Whenever you’d like to join in, simply link your post to my most recent post on the theme, and I’ll link to your post the next time I post mine. Usually, I request that you submit your post by 1:00 p.m. EST on the afternoon prior to when I will post.
Thanks so much for being part of our ~ wander.essence ~ community!
A cold front blew its way into Virginia on the Friday morning in March we were due to leave for Pittsburgh, knocking out our power at 3 a.m. We showered, dressed and ate breakfast by battery-powered lantern and candlelight and then abandoned our house to the elements.
Driving through snow flurries on a slate-colored day, the wind ripped branches off tree trunks. Bare trees like tangled candelabra danced wildly along the road. Through Virginia, whitewashed silos and barns shivered on the land, along with horses and hay bales. Black cows sat folded on the fields. Wheat fields wore sloppy crewcuts, as if a clumsy barber had hacked away at them with oversized zig-zag scissors.
My Pittsburgh Tunes playlist belted out bluesy songs about working in steel mills or on the Monongahela River, setting the stage for the hard-working, once-industrial city. Sean McDowell sang: “Now I’m stackin’ bricks in Pittsburgh Town / I make two bucks a week workin’ on Lime Hill.”
As we crossed the Potomac into Maryland, Irene Cara sang optimistically from the 1983 movie Flashdance, “What a Feeling:”
Take your passion
And make it happen
Pictures come alive
You can dance right through your life
What a feeling
On my phone, I opened my emails to find the Dictionary.com word of the day: phub: (slang): to ignore (a person or one’s surroundings) when in a social situation by busying oneself with a phone or other mobile device. I told Mike about this word I’d never heard before, and he asked, as I scrolled through my phone, “Hey, are you phubbing me?”
Prickly, urchin-like trees congregated around a red barn near Hagerstown, while Mohsin Hamid said in an online interview about his book, Exit West, “Human life is transient.” We understood this, and lived it, moving from there to there, suspended in the middle. Life flowed like cool breath over the tired earth.
We passed Sharpsburg, Hancock, Breezewood, and Cumberland through maize-colored fields when, at last, Welcome to Pennsylvania! greeted us by billboard. Phantom Fireworks burst with promise as we sped by.
I-76, one of the highways making up the Pennsylvania Turnpike
Tarnished-silver clouds hung like heavy draperies over a drab brown landscape spiked with spiny white trees. Horse farms dotted roller coaster hills. We drove along a mountain ledge overlooking a valley, where a brown weathered barn hunkered down in a snow sprinkled hollow. Stacked lumber settled neatly in a lumberyard near Crystal Spring, and snow blew sideways like a sandstorm. Uplifts of snow swirled into mini-cyclones, while feathered grasses swayed to and fro in a wetlands area.
Pete Seeger sang “Pittsburgh Town is a smoky old town, Lord God, Pittsburgh… All I do is cough and choke in Pittsburgh.”
Poor Pittsburgh has such a sooty reputation.
paying tolls on the Pennsylvania Turnpike
We soon passed the exit for Shankstown, where the passengers brought down one of the planes on 9/11. Brown igloo-shaped storage containers holding sand for icy roads sat in wait for snowstorms along the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
At 11:19 a.m., on the other side of a mountain pass, blue skies peeked through scattering gray clouds and the snow disappeared as if it never was. Farm equipment gleamed at Rolling Rock Equipment and a glowing light spread itself fetchingly over rolling hills. A white farm-house looked otherworldly. A billboard for Peace Love & Little Donuts made sweet promises. Maybe there was hope for the weather after all.
As we rolled into the city, the Quebe Sisters sang:
I am a poor, wayfaring stranger
Traveling through this world alone
And there’s no sickness, toil, or danger
In that bright line to which I go
It was lunchtime by the time two wayfaring strangers arrived at the University of Pittsburgh and sought out food and warmth at Fuel & Fuddle.
Fit and Fuddle
A Pittsburgh specialty, Chipotle Polka, offered itself up: mini-potato & cheese stuffed pierogies smothered with sweet onions, bacon and smoked jalapenos in adobo sauce, topped with sour cream, cheddar and Monterey Jack cheeses; I washed this feast down with a Hitchhiker Trial by Fire beer. For dessert, oddly, the waitress brought us fortune cookies. Mine said: “The wheel of good fortune is finally turning in your direction!” I hoped so!
Chipotle Polka
Mike enjoys a Six Point Barrel Aged Duplex
Signs on the wall
Lagunitas
Keystone
Sign out front
Fuel and Fuddle
Our waitress wore an aqua-jeweled nose ring, mismatched dangly earrings and a “Feminist Killjoy” necklace. When Mike asked her about her necklace, she shrugged, “I guess because I’m a feminist, I’m a killjoy.”
Another server wore a black tank top that said on the back: No crap on tap. Yet another had her hot pink hair pulled back in a ponytail. It was bustling place, with athletes tossing balls around on wall-mounted TVs. It was tough to leave such a cozy spot to go out in the cold. But. We peeled ourselves out of our seats and headed out to explore the city.
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“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-1,000 word (or less) post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, May 15 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, May 16, I’ll include your links in that post.
If you’d like to see the original post about this invitation, check out: on the journey: taking ourselves from here to there. I’ll be writing about a journey I’ve already taken, as I’ll be on my 25-day road trip around the Four Corners area, and I’ll only be doing scheduled posts during that time. I’ll still add your links if you want to join in.
This will be an ongoing invitation, every third Wednesday of the month beginning in May. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Jude, of Travel Words, wrote about the her trip to the southwest of the U.S.A., west of where I’ll be going on my May road trip. I love how she thought of film and song titles along the way.
Pauline, of Living in Paradise…, wrote about her road trip to see autumn colors in Tenterfield, New South Wales, with some misadventures along the way.
Two days after Christmas, we took off for a 649 mile drive through two states, Virginia and Tennessee, to Nashville. We loaded the car with coats, gloves and hats aplenty, as frigid temperatures were forecast.
Mike breathed a sigh of relief as we cruised through a small mountain gap on I-66 less than an hour from home; that gap represented leaving the hubbub of Northern Virginia behind. This highway is not to be confused with the iconic Route 66, which runs from Chicago to Santa Monica, CA. Perhaps we were moving, although we were still, sitting inside the Toyota RAV watching scenes roll by out the window. White spindly trees and apple orchards clustered around a church steeple, offering up prayers. Three smokestacks belched smoke as we crossed the Shenandoah River.
As we barreled south on I-81, Van Morrison sang from my 92-song “Highway to Nashville” playlist: “My momma told me there’d be days like this.” Bucolic scenes whizzed past: a red weathered barn; farmhouses; cows chewing grass behind black split rail fences. The Massanutten Mountains stretched out under splotchy ironclad skies. Weathered white, red and pistachio-colored barns and silos hunkered down amidst hay bales, shortly interrupted by industry: a Merillat Cabinet Factory and a “Flea Market & Antiques.”
Outside our warm enclosed world, goats congregated around an above-ground swimming pool, a rusty horse trailer, and a pigeon roost. Our Nashville tunes were blasting away and we found ourselves singing along with the country music.
Chris Cagel, after referring to how, in the Bible, God said “Let there be light,” sang:
Let there be cowgirls for every cowboy
Make ’em strong as any man
Something you can’t tame, she’s a Mustang
A heart beat, the harder I am
She’s got a drawl y’all
She’s the salt of the earth and rocks my world
Hungry cows nibbled on a meandering line of hay feed near James Madison University. This part of Virginia is familiar territory; after all, I’ve lived here much of my life, and I thought “I wanna go somewhere where nobody knows, I wanna know somewhere where nobody goes,” like Miranda Lambert sings in “Highway Vagabond.”
We cracked up over Luke Bryan’s song “Country Girl (Shake It for Me):
Shake it for the birds, shake it for the bees
Shake it for the catfish swimmin’ down deep in the creek
For the crickets and the critters and the squirrels
Shake it to the moon, shake it for me girl
Aw, country girl, shake it for me
Girl, shake it for me
We were having some fun now! We sang along with Blake Shelton: “These feelings piling up don’t give me no rest. You be my glass of wine, I’ll be your shot of whisky, I’ll be your honey bee.”
Outside of our cocoon, sheets of plastic wrapped themselves tightly around rows of grapevines and a flock of sheep huddled around a sign for the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library. Smoke tumbled out of a small barn chimney against a backdrop of mountains painted with periwinkle and pink striations. Alabama Shakes sang “Always Alright:” “Well pass me the whiskey, pass me the gin / Pass me whatever there’s drank left in,” while we passed Lexington, Buffalo Creek and three crosses by the road near a sign for Natural Bridge. Long-bed trucks shuddered past loaded with blue water pipes and other rocket-looking structures, purpose unknown, with environmentally hazardous signs on them.
Hayes Carll sang:
Chances are I took the wrong turn
Every time I had a turn to take
And I guess I broke my own heart
Every chance I had a heart to break
And it seems like I spent my whole life
Wishin’ on the same unlucky star
We agreed these lyrics fit someone we know and love. I could say them about myself at times in my life. My lips felt chapped and ragged, as they often do in winter, and I rubbed grapefruit scented lotion on my hands. On a barn with a nativity scene out front, large letters shouted: “Jesus is the Reason for the Season.” Soon after, the Purgatory Emporium hurtled past while Miranda Lambert sang “the wheels go round and round.”
A Country Cookin’ billboard and a trailer park kept company; a truck picturing Little Debbie Bars sped by. We snacked on bananas, cashews, raisins and walnuts. Luke Bryan wanted to “pour a little sugar in her Dixie Cup” – why not mine? – and blue skies peeked out from the west. We passed Claytor Lake State Park, Pulaski, Wytheville, Bristol, Dublin and Pearisburg. FATZ was a food place that didn’t entice. Instead, we gobbled down an Arby’s beef and cheese sandwich with horseradish sauce and flew past a Fireworks Supermarket.
About 4 1/2 hours into the trip, another hour and a half to the Tennessee border
I was driving when we crossed the Tennessee border, holding my journal in my lap and making sporadic notes, unbeknownst to Mike, who was sleeping. A billboard greeted us: Hey Knoxville: Your vodka’s ready. I was suffering a litany of discomforts from sitting in the car for nearly five hours: neck pain, needle pricks in my accelerator foot, lower back pain, and glaring sunlight. Tennessee is a state of billboards: Brown Squirrel Furniture.The Bourbon Bird.Cupid’s Outlet: Vibes-Lingerie-Novelties-DVDs.
After passing into Central Time Zone, the clock dropped back an hour and we saw Moonshine Headquarters beside a field of brown and white donkeys. A Pontoon Boat Factory. A flashing sign warned “NO FATAL CRASH TODAY: ARRIVE ALIVE.” In Crossville, we saluted C&C Army Surplus and the “Home of the U.S. Chess Federation.” The Golf Capital of Tennessee. Huddle House: Open 24 Hours. Pikeville seemed to be the home of porcelain.
In a Shell station where we stopped for gas, we were greeted by a sign outside the restrooms:
Standing in line with some local women, I heard that Tennessee country drawl, reminding me I was now officially in the south!
We headed straight for the Loveless Cafe, a Nashville landmark. Our hilarious waitress Tammy brought me a Strawberry Sipper in a take-home Loveless Cafe mini-mason jar, chicken n’ dumplings, slow cooked green beans, and fried green tomatoes. Mike enjoyed a pale ale and pulled pork BBQ with fried okra and a squash casserole. Country music posters plastered the walls at this classic spot: CASH: DO IT RIGHT NOT WRONG. WALK THE LINE.
The Loveless Cafe
The Loveless Cafe
Strawberry sippers: Strawberry rye with lemonade & strawberries
Me at the Loveless after our 10-hour drive
Mike enjoys a Pale Ale
chicken n’ dumplings, slow cooked green beans and fried green tomatoes
We arrived late at our Airbnb, where the heat seemed almost nonexistent, so we cranked it up.
Our Airbnb in Hillsboro
the kitchen
the living area
We took a quick walk through our Hillsboro neighborhood, considered one of Nashville’s most walkable neighborhoods.
cute shops in Hillsboro Village
Street art in Hillsboro Village
We were ready to explore Nashville for the next 3 days!
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“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-1,000 word (or less) post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, April 17 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, April 18, I’ll include your links in that post. My next post will be about my road trip to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Shia, of Tales from the Romulan Neutral Zone, tells of a journey to Denmark, on trains, a taxi and a ferry, loaded down with luggage that burgeons as the journey progresses. A clever and humorous tale indeed.
Sue, of WordsVisual, writes how she overcame physical limitations on a journey to Cuba. She showed great creativity in arranging her trip so that she could satisfy her wanderlust.
I took myself to Cape May in sub-zero temperatures and blustery winds in the dead of December, loading my Toyota Corolla with heavy sweaters, a down coat, gloves, a hat, boots and tennis shoes. I brought a desire to be alone and at peace, to escape from our son’s endless stream of challenges, and to simply wander haphazardly, pay attention and take photos.
Heading north on I-95, I played my Spotify playlist, On the Way to Cape May, putting me in a Jersey state of mind. I chuckled as the John Pizzarelli Trio serenaded me with a mishmash of how different singers would sing about New Jersey. 🎶 “Travelin’ down the turnpike, headin’ for the shore… Forty-seven shoe stores line route 22.” 🎶
In his Paul Simon version: 🎵 “gas stations we have scores… Some states have their rock stars, oh but Springsteen beats them all… Lots of dineries, oil refineries, our highways make you cough… The drinking spots and used car lots make the place just grand.” 🎵
🎼 “It’s another New Jersey sunrise,” Pizzarelli sang in a Beach Boys version of “Tequila Sunrise.” “Philly dogs like chili dogs they eat in Cherry Hill, woo-ee-ooo… There are no Jersey strangers, just friends we haven’t met.” {Instrumental} “Hey, let’s go to Jersey now, everybody’s learning how. Come on out to Jersey with me.” 🎼
He added the Lou Reed version to the tune of “Walk on the Wild Side:” 🎶 “Our famous parkway, it’s the dark way… you’d think for all those quarters, they’d turn the road lights on… And have no pity, Jersey City, once again we’ll shine…” 🎶
People certainly have a sense of humor about the Garden State! 🙂
Crossing over the towering verdigris-colored Delaware Memorial Bridge, I paid homage to veterans from both New Jersey and Delaware who died in the Korean War, the Vietnam War and the Persian Gulf War, to whom the twin suspension bridge is dedicated.
After crossing the Delaware River, I exited onto Route 40, where I stopped at a gas station and struggled to get my credit card to work in the gas pump. A lady in a monstrous SUV pulled up and rolled down her window. “You’re not allowed to pump your own gas in New Jersey. It’s great! We never have to get out of our car. I saw your Virginia plate and could see you were confused.” I was glad she informed me of this; I had no idea!
A white-bearded attendant lollygagged over to pump my gas. I asked him if they had a bathroom inside and he dismissively shook his head. I said aloud to myself, with the window open, “What? Crap! Why did I stop here?”
A burly African-American man poked his head out from the other side of the pump, where he was wiping the windshield of his huge burgundy pickup. “Mam, there’s a sign over there that says there’s a restroom around the corner, outside.” I frowned as I saw a porta-potty beside the building; I had no choice but to use it. A half mile further, a Wawa and a McDonald’s turned up, offering clean indoor facilities — too late for my needs.
Along Route 40, I passed a long lanky cowboy at Cowtown Rodeo. Mike told me later he remembered seeing that cowboy on a high school road trip in 1972.
Cowboy at Cowtown Rodeo
Across the street, John Wayne sat astride a horse in front of Cowtown Cowboy Outfitters, selling “the very best in Western wear since 1958.” Saddles, Western boots and hats, were flung over fence posts outdoors, enticing wanna-be cowboys to drop in.
Cowtown Rodeo
I passed barns, silos, flat farmland, a big truck shop with the truck cabs tilted forward as if yawning. A John Deere tractor shop gleamed with green and yellow tractors and farm equipment. RVs squatted for sale in a big lot.
I drove past the Boro of Elmer, brown derelict corn stalk stubs, Malaga, Porchtown, South Jersey Classic Cars, signs for Atlantic City, apple orchards and Bishop’s Produce Stand. Kountry Kitchen offered “Good Vittles,” but I had my heart set on lunch in Cape May. I whizzed past Pinelands Nature Reserve and a “SHEEP FARM” sign, and around a traffic circle in the township of Dennis, where, whirling like a dervish, I sang along with Desert Sessions, “I Wanna Make It Wit Chu,” and later, “Livin’ on a Prayer” with Bon Jovi.
🎶 Woah, we’re half way there Woah, livin’ on a prayer Take my hand, we’ll make it I swear Woah, livin’ on a prayer 🎶
The Pink Cottage
my 3rd floor room in The Pink Cottage
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“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-1,000 word (or less) post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, April 10 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, April 11, I’ll include your links in that post. My next post will be about my road trip to Nashville, Tennessee. If you’d like to see the original post about this invitation, check out: on the journey: taking ourselves from here to there.
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!
Robin, of Breezes at Dawn, wrote about her recent road trip from her Eastern Shore home to visit family in Ohio. They make a sad stop along the way, cross a Scary Bridge, and pass some quirky sights. She even manages to include great pictures from the car window.
Robin also wrote another post about taking herself along, another question I posed in the original post about Journey. I like how she talks about taking along her fears but, more importantly, her sense of wonder.
Carol, of The Eternal Traveler, wrote about the reasons for and the beginning of her three week road trip from Toowoomba, Queensland to Bairnsdale, Victoria: the lifelong friendship between her husband Glen and Kevin, the beer-themed birthday party at the destination, and the craft breweries and craft shops along the way.
Meg, of snippetsandsnaps, wrote about a road trip from her daughter’s home to her home in New South Wales, Australia, where she encounters “macropods courting death,” skyscapes with the clouds bowling above her, and some local characters, including a solitary man on a mission to prevent youth suicide. She includes haiku and wonderful photos as well.
In Alain de Botton’s fabulous book, The Art of Travel, he writes: “we never simply ‘journey through an afternoon.’ We sit in a train. Lunch digests awkwardly within us. The seat cloth is grey. We look out the window at a field. We look back inside. A drum of anxieties revolves in our consciousness.”
Of course, we don’t want to bore our readers with every detail of our journey, but maybe there is something that stands out, some aspect of the journey that is worth remembering and, later, telling.
on American road trips (or road trips anywhere…)
In the U.S., we are used to driving everywhere. We embark on a road trip in adventurous spirit, determined to marvel over everything. What passes outside our window may be stunning, silly, ugly, industrial, tacky, or even frustrating (traffic usually). The roadside may be littered with farmland and silos, decrepit buildings, businesses gone by the wayside, people doing bizarre things, bucolic rolling hills dotted with cows or sheep, or billboards hollering outrageous slogans.
I took my first major road trip when I was about 10 years old. My whole family, with the exception of my baby brother, piled into our Ford station wagon. My parents drove us to Pagosa Springs, Colorado, where my mother was born and raised. I don’t have any pictures from that trip. I’m sure all we kids did was complain: “Are we there yet? I have to go to the bathroom!” I vaguely remember squirming, reading and getting carsick. I have no clue what I saw along the way.
In the fall of 1979, less than a year after I graduated from the College of William and Mary, my first husband Bill and I embarked on a 2 1/2 month road trip around the U.S. We loaded ourselves, our clothes, a tent, a cooler and sleeping bags into a Chevy van with my husband’s two pugs, Max and Ulysses, and my mutt, Lilly, and drove around the country. We camped, we stayed in hotels, we slept in our van. We visited Bill’s father in New Hampshire, made our way to Acadia National Park in Maine, crossed the Canadian border into Ottawa, then returned to the U.S. via Michigan. After stopping in St. Louis to visit friends, we made the endless slog across the Kansas plains until we came to the Rocky Mountains, eventually making our way up to Yellowstone.
New Hampshire lakes 9/17/79Lilly in New Hampshire 9/17/79Acadia National Park 9/19/79camping in Maine 9/19/79Ottowa, Ontario 9/22/79Sleeping Bear National Dunes (Michigan) 9/23/79Sleeping Bear National Dunes (Michigan) 9/23/79St. Louis, Missouri 9/25/79Kansas Plains 10/2/79Colorado Rocky Mountains 10/3/79Lilly at Rocky Mountain National Park 10/4/79Rocky Mountain National Park 10/4/79Colorado National Monument 10/6/79me at Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area 10/7/79Grand Tetons 10/8/79Grand Tetons 10/8/79Old Faithful 10/9/79Bison at Yellowstone 10/9/79me at Fairy Falls, Yellowstone 10/9/79me at Imperial Geyser, Yellowstone 10/9/79Mammoth Hot Springs, 10/10/79Mammoth Hot Springs, 10/10/79Mammoth Hot Springs, 10/10/79Lower Yellowstone Falls 10/10/79Sour Lake 10/10/79
After leaving the Rockies, we drove north to Banff, one of my favorite places on earth.
Banff Crag, Canada 10/14/79Banff Crag, Canada 10/14/79me at the Columbia Icefield, Banff 10/14/79Big Horn Sheep on Mt. Norquay 10/15/79
By October 26, we were at the Oregon coast.
Oregon Coast 10/26/79
We arrived in Crater Lake, Oregon by October 28.
Crater Lake, Oregon 10/28/79
By October 29, we reached the California coast, then went inland to Yosemite, where it was so cold I remember waking up in the van to find the dogs’ water dishes frozen over. In Death Valley, we met the opposite extreme – sweltering temperatures.
Crescent City, CA 10/29/79El Capitan, Yosemite 10/30/79Half Dome, Yosemite 11/4/79Upper Yosemite Falls 11/4/79Pioneer wagon, Death Valley 11/7/79Scotty’s Castle, Death Valley 11/7/79Sand dunes, Death Valley 11/7/79Devil’s Golf Course, Death Valley 11/8/79
I don’t have a travel journal full of witticisms or vivid observations. I know we saw wild and crazy things, listened to plenty of Tom Waits and the Eagles, and told funny stories to each other. After all, Bill was a master of the long joke and I could spin hilarious yarns about my friends and our antics. It’s all lost now. I vaguely remember jotting a few notes someplace, but I have no evidence of it now; whatever I wrote has vanished. As I didn’t make much effort with my writing in those days, it was probably dull as mud.
All I have today is an album full of snapshots to remind me of that epic road trip. However, since someone ransacked our van in San Diego and stole our camera (because I stupidly left my passenger side window partway down when we parked in a neighborhood to take the dogs to the beach for 15 minutes), we don’t have any pictures from San Diego back across the U.S. to the East Coast. On that lost portion of our trip, we stopped at the Grand Canyon, Farmington, NM to visit my uncle, and New Orleans, Louisiana, with several other stops along the way.
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On a long road trip by car, if we ever want to get anywhere, we can’t stop at every whim to take pictures. Taking pictures out of a car window simply results in blurred impressions. In the last several years, when driving alone, I’ve held a journal in my lap and jotted notes without looking down – admittedly dangerous and not recommended. Recently, I bought a voice recorder to record my thoughts – a much safer option. 🙂
on planes, trains, buses & pilgrimages:
Of course, our journey isn’t always a road trip. Sometimes it’s a plane flight, or multiple connecting flights, a train or a bus ride, or a combination of all of these. Sometimes it’s a walk or a hike. However we travel, there is bound to be something illuminating in it.
Waiting at the bus station in South Korea 2010me with our driver in Jaipur, India March 2011Heathrow Airport June 2013En route from London to Barcelona June 2013
The journey to our destination can be excruciatingly boring, or it can be fascinating, if we observe the unusual and render it well. Anything that informs our journey, adds dimension and depth to our travel experience, can become a subject for a travel piece: an encounter with strangers, a movie watched, music on a playlist, a conversation, unexpected challenges.
on bringing ourselves along
We might also consider the following: How do we bring ourselves along? The truth is that no matter how far we travel, we still lug along our happy, sad, angry, adventurous, forgetful or stressed selves. It is impossible to excise our inner or physical selves from this world to which we’ve escaped. How does that self make itself known in this new place? Do we learn something from our best or worst selves?
I’m challenging myself to write about the journey itself in a more engaging way. I invite you to explore how we take ourselves from here to there.
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“Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows. Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is non-existent. And don’t bother concealing your thievery – celebrate it if you feel like it. In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you take things from – it’s where you take them to.”
– Jim Jarmusch
In Vladimir Nabokov‘s book Lolita, at the beginning of part two, Humbert Humbert and Lolita take a road trip across the U.S.A. Nabokov captures a small part of their journey perfectly in this passage:
Now and then, in the vastness of those plains, huge trees would advance toward us to cluster self-consciously by the roadside, and provide a bit of humanitarian shade above a picnic table, with sun flecks, flattened paper cups, samaras and discarded ice-cream sticks littering the brown ground. A great user of roadside facilities, my unfastidious Lo would be charmed by toilet signs — Guys-Gals, John-Jane, Jack-Jill and even Buck’s-Doe’s; while lost in an artist’s dream, I would stare at the honest brightness of the gasoline paraphernalia against the splendid green of oaks, or at a distant hill scrambling out — scarred but still untamed — from the wilderness of agriculture that was trying to swallow it. (p. 153, 50th anniversary edition, Lolita, June 1997)
Inspired by Nabokov, I wrote about a road trip we took one winter to Philadelphia.
As we drive north on a freeway hemmed in by concrete barriers, the Toyota RAV’s wipers swish the drizzle to and fro on the windshield, a squeaky metronome. Vehicles from Maryland, Virginia, and The Garden State whiz past, their tires flinging dirt-infused mist on our windshield. A Warehouse for Lease! slumps on the fringes and black spiny trees blur along the roadside. U2 sings “Mysterious Ways” and highway vagabond Miranda Lambert wants to “go somewhere where nobody knows.” I’ve snagged my left thumbnail and as usual, I don’t have any nail clippers in my purse. The annoying snag persists. A yellow sign forbids U-turns and when we cross the bridge, a ghostly mist rises off the Susquehanna River. Barns, silos, and bristly sepia fields scroll past and an aqua “Town of Perryville” water tower mutters a greeting. On the industrial corridor near “Port of Wilm,” metal utility towers spread their triple-triangle arms and factories belch smoke, gasping their last breath. Blue-green porta-potties stand in formation along the tracks and containers lie like coffins on idle trains. The derelict train station’s windows are broken. Citywide Limousine squats beside a lot of Ryder trucks and an empty pedestrian bridge covered in chain-link looms over us as we sputter underneath.
Finally, “Pennsylvania: State of Independence,” welcomes us while Hidden Figures of NASA stand in all their mathematical genius on an electronic billboard. Run-down brick row houses hug the highway behind a thin veil of chain-links. CSX rail cars hunker along the highway, dead in their tracks. Another billboard promises “The Wounded Warrior Project helps me heal the wounds you can’t see.” At Philadelphia Energy Solutions, giant cylindrical tanks squat on the land and, next door, bundles of paper haphazardly occupy a recycling plant. A pink “Risqué Video” sign entices those so-inclined. We skid into the Philly outskirts, land of the free and home of the tired.
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“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 750-1,000 word (or less) post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, April 3 at 1:00 p.m. EST. When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, April 4, I’ll include your links in that post. My first post will be about my road trip to Cape May, New Jersey.
This will be an ongoing invitation, once weekly through April, and monthly after that. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂
I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
My path less traveled. Rediscovering self after surviving the abuse that almost sunk me. Goal of strengthening and thriving on my adult legs. 👣🙏🏻 #recovery #forgiveness
This blog is for those who wish to be creative, authors, people in the healing professions, business people, freelancers, journalists, poets, and teachers. You will learn about how to write well, and about getting published. Both beginning and experienced writers will profit from this blog and gain new creative perspectives. Become inspired from global writers, and find healing through the written word.
Explore, discover and experience the world through Meery's Eye. Off the beat budget traveler. Explore places, cultural and heritage. Sustainable trotter.
shareable tales of Meery is Meeryable
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