I'm sitting at the exact same airport, two and a half years after I started writing Home: Part I - and still reflecting on the same questions and struggling with the same tensions. But this time, rather than thinking about home defined by the place, I've been thinking home defined by the people that occupy it. If you move away from "home," what is your responsibility to the people that remain? Or, what happens when the people that you most associate with "home" are no longer there? If they move elsewhere, is that new place "home?" Is it possible for that place to become "home?" These seem to be the quintessential questions for immigrant families; yet it is one that no one seems to have an answer for. It defines how we experience the places in which we live, the places from which we came, and the relationships we have with the people - both in our places of origin and destination(s). And it's not just a question for immigrants - whe...