At last—God Bless my sitting
ass—I have arrived.
Luggage: check.
Safe, sound, and sealed.
Comforted by the familiar tug
of pack on back, backpack and Mac, I exit the airport and board a train headed
North to Malmo.
The world passes through
dirty windows: fields and water, a latticework bridge, the ugly, industrial
outskirts of Copenhagen.
Sitting opposite me, a
faux-redhead whispers excitedly to her companion.
It’s all gibberish to me—a red-blooded, meat-eating, ignorant,
arrogant, single-language, close-minded, American fool.
God Bless the country of shopping
malls, fast food, and Fords, chain stores, obesity, belligerence, blissful
ignorance, egos and opinions; the country of Red (necks), White (majority) and
Blue (bloods). Camouflage hats and hunting jackets. IPhone outlooks, economic altitudes
and attitudes. Minds open like the double barrel of a shotgun, shoot-to-kill, and ready to blast.
The train pulls to a stop.
I get off, associating myself
with better things (as any good American would).
Juliana surprises me at the
Depot.
We embrace.
Her body is warm, smile wide
and bright.
Central Malmo is undeniably
hip. The buildings tower above; six-story sentinels overlooking cobblestone
streets, cafes and clothing stores. By night the lights are low, casting
Jack-the-Ripper shadows, and everybody wears scarfs and coats and
leather-boots, sweaters and jeans.
Juliana shows me her
apartment—all of three bedrooms, a kitchen, living room, and two
roommates—located at the very top of a building, boarding the bohemian downtown
and more upper class hipsterville—brown tweeds vs. worsted wool, mostly black.
The hipsters wear Adidas and
Nikes, dark jeans, three-quarter coats, Buddy-Holly glasses and hairstyles,
stubble beards, mustaches.
The more Bohemian-minded folk
sport slacks and fur-collared tweeds, nylon coats, oversize scarves and faded
Levis—coffee-cups and cigarettes held in ungloved hands, well past dark.
She shows me around.
We eat at a
hole-in-the-wall—ill lit, bathed in yellow florescence—Arab tacos and a bottle
of Coke.
We catch up.
It cools down and I’m
wondering if my “layers” theory will work for winter backpacking. I have no
coat—rain-jacket, yes, but nothing substantial (or hip). I packed light, lots
of layers: sweaters, compression shirts, thermals, etcetera—options.
It’ll do.
Whatever.
I think of freezing to death
in the Valley—back home, unloading Christmas trees with Eric Huus in 10 bellow
(that’s Fahrenheit).
Yeah, I’ll survive the 50’s
in deck shoes if I have to—blind-folded
and shirtless, ha.
We head back home, meet with
her friend Linnea and roommate, Maria.
Sit around and drink tea.
I can’t help but wonder—in
the afterglow of months spent working, arrived-now, traveling again and
happy—why do we do it?
Compromise this feeling I
have in my cheeks right now.
Think:
We spend the first quarter of
our lives “growing up” “maturing” solving the mysteries of our “youth”, and
just when we’ve reached that “peak”, having discovered who we are, what we
want, and what makes us happy, we alter our design to better fit society—a
conventional life—shedding those discoveries like an unwanted skin and beginning
an “adulthood” of compromise and abandon. We walk away from our identity,
assuming the stresses and unhappiness of “age” “maturity” “professionalism”; a
life lived “because” [enter excuse here].
I’m not talking about
responsibilities.
I’m talking about excuses.
The sad, even ridiculous truth is that you can’t change your identity—you just
become unhappy.
How many bright, full-of-life
people have I met traveling, only to rediscover them later, devoid of that joy
and substance—conformed and unhappy, functioning against their personal design
and humanity?
Sheeeeit.
Look in the mirror mutherfucker.
Dozens.
Myself included.
And for what?
[enter excuse (or excuses)
here]
I’m not shrugging the
responsibilities of adulthood—by no means. I’m not providing any answers, how
could I? We have our own individual dilemmas, circumstances and even
train-wrecks, perhaps.
“Life’s a bitch, and then ya die”
-
Nas (Illmatic, 1992)
I’m just watching the sun
drop—that special light in your eyes fade to a nondescript blur.
Rich or poor, hip or
otherwise, I urge you: make the sacrifice.
Don’t compromise this life. Don’t
trade your joy for something as insignificant as an excuse or a fear.
Maintain.
Grow up (growthefuckup) and keep. Don’t
go downhill at 22 or 24 or 26. Don’t loose sight of who and what you are, and
of what makes you happy (which sometimes can be as simple as that: staying true
to yourself).
Watch for the hook, ya dig?
Though it feels good in the
steam, don’t it?
Like watching your reflection
disappear in the bathroom mirror: you’ve just turned the shower on, how long
you gunna let it run?
There’s chlorine in that shit!
2 comments:
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That was Inspiring. Thank you.
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