There’s no place like home, and after three years living here Durango really feels like home. I’m grateful to the community of Durango for that. I realized this after two back-to-back trips in the only other places I have called home: Normal, Illinois and Crested Butte, Colorado.
Yes, I’m from a town
called Normal. It really says it all. A typical American middle sized
Midwestern town that John Mellencamp could have sung about. Little pink houses.
Surrounded by cornfields, cows, and soybeans. Malls, plenty
of malls. A college. Frats and Sororities. All types of people, colors, ethnicities,
and income brackets. The rich live on one side of town, and the poor on the
other. The middle class lies in between. State Farm insurance has their
headquarters there.
I had to get out. A
fine place to be raised, but if you’re restless and yearning to see wild places,
well, you must go. So I went. You know the story, man goes west. Finds himself.
Blah, blah, blah. Now, I find myself again when I return to Normal.
The passage of time
will make you hold things close to your heart that you once took for granted. I
recall my teenage days of being angsty, angry, confused, and depressed. I
remember telling my parents I hated them more than once. “Every teenager is a shooting
star,” writer Doug Robinson once penned.
My mother recently retired from her job as a middle school principal so I went home for the party. I’m proud of her, and she already seems more relaxed. Her job was incredibly stressful. She deserves a good party.
I am not nostalgic
about the landscape of my Motherland, but rather the people, my family. The
landscape bores me, makes me long for diversity. It’s as if no one can think
creatively about how to use land. Corn. More corn. Throw some soybeans in
there, and cows. That’s about it. The Midwest has some of the most fertile soil
in the United States, and all they do is spray pesticide on it and grow GMO
corn, soybeans and raise hormone filled cattle.
But I still find ways
to appreciate this landscape. Every morning I write, as Grandma reads the
newspaper, Mom prepares for the party, Dad is at work, always working hard, my
brother reads the paper too and catches up on sports. Like myself, my sister in
law works on her laptop; she’s a wedding dress designer in New York City. And
then when I’m done writing I run with my brother.
Life around here
revolves around the lake my parents live on. It’s a burst of refreshment from
the muggy, humid air that makes you sweat the minute you walk outside. Each day
we take a pontoon ride. The rich people’s houses look like something out of the
Great Gatsby. One section of the lake is still forest. We float slowly, taking
it all in, the serenity of a midday boat ride. And then, “look a bald eagle”.
Whoa. Something wild. Hope. The eagle shows off its wingspan as it flies higher
in the sky; till only its trademark white head is visible.
Mom’s party is a
blast. I visit with people I haven’t seen in years. I’m a novelty in these
parts, the only one from Colorado, and I gladly oblige in tales of mountain
living. Everyone wants to know about legal weed. I think they hear more about
it on the national news than I do following our local media.
The house is filled with kids throughout the weekend. Cousins with kids. Friends with kids. The trippy part: At 35 I’m older than every single one of the parents with small children. Back home, everyone is all grown up. Maybe I should grow up too, I ponder.
The house is filled with kids throughout the weekend. Cousins with kids. Friends with kids. The trippy part: At 35 I’m older than every single one of the parents with small children. Back home, everyone is all grown up. Maybe I should grow up too, I ponder.
My visit to Crested
Butte the following weekend was a perfect contrast. My buddy Tim and I arrived
just in time for the Fourth of July parade, which is among the best, if not the
best, in Colorado. Everyone dressed in red, white, and blue, except for the
Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory crew, there are sixty of them only wearing
skunk cabbage skirts. And then there’s KBUT, the local radio station, and their
Soul Train float, filled with afros and glitter. My friend is running the whole
gig and puts us to work at the beer tent: slinging t-shirts and selling drinks.
Here, most of my friends are not growing
up. Maybe on paper they are, but their living situation says otherwise. They
live in a house that feels like a commune. Couch surfers every night. Dogs everywhere,
escaping the house, and out onto the streets. People argue about eating each
other’s food. The living room table is full of incense, jars of weed and old
climbing magazines. Some of my friends are having “summer flings”, mid-thirties
and all that matters is the summer, the moment, having a good time. It’s like
I’m 22 for the weekend. Awesome.
The day after the
Fourth of July I deliver a presentation at the local bookstore. I’ve done this
a couple years in a row now. The audience is usually comprised entirely of my
friends. I plan on reading stories that involve the usual repertoire of my old
school stories: sex, drugs, and rock climbing.
I walk in late and
everything is different than I expected it to be. There are people I don’t
know. Not only that but there’s women I don’t know, waiting to hear me speak.
Beautiful women. And, there’s kids. Wait, who let these kids in here? I retool
my reading material, and keep things PG. It’s my most successful presentation
ever, and my writing dreams are kept alive.
The next day is the
Farmer’s Market. Vibrant, organic food, arts and crafts, hippie girls singing
bluegrass. Independent and local, two necessary ingredients to keep the flavor
and spirit of the West alive. Midday I want to go bouldering, but it rains. So
I head over to the new coffeeshop and bakery. It’s a small, organic, craft
based joint. I love it. There’s a garden out back and a zine library. I think
the hope for America comes in the form of this new small batch, craft movement
sweeping the country.
I want to stay in
Crested Butte forever. Well, at least through the summer. But it’s time to go
back, back to work, back home to Durango. The more I travel, the more I realize
its good to have a home, especially because the road goes on forever, and the
party never ends.
This piece was originally published in the Durango Telegraph.
My two books are called: The Great American Dirtbags and Climbing Out of Bed. Click on the titles to view them on Amazon.
My two books are called: The Great American Dirtbags and Climbing Out of Bed. Click on the titles to view them on Amazon.