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Tying up loose ends is always difficult. And it seems to me like there were more knots than usual this time round. But so it goes. And so it goes. James, the cat-loving tough guy who took over my room and knows a bit about traveling was right though when he said, “Sometimes you have to burn bridges to move forward.” But as Patrick told me, looking into the coloured sky outside my window as we lay limp and dejected one night awhile back, preparing for a long night of work and crazy adventures ahead, when communication breaks down, sometimes you just have to move forward. Nothing more, nothing less. It’s just that, when you look down the path of the future, sometimes you don’t see anything. Not clearly anyways. That’s fear. But hell, it’s also exhilleration, too. So hit the high-brow fashion scene and stripper parties hard, jump out the roof so you don’t get arrested, clear up any lingering misconceptions that are still dragging you down, take hitchhiking cues from the indie-rock kids, have wine, coffee, cigarettes and more with your friends, late into the night, and stick around for one more at home bash with the brohiems and their vinyl. It all seems to play out over a Crystal Castles soundtrack. Check in on the rave scene, and then just shove off – Because at the side of the road, you know it, is how it all begins.
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I don’t think I’ll ever forget bombing down I-90 in a little compact diesel with the CEO of one of the most effective leadership and voluntary organizations in the entire world, his wife sitting passenger side. I’m staring intently into the laptop monitor, watching a former marine give his story of unarmed military observation in Darfur, Sudan. Love of country, loss of faith in it. A man who has been through the wringer. Because, indeed, the devil came on horseback, and he’s learned how to shake the hands. But maybe more importantly, beyond the plucked out eyeballs and charred corpses and beyond local atrocities, maybe the true depravity is not the Janjaweed pirates or a scheming Sudanese government, but that even when this well-trained marine, the New York Times and the Bush administration steps up to the plate to reveal a “genocide”, and even when the ability to stop the killing already exists... no one has stopped the devil from coming on horseback. To rape. To pillage. To kill. Because, the news deluge eventually reverts to a trickle, the government fails to live up to its commitments under the UN, and Barak Obama and everyone else knows the country’s resources are already gushing into Iraq. And it’s no conspiracy theory that the U.S. wants access to what’s under the ground in Sudan, and must please their government, and face off with China to get at it. Hell, Bush knows he needs a peace deal in place and was briefed on the country’s atmosphere by the fundamentalist icon Rev. Billy Graham himself before he even stepped into office. Everyone has the ability to know what’s going on. And I look at a retired, young marine sitting emotionally in shambles as he relates his tale of powerlessness to the camera, sitting in his off-road vehicle as the arid African landscape dotted with scrubby vegetation and burnt-down villages lined with corpses streams by in the background. I drink it in, take a breath, and look up. The first thing I see is another COSTCO. I’m surrounded by baffling light patterns that rise and fall with the highway I’m on, as we weave up and down over once virgin landscapes – passing under six-lane highways every few miles. I see 24-hour Wal-Marts (mall worts we joke). I see rectilinear structures that are home to the proud happenstances of inane office politics. I see gas stations complete with jumbo coffees, arcades and multiple massage chairs. I’m looking at a completely different way of life that’s so difficult to maintain. And I think about the blue collar steelworker with a knack for photography who took me up to the border, and expressed his concern with the towers of greed his rebar helps to create and sustain. And so I open up a little book he passed along, quite at random – and I read something to ease my mind: “Wherefore I was grieved with that generation and said, They do alway err in their heart; and they have not known my ways. So I, sware in my wrath. They shall not enter in to my rest.” Alexisonfire covers Moneen and knows it. Obama at least says that he knows it. And hell you can survive it, or be a CEO and do something about it. But let’s not forget how this shit runs.
And this was just Day 1.
2 comments:
You know it!
Cheers to living a dream [ ;) ]
Safe travels,
-Ryan M
ya, thanks man.
one step @ a time.
checkin' out the sites. hearin' the stories. meetin' rad ppl.
roaming hard... but with that destination in mind...
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