It was another long drive.
Skip and I shared driving time and between the scenery, the conversation
and the music it went by fast. We
started out on the wrong road due to the faulty memory of the old man driving,
but we got back on track and drove through some familiar stomping grounds.
We drove through a little town named Mora. Marty put together a mission trip for our
youth group at First Presbyterian in Waco to repaint a church there. All the kids and sponsors stayed at the house
in Pendaries and we drove over every day to paint. I could not find that church as we drove
through, faulty memory you know.
We did find Sipapu on our way. Sipapu is a small, family owned ski resort
where we skied with the kids and friends.
It was great place to get better at skiing because there were no
lines. There wasn’t much variety in the slopes,
but you could focus on the skiing and the green chili cheeseburger was great.
This is where Andrew Patrick had one of the greatest wipe
outs I’ve ever seen. He tried a long
jump, at great speed,, and didn’t make it.
It was one of the only times I saw his older brother express concern over
Andrew. It was a hell of a crash and as
some old hippie dude passed over on ski lift above the crash site he says, “Wow
dude, big yard sale” as Andrews skies, poles and gloves were scattered across
the slope. BTW…. he survived to do other
insane shit.
We went from sort of the mid-west part of New Mexico to the
mid-east part of Utah. Along the way we
saw antelopes, mountain magpies, some elk, some deer, we crossed the Rio Grande
at least three times and saw no walls or moats with gaters.
We ran into two or three construction work areas that
required waiting in line because they had only one lane open. While there we watched as some real-life
working cowboys drove about 30 black angus across the road.
We saw the reds, tans, browns, yellows and greens of the
mountains as the leaves are slowly changing.
The aspen leaves are turning green to yellow and they light up the high
canyons and mountains.
We sheltered in Pagosa Springs Colorado, made famous in CW
McCall’s song, “Wolf Creek Pass” …..you know the one, if you don’t, go listen
because that trucker ended up with a load of chickens in downtown Pagosa
Springs. Our motel was located to the
first marijuana dispensary I’ve ever seen.
Colorado has it going on.
The motel we were in felt a bit like living in a dorm. You could hear people walking down the hall
and hear the motorcycles outside. They
had a special washing station for the bikes, and the owner of the motel had two
huge bull dogs that hung out in the lobby.
It was kind of laid back, but they made me sign a promise not to smoke
in the building, ever.
We headed out to Moab early that morning with the thought we
would get there in time to check in to our motel and then go out to Canyon
Land. We did make it in perfect time and found Moab to be a cool little
town with old and young alike walking around in hiking boots and attire.
As it turns out this part of the trip is where I got to
restore part of my soul, it was where I felt the sun and wind in my face and
the sound of nothing but the wind moving around me. We got to Canyon Land and toward the evening
I found myself sitting on a rock as old as time looking out at an expanse of
red and green canyons, carved by ancient waters, pressures and dust.
You simply can’t look at this place and not feel a couple of
things, insignificant and knowing that some Hand touched something long ago and
painted a masterpiece. It was like
Vincent Van Gogh took millions of years to paint Starry Starry Night. I was sitting at peace, breathing the air,
soaking in the colors, completely immersed in the simple natural beauty of the
reality before me.
As dumb and weird as it may sound, which saying dumb and
weird stuff is kind of my deal, it was right there, right then I figured it
out. Marty’s not gone, she simply found,
as she told me, “another way of being.”
A friend asked me the other day if I ever feel Marty’s
presence. Yes, the images I have, the
memories I have are baked in and will never go away. They will change, but her presence in my life
is ingrained in my cells. But, while I
sat there with me, God, God’s eons of work before me and no one else within ear
shot, Marty, or at least pieces of her were there and I felt, in my little pea
brain, just a little more at peace than I have been in a long time.
It was a release, not so much a burden, but a tension, an
anxiety, a worry, a burden, okay we can use that word but it’s not a very good
one here, it was never a bad burden.
Tomorrow we tackle Delicate Arch.
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