Excerpt from Chapter 50: Loopy in Kamloops
'Lying flat on my back on my sleeping bag, staring upward at the V-shaped peak where tent sides meet, I watched mosquitoes
congregate to conspire the long night ahead. Directly out the west window,
indiscreet, the sun folded into candyfloss pigments of orange and pink. Allowing ideas
from the passage to percolate, something hit a nerve. More than anything in the
world, I wanted to be happy. Not for passing bursts, but for long, undulated
periods, where emotion could be amassed and the afterglow of happiness preserved.
Maybe there was a way to channel
bliss somehow.
There is a beautiful narrative in J.D. Salinger’s
Raise High the
Roofbeam, Carpenters, in which Seymour Glass describes a perceived, permanent yellow stain on his right hand, a leftover from brushing against a
playmate’s buttery dress during his childhood. Through recollections and
emotions, perhaps symbolically, we have the ability to engender the same
durable effect. Fishing in a pond of happy memories, possibly there is a means
to train ourselves to summon joy at will, and provide nourishment during dry
spells. If the law of vibration detailed in the Holy Order of Man’s digest really works, and there was evidence of
it through our basic requests, maybe then, all one needs to do is believe
in happiness.
The rest will take care of itself.
On Friday, a few days beyond June 21, morning is grey, chillier than the day
before. Not a drop of precipitation in sight. Thanking Paul for our stay, at half
past seven, Jan and I made our way from the Kamloops hostel out to the highway.
Stale sesame seed bagels tucked deep in our packs, we hoped to get a head start.
Other travellers, also moving east, had already packed their gear.
Watching a torrent of cars and transport
trucks blow by in haste, loitering on the shoulder of the TransCanada, we
contemplated the trip ahead. Habitually, Jan and I willed a harm free journey. Counting our flight to Vancouver, in four months, we'd logged close to
6000 miles. Having been in near constant motion since leaving our jobs at the
hotel in March, it hadn’t felt like a stretch. The unknown quotient of the
remaining weeks of our trip was a thrill. Along with the rush of day-to-day
adventure, came the proverbial ache of anxiety.
The yin and yang of confronting a faceless
future.'
1976: Tapes from California © 2016 Jill C. Nelson
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