Author Topic: The Trip. (cont.)  (Read 12686 times)

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Offline jtyangel

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #25 on: May 05, 2008, 01:48:57 PM »
Going until the land stops. Steinbeck said the same thing. Great minds, ASDF! Best of luck on your journey.
Yes I agree and I think JTY does too! :-) :lmao:

You can respectfully bite my shrinking a$$.  :bird: :-)
Bare it! :-)

I don't know whether I should do this  :bird: or this :naughty:

 :-)

Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #26 on: May 05, 2008, 01:53:59 PM »
Yeah, I almost made it. Isn't it about a mile hike from the road to the point?

Yeah.  And a pretty "Special" hike too, lol.  Here's part of the trail:







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Offline phillygirl

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #27 on: May 05, 2008, 01:58:18 PM »
Beautiful pics ASDF.  What a hike!!  Looks like you had to do some bushwacking.  How long did you go for?  I have another one coming up on Saturday...walk in the park compared to that...gotta love the Appalachian Trail maintainers!

Offline Rebel

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #28 on: May 05, 2008, 02:04:15 PM »
Beautiful pics ASDF.  What a hike!!  Looks like you had to do some bushwacking.  How long did you go for?  I have another one coming up on Saturday...walk in the park compared to that...gotta love the Appalachian Trail maintainers!

You can't hack away at the foliage in Cape Flattery. The trail is maintained by the local native tribe, the Makah, I believe. They have boardwalks on many of the trails.

http://www.makah.com/cape.html
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Offline phillygirl

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #29 on: May 05, 2008, 02:16:55 PM »
Beautiful pics ASDF.  What a hike!!  Looks like you had to do some bushwacking.  How long did you go for?  I have another one coming up on Saturday...walk in the park compared to that...gotta love the Appalachian Trail maintainers!

You can't hack away at the foliage in Cape Flattery. The trail is maintained by the local native tribe, the Makah, I believe. They have boardwalks on many of the trails.

http://www.makah.com/cape.html

It looks beautiful.  Do you know if you can get into the water (more importantly, get back up out of the water!)

Offline jtyangel

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #30 on: May 05, 2008, 02:51:56 PM »
asdf, I can't get over the seclusion of the cabin and looking at those views. I truly am in awe and just imagining how nice that must be to experience. I'm jealous quite frankly. I'm glad you got to check in and hope we hear from you again in a few days. I really appreciate that you are sharing this with us all! I think others do as well! AWESOME!

(sorry to jack your thread earlier :shucks:)

Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #31 on: May 05, 2008, 04:16:49 PM »
Beautiful pics ASDF.  What a hike!!  Looks like you had to do some bushwacking.  How long did you go for?  I have another one coming up on Saturday...walk in the park compared to that...gotta love the Appalachian Trail maintainers!

You can't hack away at the foliage in Cape Flattery. The trail is maintained by the local native tribe, the Makah, I believe. They have boardwalks on many of the trails.

http://www.makah.com/cape.html

It looks beautiful.  Do you know if you can get into the water (more importantly, get back up out of the water!)

Sheer bluffs Phil.  There are some great beaches south of there for beach combing that are public access though.

And the trail WAS board walked in a few places, but mostly consisted of wet tree trunk slices set in mud and mud with roots and a few places had mud with boards for variety, lol.  The hike was maybe a mile (2 round trip) but it was a hard one. For me at least.  (On edit) 3/4 of a mile according to the link Reb posted. But it was uphill in both directions, lol.




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Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #32 on: May 05, 2008, 04:20:41 PM »
asdf, I can't get over the seclusion of the cabin and looking at those views. I truly am in awe and just imagining how nice that must be to experience. I'm jealous quite frankly. I'm glad you got to check in and hope we hear from you again in a few days. I really appreciate that you are sharing this with us all! I think others do as well! AWESOME!

(sorry to jack your thread earlier :shucks:)

You can jack my threads anytime! ;)

Thanks for doing the sticky for me.  My wife has actually been popping in here and reading my posts.




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Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life...

Offline jtyangel

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #33 on: May 05, 2008, 04:55:08 PM »
asdf, I can't get over the seclusion of the cabin and looking at those views. I truly am in awe and just imagining how nice that must be to experience. I'm jealous quite frankly. I'm glad you got to check in and hope we hear from you again in a few days. I really appreciate that you are sharing this with us all! I think others do as well! AWESOME!

(sorry to jack your thread earlier :shucks:)

You can jack my threads anytime! ;)

Thanks for doing the sticky for me.  My wife has actually been popping in here and reading my posts.

Not a problem! Hi Mrs. asdf *waves*

Offline phillygirl

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #34 on: May 05, 2008, 05:46:12 PM »
Beautiful pics ASDF.  What a hike!!  Looks like you had to do some bushwacking.  How long did you go for?  I have another one coming up on Saturday...walk in the park compared to that...gotta love the Appalachian Trail maintainers!

You can't hack away at the foliage in Cape Flattery. The trail is maintained by the local native tribe, the Makah, I believe. They have boardwalks on many of the trails.

http://www.makah.com/cape.html

It looks beautiful.  Do you know if you can get into the water (more importantly, get back up out of the water!)

Sheer bluffs Phil.  There are some great beaches south of there for beach combing that are public access though.

And the trail WAS board walked in a few places, but mostly consisted of wet tree trunk slices set in mud and mud with roots and a few places had mud with boards for variety, lol.  The hike was maybe a mile (2 round trip) but it was a hard one. For me at least.  (On edit) 3/4 of a mile according to the link Reb posted. But it was uphill in both directions, lol.

They can be a killer...did you have your pack?  2 hikes ago I would have sworn the last 2 miles dragged into 7. 

The view you have is amazing.  It always takes a little pain to see views like that.  Good for you for getting out on the trail right away.  I think I would have just been happy to be out of the car after your drive!

Offline West Coaster

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #35 on: May 07, 2008, 11:11:46 AM »
Gosh, ASDF, I really envy you in this.  While I've traveled all over the US on business all my life, I've never been outside (except to Mexico and the Caribbean).  Nevertheless, I've always stayed in hotels and haven't thought about attempting something what your doing.  Maybe now, that I'm retired and just wondering around the house, vacuming and doing the laundry and other housekeeping sorts of crap -- sort of Mr. Mom stuff (although the kids have long gone) -- maybe I'll give something like this a try!
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Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #36 on: May 12, 2008, 12:41:44 AM »
Sunday, May 11, 2008

On Wednesday last week I packed up the camping gear and headed for the northern side of the Columbia river bar to a State park called Cape Dissapointment. Brett and I had camped there 16 years ago when we drove from Vegas to Washington to start our two weeks down the coast.  The camp site that we stayed in was already occupied by a young couple that looked to be about the same age as we were when we were there together. The guy had even hung his hammock between the two trees that I strung mine from so long ago.

I endured one of the worst nights I have had in decades. When I got there it was early afternoon and the sky had clouded over and drizzle was coming down aided by a 20-25 mph constant wind coming off the ocean that the thin line of trees screening my camp site from the beach didn't do much to slow down. It was in the high 50’s when I set out so I was still in a t-shirt and shorts while I was struggling to get the tent up in the wind. By the time I got done rigging the tarp over the picnic table I realized that I was freezing my ass off.  I changed into warmer clothing and got a fire going, but in that kind of wind the only way to get any heat from it is to sit downwind in the smoke, so I just huddled as near as I could and choked down a quick dinner and tried to get warm by wrapping myself around a few cups of coffee.
When I fell into my sleeping bag at 10, I couldn't stop shivering and the temp plummeted into the low 40’s.  Brand new sleeping bag and it is a semi mummy style bag so I was tossing and turning feeling a little claustrophobic. I think it was midnight when I finally drifted off and I woke up at 2:30 on the nose and was up all night.  Wind never died down. Fire didn't help me warm up. Had my first serious “Dear God what the **** am I doing HERE” moment. 

Bad night. Long Dark Tea Time Of The Soul, as Mr. Adams put it.  I had an Eyoresque rain cloud over my head as I chugged down bad camp coffee and loaded into the car and headed south. I followed 101 down to Cannon Beach in Oregon.  Whined on the phone a little to my better half.  The day did improve though.  It got sunny and a little warmer. I drove back north and drove Long Beach from one end to the other (About 20 miles I think.) and saw a baby seal on the beach and a bunch of cool birds.  Went back and walked the surf at the cape and had a good dinner and fell unconscious at dusk.  Slept for almost 9 straight hours.  Walked the north jetty after breakfast and then did some  hiking along the trails in the park.  When I busted out the map at lunch I realized that I had done everything I wanted to do that was within a days drive of where I was and broke camp and loaded up for home.  The road back took me through Montessaro, which was the jumping off point for the Wynoochee river valley and the area that I had slated to go wilderness camping.  When I hit the town, I swung north on a whim and started following the road up the valley.  I was so ******* excited when I first spotted the river, My River!, winding through the trees.  I drove up to the bend in the road that signalled the two areas that I was looking at on the maps and started driving the logging roads to pick out a camp site for later.

Little lanes of two gravel tracks and rocks going in between areas of clear cut and this sort of foreboding, dense, impenetrable wall of 2nd growth plantings of trees. Pretty steep slopes too. I kept the truck in 4 by 4 and low gear a lot. When I hit my first choice I learned a little something that they call in the military “Ground Truth”.  The little verge between the woods and the river that was there on the maps and on the Google satellite overheads was a 200-300 foot sheer hill looking down at what was in actuality a pretty decent river gorge that the Wynoochee had carved out of the foothills.  Ditto the 2nd site, except the drop was steeper.  Long story short… I scouted every accessable cow path and logging road along 10 miles of river and didn't find a single damn location where it was even possible to camp.  Unless I wanted to pitch my tent on jagged shale roadway next to acres of clear cut that is.  The terrain between the roads and the river was the next best thing to impenetrable and the clear cut areas are tree stumps every 12-15 inches with crap all around in between them.  I had a BLAST driving the logging roads and exploring, but my wilderness camp choice was a no-go. 

Came home and sort of fretted for a bit.  The federal forest wilderness camp sites are all closed right now.  I was going to wander down to the visitor center on Monday and see if ANYTHING was open.  So I spent Friday sort of recovering and did chores and laundry on Saturday.  Watched a bunch of movies. Slept.  Woke up to crystal clear skies and sunlight and threw some stuff in the truck and headed up 119 into the mountains figuring I would see if I could dig up a ranger at Staircase trailhead to talk to.  Well the road to Staircase is closed and I didn't see a ranger anywhere, damn the luck.  I started driving the forest roads and I found a tiny little remote camp ground run by the State called Lillywaup Creek.  Prettiest damn place I have ever seen with a mountain creek running along the camp area. Picnic tables and fire rings, but you pack everything in and pack everything out.    I spent the rest of the day traveling little one lane forest roads all over the mountains in the southeast corner of Olympic National Forest and taking pictures.  Later this week I am heading back up to camp for a couple of days at the creek and explore some of the trails I scouted out up there today.  Thursday is bringing three days of sunshine and near record warm temps and the moon will be near full, so for now this is as close to the wilderness as I can manage.  It’s funny… The campground had a big sign that said “Do NOT discharge your firearms in or near the camp site.” I still get to go camping strapped so I’m pretty tickled.  I’ll update when I get  back.

This has been an amazing experience so far.















« Last Edit: May 12, 2008, 03:29:50 PM by asdf2231 »




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Offline DixieBelle

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #37 on: May 12, 2008, 09:46:25 AM »
Wow. Just wow!!!
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

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No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline jtyangel

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #38 on: May 12, 2008, 10:27:32 AM »
Wow, incredible, asdf. I'm going to have to 'borrow' that lighthouse pic..just sayin' :evillaugh:

Damn...sorry...just incredible. Look forward to your next update!

Offline Splashdown

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #39 on: May 12, 2008, 10:31:28 AM »
The seal looks pissed that you waked him up.  :-)
Let nothing trouble you,
Let nothing frighten you. 
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God never changes.
Patience attains all that it strives for.
He who has God lacks nothing:
God alone suffices.
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Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #40 on: May 12, 2008, 03:37:30 PM »
Beautiful pics ASDF.  What a hike!!  Looks like you had to do some bushwacking.  How long did you go for?  I have another one coming up on Saturday...walk in the park compared to that...gotta love the Appalachian Trail maintainers!

You can't hack away at the foliage in Cape Flattery. The trail is maintained by the local native tribe, the Makah, I believe. They have boardwalks on many of the trails.

http://www.makah.com/cape.html

It looks beautiful.  Do you know if you can get into the water (more importantly, get back up out of the water!)

Sheer bluffs Phil.  There are some great beaches south of there for beach combing that are public access though.

And the trail WAS board walked in a few places, but mostly consisted of wet tree trunk slices set in mud and mud with roots and a few places had mud with boards for variety, lol.  The hike was maybe a mile (2 round trip) but it was a hard one. For me at least.  (On edit) 3/4 of a mile according to the link Reb posted. But it was uphill in both directions, lol.

They can be a killer...did you have your pack?  2 hikes ago I would have sworn the last 2 miles dragged into 7. 

The view you have is amazing.  It always takes a little pain to see views like that.  Good for you for getting out on the trail right away.  I think I would have just been happy to be out of the car after your drive!

Nopers on the pack.  The area where I was going to do the wilderness camping is a no-go and the areas that are open in the federal Forest and the surrounding areas are car access off of single lane gravel forest roads. So the back pack is not going to be needed. When I head out on Wednesday though I will have my full hiking kit though. Manpurse/Camera Bag, 2 liter CamelBak and web belt with my pistol, knife and first aide kit. And the Stick. Can't do nothing without the walking stick! :)  I will post some pics of the trails that I find for you when I get back.




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Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #41 on: May 12, 2008, 03:47:47 PM »
The seal looks pissed that you waked him up.  :-)

He was pretty snoozy when I found him, lol!

When he woke up completely and realized that I was standing there he freaked just a tad.


And then promptly went right back to sleep. :)




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Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life...

Offline DixieBelle

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #42 on: May 12, 2008, 04:06:38 PM »
but did you club him with the walking stick? :-)

Kidding!!! He's adorable!
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

Spread my work ethic, not my wealth.

Forget change, bring back common sense.
-------------------------------------------------

No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #43 on: May 19, 2008, 05:20:35 PM »
Dear God, what a helluva week.

Monday and Tuesday I spent the days driving the forest roads through the mountain range just north of my cabin. I was just exploring The wilderness area I had picked out was a no-go but I found a place called Lillywaup Creek that was the next best thing.  Primitive camp sites, bring or filter your own water and a couple of vault toilets. (That’s the fancy term for an outhouse, as I have learned.)  The entire campground was deserted and I got the pick of the litter. 25 feet or so off the prettiest little creek you ever saw.  I drove up Wednesday morning and got my camp set up.  I set up a folding camp chair and spent most of the day with a cup of coffee close to hand and started re-reading The Lord Of The Rings.  It was certainly appropriate as I swear the place I was staying in was lifted from the trilogy and transplanted to Washington.  Giant moss covered first growth cedar trunks, swaying pines, a happily babbling little creek and songbirds and humming birds flitting about. It was absolutely Sylvan.  I read until dusk and then started a fire more for the cheer of it than for the warmth.

 Then I learned something pretty elemental, but something that we tend to forget living in the modern world that we occupy.  20 miles up in the mountains and all by yourself can be a bit spooky. Your world shrinks to the soft circle of orange and yellow light reflecting off the surrounding trees. You become real damn aware of the sounds of the night. You settle in pretty quick, but I would be lying if I said that it wasn’t a comfort having a pistol strapped to my hip as I sat and watched the fire. When I was a kid I had an almost morbid fear of the dark. In certain circumstances it is sometimes easy to stand in the shoes of the child you were once more.  In some ways I was a little relieved that the backpacking into the wilderness thing got short circuited. I was able to haul along most of my Snivel Gear. (The roomy tent and the heavy folding chair to name two items.) I was also able to haul along a 6 gallon jerry can of water rather than taking along a collapsible container and my filter pump.

What I was doing felt more like a cushy expedition than some arduous feat.  It still felt pretty cool.  Miles up in the wild, hell and gone from any living soul, sipping coffee by the campfire and listening to the wind sigh through the trees and rustle the boughs while the water gurgled over the rocks in the stream. With a Colt .45 on my belt and wearing my khaki hiking fedora. Pretty damn good feeling. Slept pretty well and was up at 5:30 with the sun. Well with the daylight anyway. They had promised gorgeous weather for the next three days, but the morning was a little chilly with actual frigging clouds hanging overhead in the tree tops. Then mid morning the sun was there and the clouds disappeared.

I did a little hiking up into the hills around the creek, as much as I was able to. A mile or so out from the campground and the trails started getting pretty iffy and rather than lose track of where I was and having to remember how to do orienteering on the fly, I doubled back and just wandered about close to the stream. When I got banged up and tired enough I wandered back to the camp and spent the rest of the day with Mr. Tolkien and often just staring at the creek rushing by and thinking. About my life. What I liked. What was lacking. Which parts were mine to blame for the failings and which parts were just shit happening, if you will. I found more good than bad in what I was looking at. Which is no small thing.




We all have baggage we carry with us that we fill with the mementos and knickknacks that we buy with our blood, sweat and tears as we go through life. The painful crap that we buy or get stuck with always seems to be the heaviest. I did not have a good childhood. I’m not whining about it mind you, just stating a fact. It took me longer than it should have to learn how to be an adult, and there were portions of it that I did, and still do, just plain suck at. I still have no idea what the hell I want to do with the remainder of my life. I can do or be anything I really want to be. Literally. Within a few confines, the sky is the limit. So why is it so damn hard to figure out? I mean seriously…
You pick something you enjoy and that you are good at and you develop the skills to do it for a living.
Piece of cake. Right? 

Set that aside for now.  Baggage. My father and I did not speak for the better part of about eleven years. Estranged, with a capitol ‘E’. The man didn’t come to my wedding. A couple of years after we were married we were living in Las Vegas. My wife was carrying our first child and running the Veterinary Clinic at Nellis Air Force base. I got a phone call from one of my brothers telling me that my father had slipped on the ice while working and hit the back of his head on the concrete. Hard. Subdural hematoma. Brain surgery to relieve the pressure. But he pulled through and was home. That hit me like a ton of bricks. The old man almost died and I didn’t find out till after the fact. I put some thought into it and finally called him. Told him that for my part I was truly sorry that it had come to where we were. That I had a daughter on the way and that I wanted her to know her grandfather. That if he had died without me being able to tell him “I love you.” It would have torn me to pieces. That I missed having a father. 

We reconciled and for the next ten years we had a cordial if long distance relationship. He came back into the fold with the whole family as a matter of fact and he and my step mom became part of the regular extended family holiday gatherings. He made handcrafted wood work gifts for the grandkids and the daughters in law and my sister. It took time but we became friends in our way as well as father and son. When my son was delivered into this world in 2001 we named him Robert James after him.
We finally moved back home in 2002 after a little more than ten years in the service. I got to spend a good amount of time with the man. I saw him more in the following year than I had in the previous twenty. We arranged a day to go to the firing range together after he returned from a vacation in late Autumn.

I was a little shocked when I saw him. He was grey and he looked drawn out and tired. We had a really good day together. My dad the former cop was a lousy shot, but we had fun.  But he was done in when we were finished. On the ride home I told him that his Mini-14 was pretty neat but that I liked my AR-15 better.  He got a faraway look on his face and told me that he was going to tell my step mom to be sure to pass on his guns and the gun case he had built in his woodshop to me when he died. I just sat there for a second or two kind of shocked. I laughed it off and told him that I better inherit them when I was 60 because I wanted him around a lot longer. He told me he was having some issues and was going to see the Doctor on Tuesday for some tests.  When we got back to his house I handed him a cleaning kit I had picked up and he asked me what he owed me. I told him it was on me, and he handed me a box and said, “Well take this for it then, okay?”  It was a .22 pistol. I was floored. I drove home and sat at the kitchen table looking at the gun and cried because I knew something was coming.




He went to the Doctor on Tuesday and never really came home. Cancer. Systemic. He was in the hospital while they were running tests trying to quantify what was going on. He was too sick for chemo and the cancer was going to kill him if he didn’t get chemo. After a couple of days I went with my step mom for the meeting with the Oncologist who just said “I’m so very sorry”.  I held her for a bit and she went off to make calls.  I went back up to my father’s room to get my brother who was there to brace him and try to figure out what we were going to do.  When I walked in he was gone. I went over to the window to try to see if he was in his car and before I could slip out, my dad woke up. He reached out and took my hand and asked me what the doctor had said. I honestly contemplated doing anything short of lying to get out of that room right then. He looked at my face and sighed. “This is it isn’t it?” he asked me in a quiet voice. And I had to look into the eyes of the man I had named my son after on that sunny autumn afternoon and tell him he was going to die. I had so rarely seen him cry in my life. He didn’t cry when I told him what the doctor had said as best I could. His voice broke and the tears started when he told me that he was scared that he wasn’t going to die in his right mind.  He held my hand and told me that he hadn’t worried about me in ages. That he was proud of me and the man I had grown up to be. I struggle with that some days, because I am not sure I know who the hell that man is that he was speaking of. But it is a shiny gem in my lot of baggage that I treasure.

He died six short weeks later. After some time at home he relapsed. He chided me gently for spending so much time away from home to visit the last time that I saw him. He had a good day and was complaining about the hospital dinner he was trying to eat as I left. I looked over my shoulder at him and I knew somehow deep inside that I wasn’t going to see him again.  Within the week pneumonia set in and my step mom called me to tell me that things did not look good. My wife was in Canada on business and I called her and she moved heaven and earth to get home that day while I let my sister and brothers know what was going on. She made it halfway home when they called from the hospital to tell me he had died. He did not die alone. The man was surrounded by family all day. But I wish I had been there for him at the end all the same. There’s an old quote, “He’s in better hands now, but God, we wish he were still in ours for a while.”

So I struggle sometimes with this.  He was proud of me. A lot of men go through hell in life on the basis of unfulfilled parental approval from their fathers. There are whole chapters in psych texts on the subject. It’s funny to me sometimes that I’m not sure that I’m proud of the man I have grown into but that he was. God knows I should probably take more pride in myself. I am a good man, for the most part. I have a good life and a good and loving family. I am starting to sort through the baggage during my time alone on this trip with an eye toward ditching the crap that I don’t need to be carrying and sorting out the spaces I need to fill yet. Balancing the load. God, it’s hard sometimes. You carry so much crap that you don’t need that you sometimes lack space for the essentials.

Maybe that was why the last few days were so golden. For a while there was just this bit of peaceful forest wrapped around me and the rest of the crap just stopped mattering for a bit.  I have choices that need to be made soon. Important ones. I am standing at a crossroads in my life and I need to get off my ass and pick a road and start walking.  I am tired and sore right now, but pretty content. I have not spent this much time with myself in many years and I am finding that I am still pretty happy with the guy in the mirror. As I said, I have found more good than bad when weighing my load in life. It’s a decent start on figuring out the path from here. It’s after midnight and the tree frogs are singing, the moon is up over the woods here and I have about run the laptop battery down to nothing. It’s been a long week and bed is calling.











Build a man a fire and he will be warm for awhile.
Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life...

Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #44 on: May 19, 2008, 05:21:21 PM »
A couple of days later now. Here is the funny thing. I have had this weight sitting on me like an anvil the past five or six years. This constantly whispering and capering shadow thing haranguing me and criticizing. When are you going to grow up and get on with your life? Why the hell haven’t you even tried to do anything? Is this the best you have? It got worse after my dad passed because in some way I felt like I was betraying that pride in who I was that he had expressed to me at the end.

I have been a full time stay at home since the day my daughter was born 14 years ago this May 20th.  I have had a bad couple of years. Short with the kids, withdrawn, depressed, low self esteem, the works. Every day that I was sitting around the house doing the basics and taking care of the kids seemed like one more funerary stone on the cairn of my life. A legacy from that crappy childhood is the self accusation that I was slacking. Quitting. Giving up and giving in. Sitting on my ass in laziness doing nothing while my wife worked her butt off securing an income for us. I hit 40 and had no chosen career, no real goals or prospects for one. I have been trained to hell and gone in disaster recovery work, but it is volunteer work. I am a fair hand with a paint brush and doing modeling and miniature work, but you can’t make a real living off that.  Unfinished college degree, half finished projects in the basement, a stalled writing project on something that was heading towards publication, and this sinking feeling in my gut that I was running out of time to find what my path was going to be in life. And every day that passed was like this mocking weight pressing down on my chest.

My wife is hugely successful in her chosen career field and though we tote a large chunk of debt in certain areas, we literally want for nothing. I never resented her anything. If I did it was that she had always had the clarity to know exactly what she was steering for. She knew what she wanted to be and followed the path to it like she was riding a rail. And there was myself feeling like I was.

I have great kids. Seriously. They are polite, empathetic, so smart it scares me and such gentle, humorous little souls. There are shoals ahead I know, but they are such smooth sailors I hope we get by them without too much trouble. It has finally sunk in that they didn’t become who and what they are in a vacuum. My wife’s success in her career and professional endeavors did not happen in a vacuum.
I was so wrapped up in funk about not having a direction or function in my life that I could not see that I was already doing hard work, and as self involved, blind and crippled by my own stupidity and selfish concerns as I have been the last couple of years, I was still managing to do it pretty damn well. My wife can leave for two weeks of business travel without worry, if not free of regret at the time away from home, because I am there doing my job. My kids have had a parent home with them and there for them their entire lives because I have been there doing my job.

I have been victim to measuring myself by the wrong yard sticks. Society hands men a crappy archetype to try to live up to.  And when you live outside that archetype it is easy to diminish what you are by trying to compare yourself to the expectations. I have had a path and a purpose all along and was just too surrounded by the trees to see the forest. And when you get lost inside yourself it is often hard to find your way clear. You cling to that circle of campfire not because of the things that are actually outside it, but because of the things you fear may be there. Self doubt leads to reinforcing personal failures. I was so scared that my life was passing me by and that I was failing miserably somehow to live up to what I was supposed to be that I couldn’t see the plain truths that were in front of my nose.

I am never going to be the things that I imagined myself being when I was a child. I am never going to be the things that I supposed that I should be as a young man. I am never going to be the things that I blamed myself for being too inadequate to become as an older man.  And I would not change a thing that brought me to where I stand now, because any alteration would have taken from me the wonderful little souls waiting for me back home, and the love of the woman tending them till I return.

I was not afraid that in my heart of hearts that I was a bad man. I was afraid in my heart of hearts that I was a useless man. And self-doubt and self-recriminations breed nothing but anger and fear. And I have been an angry, fearful man for some time. All fathers have things that they want and hope for their children. Happiness, security, prosperity… To pass on enough that their children can pick their own paths with confidence and hold their heads high as they travel through life. This does not always happen. Some kids get a dark place in their souls that takes root and they ride the spiral down into the depths. I managed to claw my way out of the pit so very long ago and stagger off trying to get my legs back underneath me. It was not an easy path but I have steered a course that has been pretty true, if not always straight. I’m not sure where the detours and side roads will lead but I am pretty certain that I can see the road of my life ahead of me, and it does not seem a bad one right now.

I am a father and husband, and a tender of hearth and home. I have been and will be again a recovery worker who helps out others in time of disaster. I will have my hobbies and side distractions. But my job is tending to the garden of three souls and making sure that they can flourish in life. The things that I do separate will make sure that I flourish as well. It hurts to the core being away from them for so long in this place of green and sunlight and snow chased peaks, but I feel almost whole again for the first time in distant memory. And God knows they deserve a whole person to come home to them.




Build a man a fire and he will be warm for awhile.
Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life...

Offline asdf2231

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #45 on: May 19, 2008, 05:22:20 PM »


The mountain on the left side is Dow Mountain.

My cabin is in the foothills there.




Build a man a fire and he will be warm for awhile.
Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life...

Offline jtyangel

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #46 on: May 19, 2008, 05:43:18 PM »
That's really something, asdf. I'd write more, but I have to get to class. Suffice to say, I can relate to so much of what you have written in these last two posts...so much. Glad you are doing well, my friend. Take good care of yourself, up there...your family awaits.

Badcat, I'm going through mine by running up bleachers everyday.  :lmao: I may figure nothing out, but I'll have a rock hard ass when I finally find where I'm going.  :lmao:

Offline RobJohnson

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #47 on: May 19, 2008, 05:46:28 PM »
Asdf...touching story about your father. Brought back alot of memories of my relationship with my father, both the good and the bad.

You are taking a journey so that many of us will not have to.

Thanks.

Offline Texacon

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #48 on: May 19, 2008, 05:54:32 PM »
Quote
I have been a full time stay at home since the day my daughter was born 14 years ago this May 20th.

Cool deal.  My daughter will be 14 tomorrow as well.  It's been a blast!  Hope yours is as great a kid as mine is.

KC

  Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day.  Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life.

*Stolen

Offline Texacon

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Re: The Trip. (cont.)
« Reply #49 on: May 19, 2008, 05:55:35 PM »
That's really something, asdf. I'd write more, but I have to get to class. Suffice to say, I can relate to so much of what you have written in these last two posts...so much. Glad you are doing well, my friend. Take good care of yourself, up there...your family awaits.

Badcat, I'm going through mine by running up bleachers everyday.  :lmao: I may figure nothing out, but I'll have a rock hard ass when I finally find where I'm going.  :lmao:

I'll be the judge of that......bring it over here for the 'TEST'.   :naughty:       :-)

KC
  Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day.  Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life.

*Stolen