The End

In the sharp night Icelandic sky, which had momentarily cleared of cloud and rain, hung the familiar Orion constellation. There was something about the congruity of that ever-recognisable belt. The new depth revealed by dark skies and shaky binoculars, always inspired me.

The nebula hidden just below was my own cosmological constant and anchor to the world to which I would soon return. A reminder that just as with the stars, wherever I travelled in the world, there I would be. Like Orion I’d always be hunting for something. Less like him I’d not always be sure what it was that I was hunting for.

Tonight though we were all certain. The elusive Northern Lights were our prey and we waited with breath held in anticipation or stolen by the icy, swirling wind. Of course, like with any hunt we had to be prepared to go home with empty mouths. An unslaked hunger to bear witness to the silent inner workings of our complex world.

A slow bus-ward trudge commenced as the cold continued to gather while time ticked away. I didn’t feel bad that I was not going to see the lights. Instead only proud of the distance I’d come and that I’d given myself this opportunity to feel so alive. I was sure there’d still be plenty of explosive moments yet to come.

Explosive moment

Besides, if anywhere had taught me not to be so shackled to my expectations, then New York, which I had only just departed, was that place.

Big Christmas in the Big Apple

What I’d expected was snow covered streets melted only by traffic and coffee spilled while handling giant pizza slices. Happy faces skating frozen lakes. Windows lined with wooden toys. The glass steamed up by the chilly breath of hopeful children.

Definitely not frozen

It was a fantastic city full of sights and buzz. But the only Christmas magic I felt, as a few flakes of snow drifted down atop the Rockefeller centre in miraculously still conditions, was quickly dispelled. “Is it normally so calm like this?” I asked, “You’re 800 feet in the air man what do you think?” came that typical surly New York reply.

Brooklyn however had been full of nice surprises. Views of that iconic jeweled skyline. Probably the world’s best cup of coffee (not the one in Elf, that place had closed). And what was truly the best of what travel had offered me: coincidence.

Best coffee ever

Coincidence

Drinking in a bar close to the brewery, trying to come to terms with being back on my own again after having only just made friends in San Francisco, another friend coincidentally appeared. This time an old friend. Twelve years we reckoned had passed since we last met. Whilst I posted a picture of the bar for distant friends to see, he was sat right around the corner reading it.

Of course we didn’t have nearly enough time to catch up on 12 years of our lives. But the time we spend on the paths we travel I realised, was less important than how and when those paths coincide. Making unique moments that made this trip my own.

The final surprise New York would have for me was not any of the great things my friend recommended for me. Not even the relaxing night off I gave myself cat sitting Stirling.

Stirling’s “Who the heck are you?” look

No, instead it was one of the most touristic things I could have chosen to see.

The Statue

Although smaller than I’d expected, again it was the unexpected that made her come to life for me. Stood inside the pedestal, Emma Lazarus’ words stamped in copper changed the meaning of the statue for me like they had been doing for others for over 115 years.

I’m sure my travel-weary body and barbwire-tattered trousers went some way to helping me see these words from the perspective of the trembling voices of the Ellis Island immigration museum. Their striking effects empower the meek, welcome the needy and cast out the pomp and unduly proud.

As these sick and tired bodies drifted through the sea-washed sunset gates, inspection, detention, freedom and happiness were all in equal play. Any of my own anxieties these past few months were far out-stripped by what they must have felt.

I wonder did her beacon-hand glow with world-wide welcome, easing their fears and kindling their hopes? Or would they be doomed to wash up like wretched refuse on the teeming shore.

A Flag in the Wind

Such conflicted thoughts of hope and helplessness bubbled up again for me in Iceland.

An acoustic guitar warms the air in Hlemmur Mathöll food hall. I sit against the radiator and plate glass that resolutely combine to reject the cloud-locked skies of Reykjavik’s odd December. Perhaps by the end of my Prince Polo chocolate bar, the low-lit blue sky will return. Or snow. Or thunder even. The weather here it seems is as changeable as my thoughts on returning home.

I am like the restless Icelandic flag whipped by the wind. A bright red cross, a flame of passion for all the words and pictures I created. Like the lava the cross represents, spilling forth to form new lands and with them new purpose. The flag also bears a white cross of ice. Like some hollow cavern, sometimes empty of promise or belonging in the world. Finally, surrounded all by the deep blue of the ocean. At times I felt strong and proud like these Nordic island borders. But sometimes still like an islander without a boat, helplessly adrift on the colossal tectonics of the world.

Walking between the plates

I wondered as those New York immigrants probably did. “Could I somehow bridge the seas and find a life to live?” Would I be warmed by that subterranean soul I’d found within my core? Or would I wonder icy caverns instead. A chill-stifled voice inaudible, the only sound the echoes of my own lost footsteps.

The Light

As I neared the bus door I was resigned to my wish of seeing the Northern Lights, remaining just that. The wind that ragged at coats and ponchos, sapped out heat even through my two layers of trousers. I was ready to give in.

That’s when I heard it. A hoot of excitement from the American contingent. I wheeled around like a wide-eyed prize fighter who’d been caught off guard with a celestial hay-maker.

There in the sky, hung an off-white glyph. A milky lizard tail laid lazily across the night. Like a sorcerer had stamped their ownership on the heavens above us. From it traced down neat ruled lines that gave the sky a depth no star could ever manage.

Like Fuji’s clouds the lights would slowly and imperceptibly change. The tail became two great beams. A ghost train from behind the cloud, ferrying beings in worlds we’d never know.

Bracing myself against the wind-shook bus was not enough to capture the moment. Merely enough to reveal the colour hidden to our naked eyes.

In a way I was glad. Too often would I have to force myself to put the camera down but now I was left with no choice but to stare up at this silent-lipped spectacle.

The End

This would be the punctuation point in my little trip once around the globe. A point by which I’d hoped to have become so changed by the world that I would no longer worry about the flaws in my character, concentrating only on my strengths.

I thought back to Bartholdi’s statue and how her mild eyes and silent lips command such power without aggression. Her meekness intertwined with her greatness.

Also her Liberty Green shell, when formed, created widespread worry among her carers and admirers. I know some words I’ve written appear like a creeping rust oxidizing over how I’ve previously been seen.

But that flaw now forms an essential part of the statue. It seals the thin copper from the harsher elements she faces. My own flaws give me my perspective and the passion for what I enjoy.

With all the wondrous and terrible things I’d seen in these past 100 days the world had changed me it’s true.

More than anything it merely changed the way I looked at the person I always was.

Henry Miller was right, “One’s destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.”

I look out to the green haired rocks, gathered like petrified goblins awed by the abyssal falls. With my notebook only halfway filled, I’m ready to see in as many new ways as the world will let me.

My trip was at an end. My future was just beginning.

Embrace the Suck

A butterfly flaps its wings in New York and causes a hurricane in China. You’ve probably heard of The Butterfly Effect and the various exaggerated examples of its power. I’m sure you’ve taken them with a pinch of salt too.

The closer you look at your own life however, the more you can trace it back to some seemingly insignificant moment that started you down this specific branch of the myriad of ways in which your life might have gone.

Green Lake, Whistler

In Sacramento with the rain driving down, walking amidst the characterless concrete surrounding the Greyhound station, I wonder. Can any good come of tracing things back like this? Will it simply make you obsess over your “poor life choices” as my friend from the bus station limbo puts it? Or can it be seen both ways – a catalyst for the good, bad and just plain unexpected? Things that might be considered the real, but less glamorous adventure.

As Benji goes “full hobo” and climbs in to his sleeping bag on the cold station floor he turns and reminds me of a motto he learnt serving in the armed forces. “Embrace the suck man. Embrace the suck.” He laughs.

The Suck

Attributed to what I have termed my occasional “common sense blackouts” there was about 15 seconds in which I flapped those dreaded cotton wings and formed a hurricane in the path of my future. Perhaps through believing we’d entered a digital era, or perhaps just sheer dumb absent-mindedness, I removed my driver’s licence from my wallet thinking “I wont need it, I’ll probably just lose it”.

Sea to Sky Gondola, Squamish

Despite my good friend posting it out to me in Vancouver, fate it seemed had other plans for me. As I left for Seattle on the bus I learnt my licence was stuck in a depot in Richmond due to unclear postal bloopers. It might eventually make it back to the UK. I didn’t care at this point. I had food poisoning, the start of a chest infection and my travel buddy had left. I’d never felt so alone.

A chain of events had been set in motion that would see me give up my dream of seeing Mount St Helens and Cannon Beach, fall off a bike in Portland, break my camera, pay for a room I would have no chance of staying in and taking the worst bus journey of my life.

Mount Hood from Pittlock Mansion, Portland

Two hours delay in departing and fourteen to Sacramento. As I write this the announcer brings news of snow, making our forecast lay over another six hours before we get the final three hour leg of our journey. In less time than this one bus journey I’d flown half way around the globe.

That’s plenty of time it turns out, to completely re-type this post after what seemed like an inevitable power cut and then as the power came back on a blue screen of death !

Blue Screen of Death, Sacramento

The Wake

Clearly, there were large tides of suck flowing in to my life. The moment I realised I’d booked the wrong accommodation back in Portland for example. About to tuck in to a bacon and blue cheese burger in the stylish Kelly’s Olympian, one such wave crashed over my thoughts creating an awful inception, ruining my lunch.

Beautiful shot of Portland suggested by a friendly passer-by

“Maybe I’m just a loser?” I thought. In truth this thought had bubbled up a few times in recent years. Underachievement, bad luck, mistakes and mishaps. In spite of all my gifts things would often not work out in one way or another. Could some people end up losing while others inexplicably land on their feet? Was I the unfortunate balance to the off-tilt scales of fate?

I know I can be very focused on the negative sometimes. This could just all be part of my own neurosis. So I forced myself to find the positive things that had arrived in the wake of these waves of suck. That’s when I started to realise that as much good had found its way into my path as bad. Some that I would never have seen on my original trajectory, some simply made better by the relative suck of the previous days. How many could I name I wonder?

Off the Itinerary

At least two places I loved were a direct result of my karmic debt being collected in full the day I left Japan. I’d had no travel mishaps so far so when the last Gyoza hit my stomach and the cramps begun I knew it was going to be a tough time. It was so bad that even after two days of not doing a whole lot in Vancouver we decided to retreat to the mountains in Squamish and splash out on our own apartment with hot tub, cinema room and mountain views. Without my stomach bug I’d maybe have never seen Squamish or Whistler. I’d almost certainly have not enjoyed a blissful Netflix and hot tub regime!

Sea to Sky Highway, Squamish

When I realised my licence was not going to find me in Canada, I needed an alternate itinerary quick. Portland had never been on my radar since I had been thinking of wilderness and camping. But this city was so much fun for me I told at least four people I would move there one day. I hiked and ran, saw mountains, and humming birds, watched live music and my first ice hockey game. This place was full of life and without the suck, I likely would have driven right past it.

Portland was bursting with wall art

Off the Wall

Staying in cities for extended lengths of time makes you seek out things you might not normally look for. Thanksgiving dinner in the hostel in Seattle was just such a thing for me. A large plate of small talk to go with my side of turkey would usually be a definite no. Instead I went for it, found a girl who really needed a friend and sipped Naughty Nellie while praising the notion of “to have loved and lost”. We watched the happy faces of the Macy’s parade the following morning and found ourselves smiling too.

Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade, Seattle

A museum could never normally be considered “off the wall”. But I had a good feeling about Seattle’s Pinball museum from the moment I stepped through the door to be meet the resident greeter Buddy the Golden Retriever. There I found machines from 30 or 40 years ago as well as two of my all time favourites, Fun House and Arabian Nights. Who knew for $15 I would be playing on machines worth $10,000 and upwards.

Fun House, Seattle Pinball Museum

Off the Chart

It’s every traveller’s hope that their dreams are fulfilled by the places they travel. To feel that elation that where they are in the world is exactly where they want to be. Turns out that feeling gets amplified when you’ve had such a run of bad luck. In Sacramento, in the 5th hour of delay, during the first power cut, coughing uncontrollably I was suffering an off the chart low. Within an hour of that moment we’d escaped in our own rental car and were cruising out into view of the San Francisco skyline. The rain had given way to a glorious sunset, the concrete swapped for sea, sky and painted houses. We both instantly hit off the chart happiness. This place would be special, made all the more so because of the lingering suck.

Approaching San Francisco

Back in BC, I couldn’t really see a future for this trip. I imagined being sat in some smokey city on my birthday resenting the obstacles that had prevented me getting out to places like Yosemite. In Portland I’d watched a film about a man climbing all 3000 feet of El Capitan without ropes.

If only I’d remembered my licence, if only it hadn’t been lost in the post. If only a million other things that made me lose this goal like all the others.

It’s my birthday in a few hours so I bought myself a present. A tour to Yosemite. Something I know I’ll appreciate just a little bit more because of the totally unplanned way it has come about.

Not so smokey city, San Francisco