock as well as it touched you. Now get your NY pace back on. Come back often so we can see what's en vogue.. We'll deprogram you as needed.
What a beautiful piece. Best
Kate B. Washington, DCWhat a beautiful piece. Best of luck in NYC!
Remy,
Jack Shea Vineyard HavenRemy,
Thanks for a wonderful summary of your time here. Reporting on yourself is hard. Good job. Come back.
Jack
Wonderful piece, Remy. In our
Kevin Gunn Havertown PennsylvaniaWonderful piece, Remy. In our family we call boats from Woods Hole "happy boats," and ferries to Woods hole "sad boats." As a writer living in Philly, our annual trips to MV for the past two and a half decades give me the freedom to be the 'me I want to be." The island has a way of stripping away the trappings of the pursuit, and leaving the person unguarded and subjected to the grace and beauty of nature. You'll take those qualities to NYC as you continue your journey. Do so bravely and happily, knowing that you made as much of an impression on Martha's Vineyard as it has made on you.
What a beautiful story and I
Dee CTWhat a beautiful story and I love getting on the happy boat with car in tow and as the late George Carlin would say with my stuff! For the last two decades we have created beautiful memories on our island lol! I have traveled world wide and the Vineyard along with my college homecoming are my favorite places to go that give me the feelings that the writer so beautifully described!
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