11/05/2022
over
On a whimsy, sitting on the sofa at my sister, Ariel's Hollywood apartment waiting to leave for my flight home, I jumped up and announced I was taking the to for some final pictures. Ariel opted to co-pilot and we unleashed the along the winding roads. I joked that this would be "Classic Adventures To Nowhere and we'll get there two minutes too late."
I was right. But the sunset was for me and Ariel, a farewell of sorts. Cresting Mulholland the sky offered us a glimpse of the that we witnessed driving up. I give you this picture as a whisper of something greater. As we got back in the car the lyrics came through from Pandora:
"And you run and you run and you run
To catch up with the sun
But it's sinking
Racing around to come up behind you again"
I laughed. It was one of those moments that no one would believe if there wasn't a witness.
"The sun is the same in a relative way but you're older"
The last time I was here was the original to Nowhere. I was 19, I think, and the US was at a pivotal point of change. There was still a strong smell of Cold War across the country that had been compounded by the 9/11 attacks. Now, at least three apocalypses later, looking back on that time it seems like a million years ago, both for me personally and in the of society and culture. When we left on that trip the world seemed huge and we had set out looking for our place in it.
"The sun is the same in a relative way but you're older
Shorter of breath and one day closer to death"
In a recent post I alluded that I still question the definition of an "Adventure to nowhere." Truth is I have that answer and I know the pieces that go into one. I know what the formula is that make up these trips. I know how important the concept of being on an "Adventure to Nowhere" is in inspiring my daily life. I know what these answers are for me, and they are mine. And maybe over the right beer at the right time and to the right person I'll give those answers.
But for now what I can say is this; The days are just as long as three years or decades or even centuries ago, it's just that makes them feel shorter. We don't lose our improvisational or our ability to see and in the world, it's just sometimes we forget how. And maybe with a bit of and a lot of we can find those lost minutes and rekindle the fire of wonderment and awe.