At 37 years old – an age when many are settling down to start families or solidify careers – I decided to leave my life in Oakland, Ca. and travel the U.S. with my cat, María Lionza. The reasons for this were many and varied and often, not entirely clear. Like Thoreau, I wished to live my short life more deliberately. And, as Whitman had advised, I had already begun to reexamine all that I’d been told. I was suspicious of how we’ve been conditioned to think of our lives and of the world around us; the ways we’re all expected to perform. Something in me was calling me back to the beauty and simplicity of nature. It was telling me to go to the mountains.
At the suggestion of a friend, I decided to record my journey on this blog, based very loosely on John Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley. I aim to be as accurate as I can, though conversations will be repeated from memory, and names may be changed to protect identities or locations modified to keep hidden treasure concealed. Mostly, I hope that these ramblings and musings bring you as much joy to read as the experiences themselves have given me to discover, to live and to write.
Setting Out
(by Wendell Berry)
Even love must pass through loneliness,
the husbandman become again
the Long Hunter, and set out
not to the familiar woods of home
but to the forest of the night,
the true wilderness, where renewal
is found, the lay of the ground
a premonition of the unknown.
Blowing leaf and flying wren
lead him on. He can no longer be at home,
he cannot return, unless he begin
the circle that will first carry him away.
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Rachel,
We did it – our first poetry slam! You memorably added to my experience and I appreciated our friendly conversation. Like you I’ve reexamined what I’ve been told and conditioned to think. I’m eager to read your blog and learn about your experiences.
Peace!
Tom Schreiber
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We did!! I enjoyed your reading and was grateful to share the stage with a fellow first-timer. It was great to meet you.
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