Sunday, February 9, 2014

A Choice Not Taken

The other day while numbing through Facebook, I posted to my timeline “Looking for something to write about. Hit me…” The first response came from Nancy Nevin who recently enrolled in a writing class in Aspen, Colorado. She replied, “a choice not made.” This isn’t the first time she has prodded me to write. Last week I posted that I was sitting in a coffee shop in Virginia Beach watching a barista with a West Hampton soccer tattoo waiting on a man with a Manchester United knit cap, while I – an Arsenal fan – observed. Her post wanted me to describe the sounds and smells there; the conversation between opposing fans. Coffee shop encounters is a story for a later time, so for now I’ll fulfill Nancy’s request "a choice not taken.”

Back in the early 70s, my family used to pile into a beige, barge-like Pontiac station wagon and make our way from Chesapeake, Virginia to my Grandmother’s house in Greenville, South Carolina, some eight hours away. Five of us use make the trek: Mom and Dad in the front and me, my sister Gena and brother, Mike having full command of the rest of the vehicle as long as I didn’t look at, touch, or breathe near my sister. On one trip Gena actually asked my mother to “make Greg stop breathing.” Brotherly love at its worst.

Trips to visit Nana’s (my grandmother on my mother’s side) were, for the most part, happy family affairs full of southern fried chicken, scary visits to the basement to retrieve something for my grandfather, and slobbery kisses from three ladies who I remember as being known as the “Anties.” One of the “anties” had one leg shorter than the other that was corrected partially by a clunky black shoe with a four-inch sole. I still have nightmares of her limping my way with open arms and saying “give me some sugar, sweetie.”

One night at Nana’s stands out particularly over forty years later, I was maybe ten or eleven and was sitting on living room floor under the watchful and creepy eye of a mounted deer head that my grandfather shot. It was early evening, and the house smelled like most grandmothers’ houses: a unique combination of baby powder and decaying furniture with just a hint of bacon grease from morning breakfast. My grandfather sat in his leather recliner that farted with the slightest move while Nana roamed between bedroom, hall way and living room. I don’t recall where the rest of the family was, perhaps fleeing from the slobbery kisses of the aforementioned “Anties.” My grandfather was making small talk and asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up and I replied “archeologist.” Praise and interest from my grandfather was quickly shot down by negative comments from Nana that ranged from it was a dirty job, to I would be forced to live in remote villages, and I would never make a “decent living.”

Wow.

I felt deflated but was taught not to speak back to elders. I didn’t plead my case to dig in the dirt and explore the world. To pursue a “decent living” not measured by money but by passion. What would have happened if I spoke up and defended this boyhood dream? I chose to remain silent. I chose to take her ‘advice.” From that moment on, thoughts of becoming an archeologist were buried, so to speak. Even today, I’m envious of love reading stories in National Geographic about how people are discovering lost treasures but am more envious of the writers rather than the “diggers.” But then again, writing takes a lot of digging and exploration. Maybe that archeologist is still inside me, but today my tools are imagination and a keyboard rather than a trowel and a soil sifter. One thing I did learn from that fateful, one sided living room conversation in Greenville, South Carolina is to be careful what you say around children especially if talks turns to dreams, goals or passions. A quick, thoughtless remark can and does lasting effects. In short, chose your words wisely.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Money and Travel

I keep foreign currency in my wallet. Not much, five Euro. 500 Tanzanian Shillings (which is about $2 US), two pounds. It’s a pleasant reminder of places I’ve been fortunate to visit, especially when I’m paying for things that are a part of the suburban American lifestyle: Mulch at the Home Depot, dress pants at Banana Republic, coffee at the local bagel shop. Thumbing past color currency to find to find a dull green $20 US bill also reminds me it’s a big world out there. I know that’s no big revelation but as we go through life, much of it is happens in a relative small footprint of habitual boundaries like the local grocery store, the soccer pitch, office and home.

Breaking through those habitual boundaries comes with a price tag. I realize that. Often it comes down to the choices that we make. Admittedly, mulch, dress pants, and overpriced coffee aren’t “must haves” and do play a role in drawing those boundaries. Squirreling away money for travel is one way to break through. Being smart about what you spend money on is another.

For some, success means making as much money as possible, buying a big house and a fancy car. That’s all well and good but my father always said “different strokes for different folks.” For me success is defined by seeing as many places on earth as humanly possible and I get a taste of that success when I look in my wallet.