My little sister and I have a saying. When life gets us
down, and the funk sets in, we look
at each other entirely seriously and say,
When all else fails—go
west.
I’m not sure how we came up with this phraseology or why we
thought it was Truth. Perhaps because we are both wandering souls and according
to anyone who has run away from Life ever, southern California or Portland,
Oregon is the obvious place to go in order to pursue the dreams that no one in
the Midwest believes in and do so without being seen as reckless, lazy,
irrational, and slightly insane.
Bonsai followed through on this idea. I remember very clearly the day my mom, my
dad, my little sister and I loaded into the Forerunner and drove her to the
Greyhound bus station. All she had was a hiking pack.
I don’t know that I have ever seen such fear and dread on my
parents’ face as I did that day. They looked around at the demographic of
people at the station and were utterly terrified. Their youngest child, their
baby girl, was about to go on a cross-country trip with a bus full of
ex-convicts and drug addicts (not all) en route to New Mexico, and they were
not convinced they would ever see her again.
But they did.
Following her Rainbow Gathering experience in New Mexico,
she hitchhiked to southern California and spent the next handful of months
experiencing life as a traveling musician. From there she had an
Walden-sort-of-educational experience in Boston, a month of crashing on my
floor in Northwest Arkansas, a very organic stint on a farm in Colorado—and
eventually, she came back to St. Louis.
We spent a year there together, living in the same city for
the first time in eleven years. And as much as our time together was incredible
and needed and longed for, we both often spoke of the desire to leave. We were
there because we had to be. We were there because it made the most logical
sense. And every now and then, as we sat on her apartment floor sipping Yogi
tea, listening to Pandora and contemplating life, one of us would remind the other—When all else fails, go west.
But we didn’t.
She stayed in St. Louis. And she got a job as a pianist for
a winery and rocked it. And now she works at a Japanese sushi bar in the city.
And I moved to Vermont. I didn't have a musician's gig and my own place and my own community in St. Louis like she did. So I moved to Vermont to build trail, and then I stayed. I stayed in a place I swore
all of my life I would never, ever
move. . .
the north.
I stayed in a place where I am required to purchase studded
snow tires if I have any desire to successfully get anywhere ever in the coming
months. I stayed in a place where apparently
it is common for temperatures to get up to thirty degrees below ZERO. I stayed in a place that I came to only eight
months ago and did not know a soul. And I work in a place that is emotionally
draining and psychologically devastating and altogether terrible a lot of
times. I stayed in a place where it is cold the majority of the year, and
cloudy most of the time. I hate the
cold.
I hate the cold.
But in this moment, I am sitting at my computer at a coffee
shop venue in Burlington. There is a bluegrass band boasting a bass, a
violinist, two guitar players, and a vocalist with possibly one of the most
incredible voices I have ever heard. The sun is out, finally, and I am watching
passersby through the wall of windows. In a matter of hours I will be leaving
to go snow-boot shopping, and then drive an hour south to spend the evening
getting paid to hang with teenage girls.
On Monday, I will for the first time in my life, obtain a
driver’s license from a state other than Missouri, and I will move into a
townhouse in the capitol city of Vermont—Montpelier. I will be within walking
distance of the Hunger Mountain Co-op and downtown Montpelier—which is home to
a plethora of book stores, coffee shops, an art supply store, a kickass bead shop, and pretty decent people-watching. On December 1st,
I will be purchasing my very first ski pass, and on December 6th, I will
be hosting my very first housewarming party.
This Thursday is Thanksgiving. I will be spending it on an
airplane, St. Louis bound. When I get there, I will hug my little sister with
all my might and tell her something new. . .
I will tell her that sometimes the best thing we can do, is stay.
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