Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Lost, and Wishing I was Lost


Last week for my J-term class, on Friday, we went to explore Waukon, a city about 20 miles east of Decorah, for a few hours. We got there and set off on our own paths, just exploring the town, trying to find interesting things about it. I talked to the editor of the town newspaper, who was grumpy and didn't quite understand why I was there talking to him; I went into the elementary school and toured the theater behind the gymnasium, trying on various costumes that were much too small for me; I bought a plant at a local greenhouse; I walked around the high school after fanagling my way into a visitor pass. But it was meeting the local undertaker and getting tour of the funeral home that was the highlight. I and two other students got into a conversation with he and his wife at a cafe, and then we made a visit to his funeral home later that day. It was quite a fascinating tour, and he was very funny and nice.

It didn't strike me until a few days later, though, that the whole experience was so completely un-high school that I didn't even think about it as school. I suppose in a way it was, but it was the first taste of collegiate independence as sponsored by the school that I had got, and I loved it. I couldn't ever imagine being in high school and being set free on a small town for a few hours, completely at our own devices all day. And on Friday we go to Minneapolis to do the same thing. I'm very much looking forward to getting lost and alone in a big city. It was an amazing, walking around in Waukon, just walking and looking and getting to know people. That human element and the intimacy of little towns is all but lost when we drive in cars. All we see are main streets as we drive through them as they straddle a highway. It's just an annoyance to slow down. So I'm very excited to experience Minneapolis while walking.

The winter has been tough for me. I am feeling more and more restless with each day, just wanting to get out of Decorah, out of Iowa in general. I am just not happy staying here in one place; it isn't natural. I don't know how I'll work it out of my system, because I'm not ready to accept it just yet. Maybe soon, but for now I am going to stay where I am. I find myself staring out of every window, looking to the horizon and wishing I was on my way there, to find and explore what I just can't quite see. For some reason, though, going to the rock wall has helped. I've been there pretty much every day for the past couple of weeks. I love it. I want to be out in Montana or Colorado or simply west and be climbing and bumming and living with people of my ilk and perspective. People that simply live and don't give anything about society. Ragged people. Well anyways,

Take it easy,

Danny

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