A project of sorts, a project about connections and places. The
ramification of My Most Recent Life Decision.
The project is to get across the united states, from Idaho
to New York, staying at night, when possible, through 1st and 2nd
degrees of separation. This involves hopeful posts on facebook, asking people
who they know in Nebraska, and checking email frequently. I did this in 2011,
going the opposite direction heading to my soil science degree, with Buddy
Holly. We slept in the spare room of my pastor’s brother in Chicago, in the
adorable guest bed in Minnesota of my community college’s guidance counselor’s
ex-boyfriend (before-she-discovered-she-was-a-lesbian)…. people who I’d never
met before but who welcomed us and threaded us across the country.
I studied soil for a while in the west, then studied it some
more in the Puget Sound, then went bicycling around southeast Asia, flew to the
Puget Sound because my car was left there, and then had to make a choice
between 2 job offers.
Originally when I stuffed my Subaru and rolled west, I told
everyone I was for sure coming back. “Don’t worry I won’t stay there long.” But
then, in the Puget Sound, I fell for the bike lanes in Seattle, the mild
winters, the glory of Her Elusive Majesty Mt Rainier, the ever-linking public
transportation, and a certain small and resoundingly supportive Episcopal
church. So I leave a substantial book mark there.
I am returning east, to the small fingerlakes and collegy
town of Geneva in upstate NY. In some ways I am thinking of this as returning
home, and in some ways I think of this as a visit. I have taken a hands-on,
experience-rich, and lowly job at Bejo Seeds, Inc (until this November). I will
be trotting around outdoors this summer, learning the subtleties of irrigation,
and of caring for and taking inventory of 54 types of vegetable varieties. What
I think might be my dream jobs (university extension, sustainable agriculture
research, urban farm projects) call for “X number of growing seasons
experience” and so tra la this summer I shall gain said experience.
I am also very eager to spend a summer among the fingerlakes
(and Lake Ontario), something I have not done since I was immature and
unappreciative. I look forward to bicycling the drumlins, to cooling off in freshwater…but
most importantly I shall be equidistant from all those important loved ones I
left a few years ago. My aunts and uncles, my parents, Buddy Holly, all the
Rochester people (who are also essentially aunts and uncles). This next chapter
will be a blend of Moving Somewhere New (I won’t be living at home) and Being
Bold And Brave Because It Is New, and also the irreplaceable comfort of people
who’ve known me most of my existence.
~~~~~
I’d spent the last week or so in Moscow ID playing Easter
services for my other Episcopal church and living with some lovely church
people, Mr. and Mrs. Hydrology. I come in one night, and there they are at the
kitchen table reading issues of Nature. “Hey look at this supernova!” Mr. Hydrology
says eagerly to Mrs. Hydrology, showing her his page. Oh scientists. I think
they are adorable. They’ve been married 30 years and frequently go hiking and
rafting.
Who’d a thunk, that 2 years ago when I was introduced to Mr.
Tenor (aka Mr. Hydrology) at the Idaho Episcopal church, that I’d be coming
back and baking them muffins and sleeping under their tribal blankets in the
spare room. People are so wonderful.
Spending time in Moscow was lovely (save for the cold and
wind), and almost convinced me I could live there. The co-op, having your
errands slowed substantially due to chatting with everybody, the bicycles all
over. Being close to my church so that I could wake up in the morning with a
hymn traveling around my head, and then walk over and play that hymn. But I
cannot see myself living for too long in endless acres of wheat.
~~~~~~
This trip germinated in 3 days; when a job offer is made
then a decision must quickly accompany it. I had to choose between 1)
vegetables in upstate NY, 2) customer support for environmental science
equipment in ID, and 3) floating around for longer while applying for more
jobs, helping out at my favorite pub, and playing for church. I chose 2, which
then means I have to get there.
And so Mr. India, dear Mr. India who now happily has a
post-doc assignment at UI in hydrological modeling, is accompanying me across the
country. We shall have ourselves an epic road trip. But we are driving
ourselves towards our end, ending while we are still golden, ending because in
October (supposedly the auspicious month for this according to His Mother) he
goes back to India and must acquire a wife of the arranged marriage variety. In
a week he gets on an airplane in upstate NY back to Idaho and that is
that. (oh cultures and duty and
differences and acceptance and grieving)
But I’ve had the blessing of a romance out of Bollywood and
I do not regret anything.
1 comment:
Where are you now? It would be fun to track your journey across the country. I really enjoyed tracking your journey through SouthEast Asia.
Love,
Mom
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