Sunday, December 30, 2012

"The things you fear are undefeatable, not by their nature but by your approach." Jewel

When my brother left for China, shortly after graduating from Cal Poly, he did 100 days of less.  This meant giving away one thing(or many) every day for 100  days.  As my parents weren't thrilled at the idea of his giving the car they gifted him in his late teens away they relented and suggested he give it to our younger cousin.  He donated books to friends and family, ridded his life of of most possesions save a few he stored in my parent's garage and set out to explore China with a backpack, a few articles of clothing, and his essential Doctor Bronner's all purpose soap.  My parents and I would often revisit the event of my brother taking out the garbage one night only to return with it in his hands, his mind somewhere no one knew.  My brohter is brilliant, in the "holy shit how does someone skip first grade?" kind of way.  Like he knew the concepts of quantum physics out of our mother's womb.  For him to set off to China, with only the shoes on his feet and a plane ticket and a tentative destination is not something any of us fathomed my brother ever doing.  The irony perhaps is I was the one in a relationship at the time(albeit in Hawaii, not a bad place to explore) doing the opposite of what I thought I would be doing: like heading to China with only a backpack and my Bronner's soap and a desire to keep moving.  Now he's married, to a girl from China, Eva.  They've moved back to the States and are in the process of buying a house in Portland.  They have a cat named Mango and maybe they'll soon be planning to add their family, to settle in and lead life a little slower, slower than Shenzhen at least.  As for me, I've since been out of the aforementioned relationship, moved to Utah, been in another, finished school, and now here I sit crosslegged in a full apartment, with things all around me.  I've done this before, been here before.  Given away or sold most of my belongings, again save those few boxes still stored at my parent's place in California, and packed only a suitcase for my next destination.  I don't know what it is about this time around.  I just sold a massage table to a couple from Ogden.  I've gone through clothes that I never wear.  I'm staring at a mosaic I never finished.  Looking at stacks of books on the bedroom floor.  I am stagnant and nostalgic, I don't want to keep these things.  I want to toss them all in the trash or give them to someone more desirous, but I'm staring at these items as if they are what holds memories themselves.  And I suppose they do, to some extent, containing the ability to trigger my related emotions more readily.  The red envelope my brother gave me for my birthday, handmade it China, when he visited Utah two Marchs ago.  Or the picture of a tree and its falling leaves Sierra and I painted one night she stayed over while her Mom was out of town.  Or the guitar I attempted to strum a few times, but never learned to play.  My snowshoes sit bright red on the floor.  The plants I've struggled to keep alive hang limply in the window.  I'll keep looking around, remembering, forgetting, remembering, I'll toss more things, give away others, and yet I know the things I'll take with me do not exist in this room right now.  I want to keep moving. I don't want to forget where I've been.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

"Isn't it funny how day by day nothing changes but when you look back everything is different..." C.S. Lewis

I thought it might be fun to record my last month or so here in Logan, mostly via pictures, because, yes I will admit to the 3,351 photos swimming around in my phone, clogging up the memory in such a beautiful way.  It's been snowy and cold as hell.  It's been refreshing though to know after three years I can withstand the cold and chipping ice off of my little car's windshield (that is not so keen on the Winter weather, but has somehow made it through too) and the shoveling of snow and the salting of sidewalks and layering to stay warm and appreciating the covered Wellsvilles in the distance as the temperature drops, 30's then 20's then teens, then....

Friday, December 28, 2012

"How wild it was, to let it be." Cheryl Strayed

I created an account.  A couchsurfing account.  I sent my first request to a couple who have welcomed me with open arms(or messages) and am soon off to see what this adventure entails.  I am excited, nervous, anxious, ecstatic, sad, enamored by all the possibilities of adventure, and for lack of another emotion, melancholically elated at the prospect of leaving Logan after almost three years.  Never has a place and the people residing within it taught me what it means to breathe and feel alive and want to keep living and exploring.  Logan, you've seen more tears than I thought my body was capable of, more grins and deep-bellied laughter than Buddha could have mustered.  Thank you for teaching me what it's truly like to feel.  Heading to the Pacific Northwest first to see what the rain has to say.