Saturday, January 29, 2011

The real world is completely overrated.


Sometimes I wonder if you guys are just waiting for me to bust out some kind of serious post talking about politics and the world and what's wrong with it. I really hope you guys aren't because I can't stand thinking about, let alone writing about, the real world. It horrifies me. And if it isn't horrifying me, it's boring or irritating me. I despise the news because all it gives me is the bad stuff. Where the hell are all of the happy stories? Can't they ever just say, "Hey! Somebody did something totally awesome today!"

Nobody wants to hear the good stuff, though. Misery sells.

I prefer to be happy.

Like that time that I flew to San Diego to see Mouse graduate Basic Training for the Marine Corps. The happy tears when he saw me in the crowd, the surprise because I hadn't told him I was coming. The reunion and the catching up because I'd been angry and only sent him one letter the entire time he was gone because I hated war, politics, and the military. But despite that, I was still proud watching him. I had to go. I'd seen him off to Basic when he left and there were plenty of tears. Angry, bitter, unhappy tears. It wouldn't have been complete if I hadn't been there to watch him graduate. The happy tears were necessary.

And San Diego was beautiful. The sky was that perfect shade of cloudless blue that is warm and bright and so pretty it makes you want to cry. I might have cried. The Pacific Ocean was beautiful and so clean and clear that I could see straight to the bottom when I was standing on cliffs over the water. When I put my toes in that water for the first time, there was this awesome feeling of accomplishment. One more down. The Atlantic, the Gulf, the Pacific. I'm only short one trip to Alaska to put my feet in the Arctic Ocean and the Gulf of Alaska, and then I will have been in every ocean and gulf that touches the United States. 

Though I hate flying with every fiber of my being, it was worth the fear and anxiety and horrible daydreams in which I imagined all the ways I could die in the air. It was worth it because it brought me one step closer to my goal.

Because I love to travel. I love to see beautiful new places. Arizona was beautiful with it's rock formations. Vegas, with all the lights and the excitement and the hustle, was beautiful. New Mexico, with it's flat desert and the sunset the color of fire and blood, was amazing. Even West Texas, with it's "mountains" and cows, was pretty.

I've been in every single state in the Southern United States, but I think my favorite thing I've ever seen was driving through the Smokies as the sun came up over the mountains and it hit the mist, and there was bright, golden light that I knew, at fourteen years old, was probably the most beautiful thing I'd ever see in my life. I haven't seen anything to match it yet. I tried time and again to paint that image. Failure upon failure upon failure. It turns out that no matter how much you want to, sometimes it's just impossible to share beauty that you've witnessed. Also, I have no gift for landscapes. I'm better with people even if the noses never come out quite right.

I've even been to Maryland and Washington DC, though I hate the drive. Especially when going into Maryland and there's this huge bridge you have to drive over. It makes me nervous because it goes up and then down like a hill. I always hated bridges (but I'm perfectly good with tunnels) and this bridge takes the cake in horrifying. Why they would make a bridge like this. . . /\ . . .I have no idea. It's silly. And scary. Like what if your breaks go out on the way up or down and you hurtle out of control and die in a fiery inferno of pain and death and fear?

See, the world is bad enough without engineers scaring the living hell out of people with these ridiculous designs. Bad enough that you have to drive over large bodies of water to begin with, don't let's make it worse by forcing you to drive up to the clouds and then back down to Earth again. There's nothing fun in that. Though Maryland itself has some pretty sights. (Not pretty voices though. I don't know why Northerners insist on talking through their noses, but it's almost as irritating as a Southern Drawl. Can't people just speak normally?)

I have to say, though, that I saw absolutely nothing noteworthy in Alabama except a lot of Stars and Bars in windshields, which is noteworthy only in the fact that I expected to see more Alabama State flags. I don't know if I just missed the beauty because of the way we traveled, or if I'm just prejudiced enough against Alabamians that I wouldn't let myself see any beauty. I recall vividly, however, the "Welcome to Alabama!" sign at the border that was shot up with bullet holes. So classy, Alabamians. So classy.

Virginia is probably one of my favorite states to visit, and not just because Daddy lives there. I love the Magnolia trees. I've never in my life seen Magnolias in Texas outside of a florist, but Daddy had a huge Magnolia tree blooming in his backyard the first summer we went down to visit him. The flowers were big and beautiful, like the tree itself was. The smell. . .divine. (That is, after I loaded myself up with enough allergy meds so that my nose could function. Once I cross the Mississippi River I have allergies like everybody here in Austin seems to have.)

When I first decided that I wanted to go into Journalism, it was because I wanted an excuse to travel. I'm not interested in finding beautiful people. I like beautiful formations and beautiful music. That was what I wanted to travel to find, to write about. It didn't actually end up working out that way, obviously. It turns out I lack the writing style of  a journalist, and anyway Journalism is a dying field thanks to the internet. Also, I have this obsession with having a real home that isn't conducive to a life of constant travel.

Aussie said it best when he said, "Chanel, you are a paradox wrapped in a mystery covered with an enigma. There is no figuring you out."

Maybe that's true. 

I hardly understand myself sometimes. Most of the time, actually. Sometimes Padawan will say that he doesn't understand me.

And I can only shrug my shoulders and say, "Well, that makes two of us." And then we laugh.

Everything always comes back to a laugh, because life in my little world is funny. Not depressing or angry or violent or political. Who wants anything like that? People who spend their lives following politics and war and the tragedies of the world are just...missing out on some of the better things in life. The happier things.

Everyone else can enjoy reality. Me? I like my reality the way it is.

Happy.

10 comments:

  1. I can read about politics anywhere. I want to know what's moving your trash can. Where else am I going to find that out?

    I used to live in Phoenix, AZ actually. I still have a lot of family on my Dad's side there. For some reason, I live in N.E. Ohio now. I know, I should get my head examined.

    I agree with you about the news. Periodically, I get caught in some story or another, but mostly I'm too busy with my own personal life. Usually what's on the news just ends up making me mad or frustrated anyway. Like you said, it's usually all bad.

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  2. Well, you're probably not going to find that out here. I don't think I'll ever solve the mystery of the moving trashcan.

    We went through Phoenix. They have this really awesome place called In and Out burger. I don't even LIKE burgers, but I liked their's. Why would you leave that for...Ohio.

    "There's nothing wrong with Ohio...except the snow and the rain. I really like Drew Carry and I'd love to see the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame." That's what I know about Ohio. And they have Cleavland.

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  3. I have family back here as well, and I guess I just think of this more as home. That feeling always kind of trumps everything else. You know how it is.

    You're not missing anything with the Rock'N'Roll Hall of Fame. I went there a few months after it opened, and I was unimpressed. It was my first date with my wife, actually. We stood in life for 40 minutes for something called "The Mystery Train" thinking it was...I don't know what. Turns out they just put you in this little room and showed you a black & white documentary about the blues. Zzzzzzzzzzzz.

    I don't like the design of the building either. They got the architect who designed The Louvre or something. It's like this big glass triangle. I think they should have made it like this huge, Gothic cathedral with statues of Gargoyle, demon orgies...you know, something "decent" people would have had a fit over. Isn't that what Rock'n'Roll is all about?

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  4. I avoid the news too. It's just too depressing and exasperating. I like reading about you and your happy corner of the universe. Just keep being who you are.

    PS: Padawan doesn't have to understand you. I confuse the ever-loving CRAP out of my husband, and we still find a way to make it work. :)

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  5. It's a glass pyramid? Really? That's what they stuck the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame in? I'm on your side. Rockers destroy glass things.

    Also, I'm guessing by your complete lack of reaction that you didn't get the song I quoted when I was talking about Ohio. Because I never really wanted to see the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame. And I really don't like Drew Carry all that much. He's okay.

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  6. Candice: Once again, your timing is impeccable and has earned you a response bubble all to yourself.

    I'm glad nobody seems to expect seriousness from me. Maybe we should all write a letter to a news station and demand happy stories.

    PS: Do you confuse yourself, though? I think Men have it easier. We don't ask that they understand us. We just want their attentions.

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  7. That was a song? I see now that it rhymes. I thought you were quoting from a previous blog post that I missed or something. Derrrr.

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  8. It's a song by a Texas band called Bowling for Soup. The song is called "Ohio (Come Back to Texas)" and basically his girlfriend moved to Cleavland with some guy named Leeland that she met at the bank. So the whole song is talking about what she's probably missing about Texas, not that there's something wrong with Ohio. (Except for the snow and the rain.) And that the Mexican food sucks North of here, anyway. It's HUGE out here. There are different versions made for different cities they hit in their tour.

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  9. You know that I totally plan things that way. I LIKE having my own response bubble. It makes me feel special. :)

    Anyhoo...Yes. Every now and then I would have to say that I do confuse myself. I guess that's one of the prices that one must pay for being mad geniuses like you and I happen to be. ;)

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  10. I like your way of thinking! Yes, true genius is never completely understood by anyone, even the genius herself!

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