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Date:         Sun, 15 Feb 2009 22:35:54 -0800
Reply-To:     Jake de Villiers <crescentbeachguitar@GMAIL.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Jake de Villiers <crescentbeachguitar@GMAIL.COM>
Subject:      Re: Dilemmas by bus...
Comments: To: Jeffrey Olson <jjolson@gwtc.net>
In-Reply-To:  <4998DE83.4080207@gwtc.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

You have leapt and you're not sure where you'll land.

You'll be okay Jeff, you're just out of practice!

Bon voyage

On Sun, Feb 15, 2009 at 7:33 PM, Jeffrey Olson <jjolson@gwtc.net> wrote:

> I was feeling sad. Ione strode about the house making notes about what > to give away and what to store, and what to take with us. Even though > we'd been planning for three years - since the beginning of the > depression - and were totally comfortable with our decision to move to > the road, I was feeling really disconnected. > > > We'd spent so many hours talking about what we wanted to do with our > late middle years, agonizing and getting euphoric, that the reality of > the final steps seemed to have a momentum all their own. I watched the > love the of my life noting our possessions, eventually moving them them > into three different parts of the room, into three different futures. > She was so clear about what we'd decided. > > > This process had been going on for weeks, over a month actually. We > were down to little things now. Did we need the set of postcards we > send every year around Christmas wishing everyone good cheer? Would we > write Christmas cards, these cards, or would we find a way to make new > ones that expressed the different life we were leading? I didn't know, > and at this moment didn't feel like going there. This is really, really > hard... > > > I'd spent two years putting together the bus, crafting our mobile home. > One of our greatest joys as a couple was to go sit in the bus, or when > it was stripped down to bare metal, to walk around the shop and talk > about what we wanted to do, what we would need, how we wanted our home > to support our next few/many years. We'd hang out for a week or two, or > longer, and finally come to a shared vision of what we wanted about some > aspect of our home, and I'd go about making it. The Subaru engine was > in the bus. I'd replaced all the 30 year old electrical and cooling > lines. I'd installed new larger capacity brakes and new master and > slave cylinders and all brake lines. The gas tank was new as were the 6 > ply tires and shock absorbers. All the rust and dirt was stripped from > the body and I sealed everything with rubberized coating and coated the > interior sheet metal with POR 15. The exterior was ready to paint. All > the interior body panels were insulated with foil covered bubble wrap. > We'd settled on how the bed and interior would be set up and I'd built > everything to our vision - revisiting it of course as shelves and > compartments were installed. > > > It'd been a heady process this throwing off one life for another. I > remember the moment three years ago we'd sat down at Sweet Melissa's in > downtown Laramie and Ione had looked at me and said, "What are we going > to do now?" > > > I'd looked at her with bemusement. This woman I'd married and loved > kept me constantly wondering. As soon as I figured out where she was > coming from, she'd already left and was exploring another world. I > sensed this was one of the times that she was exploring something big, > not just whether we should buy a couch, or where we'd backpack for a > month that summer. > > > Most of my male friends thought she was flighty, insubstantial, > emotional, and irrational. When I first met her I thought the same > thing. We were both part of a roving singles group of 30 to 60 year > olds that met every month at someone's house for wine, a potluck dinner, > and conversation. Sometimes people paired up and that was ok. They > were still welcome. But for the most part, we were 20 to 50 friends who > enjoyed each other's company. > > > From a male's point of view, one who didn't know her, Ione was a bit > too intense to be considered beautiful. At 52 the lines in her face were > crafted from intense investment in her life, and the knowing look in her > eyes stemmed from a wonderful weaving of emotional and intellectual > intelligence. My friends were a bit scared of her - before we'd become > a couple she'd had the reputation - one that was never spoken about by > the way - of having a world that was a little bit larger than us guys. > She played with us and we either played or kept our distance. Most of > us that tried to play crashed and burned in our own insecurities and > black/white emotionality. > > > I was attracted to her fiery beauty and played. How many times in those > first months I felt like I was barely treading water while drifting > downstream towards a waterfall. I had to trust that I would go over the > falls and pop the surface. I did - many times. > > > I knew why she was single at 52. She presented such an intense, > substantial reality men simply couldn't find their footing with her. > Those that did apparently fell by the wayside at some point, unable to > keep up as an equal. Her presence is that strong... > > > I'd realized early on in our relationship that I had to maintain my own > life in order to be with her. I couldn't sink into her vibrance and > energy and beauty. If I did, I felt as deep as I can feel I'd lose her, > that she would simply move on, and that would be that. I realized this > early in our relationship and was healthy enough to maintain my > directions and interests. When I didn't waver when she did get > emotional and irrational and flighty seemed to reassure her. My own > emotions and wondering wanderings were fuel for her fires. She so loves > to ask me five word questions that have me roiling emotionally to > express what I feel. She doesn't waver either... > > > When Obama had been elected we'd felt hope like so many starving > progressive types had. When the recession officially became a > depression in the winter of 2010 and the blame began to shift from the > Reagan to Bush decades to Obama, Ione began to get uneasy. I don't know > what she sensed, and she couldn't put it into so many words. But I > trusted her intuition and the unease she felt about where the world was > heading. Looking back it seems like much of our lives were caught up in > long conversations with each other and our friends about how to live the > rest of our lives.. > > > The backdrop to our angst was a deep uncertainty about the power of > vision and ideals in public life. We'd gone as far to identify young > leaders emerging from local to the national scene, and none of them had > the cachet Obama had had during the year before his election and the > year after. No one was rising above the lowest common denominator to > express a vision of a possible better world. The rifts between > ideological positions had hardened into unbridgeable spaces between > ideologues on both sides. The "filled with hope" now seen as a naive > search to bridge the ideological divide in bipartisan politics generated > an ethos of "I'm in this for myself" across America's landscape. > America's position of power, now maintained by military hardware, was > giving over to the Chinese century. > > > Ione kept asking what I wanted to do in our late 50s and early 60s. She > was perfectly satisfied working at the county hospice center even though > it didn't pay much. She said she was open to hiking for as many years > as I wanted to, that she was open to moving to a different kind of > lifestyle not based in a house and job, that she would like to see > Alaska and Tierra del Fuego - saying this knowing my history with VW > busses. I knew she had a preference, but that it was one that would > evolve with my preferences. It was a totally humbling experience to > live with and love someone who was so in tune with me that she'd > travelled the paths of imagination I would travel before I did. > > > Ione's question "What are we going to do now?," asked three years ago, > bore the fruit of an 85 VW bus, totally tricked out into a mobile home. > We'd saved enough - $80,000 - on top of retirement to spend three to six > years living out of the bus and doing interesting things. One of the > greatest debates, sometimes an argument, that we worked our way through, > concerned medical insurance, our retirement, and our belief in the > system that we would spend our 60s, 70s 80s and perhaps 90s within. > > > We liquified all our assets. We sold our home, liquified our > retirement, and put everything into cash. This took place before the > depression hit its bottom and these kinds of cash transfers were > restricted. With the $400,000 I got in inheritance from my folks, and > the $250,000 Ione got from hers when her mom died a year ago, we figured > we had enough to last us til our deaths. We realized how privileged we > were to have this cash nest egg. Neither of us had children, and for > five years or so, we fully intended to explore the world from within the > bus. Ione was already asking about what I thought we'd do when we got > sick of playing. I, the dutiful straight guy, was wising up. I said I > didn't know, simply because I didn't. What I did know is I wanted to > spend my late 50s into my mid-sixties at least, hiking and biking and > rafting and driving from Prudhoe Bay to Tierra del Fuego. > > > Before I'd met Ione, I'd already planned a number of years to hike the > PCT and CDT, end to end, to bike the Continental Divide Mountain Bike > Trail, to learn to oar a raft well enough to guide a raft down the Grand > Canyon, to hike the Arizona Trail, the Great Divide Trail in Canada, the > Grand Enchantment Trail in the southwest, and maybe the PCT again. That > she wanted to do these things too still amazes me. I'm so lucky. > > > However, today, watching Ione putter and organize and build the momentum > leading to our new lives, I am experiencing grief, a real sense of > loss. I quit my job at the college and a satisfying career. I will no > longer play raquetball twice a week with Mike. I won't play tennis > three times a week with Dan and Gene. I won't hike the Headquarters > Trail above Lincoln's head at the highest point on I-80. > > > I watch my mate move in her confident, self-absorbed way about our home, > and I hurt. In an important sense, Ione is my doppelganger. I'm > cutting myself off from pretty much everything I know. Without her > strength and resolve and directed vision I probably wouldn't have made > the choices we've made. This scares me. I've always realized that Ione > is with me because I have had my own vision, my own dream. I satisfy > myself in my day to day life, and we are good together. But I have a > deep, unalterable sense that my life is bigger than me, that my destiny > is not something I choose. Right now I'm feeling small in my life, > overwhelmed and tentative. The choices I've made that have led me to > this moment, to living on the road, to hiking and rafting and biking for > as long as it takes to do them - is this reallly what I want to do??? > > > Jeffrey Olson > Martin, SD >

-- Jake

1984 Vanagon GL 1986 Westy Weekender "Dixie"

Crescent Beach, BC

www.crescentbeachguitar.com http://subyjake.googlepages.com/mydixiedarlin%27


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