When we returned from our trip, Anna asked,
“Dad, do you still like Michiana?”
I replied – nimble of tongue,d as I am –
“The answer is in a word contained in your question.”
“What’s that?”
“‘Still.’”
Okay, opaquely
“nimble of tongue.” But it was dazzling
wise at that moment. Capsulizing our most
recent Michiana experience, as a fleeing Will Kane in High Noon saying he has to go back, explained,
“That’s the whole thing.”
Michiana Indiana was incredibly still.
This is not always the case in Michiana. Sometimes there are thunderous downpours, “range-of-weather”-starved
Angelos perched on our screened-in porch,
watching the crackling “Sky Show” overhead.
Sometimes, we actually applaud.
This time, however…
You know how still it was?
It’s like an oil painting.
And I was the only thing that was moving.
Michiana this year was blissful serenity, with trees.
The branches did not sway.
The leaves did not rustle. The
trunks…
TREE TRUNKS: “We never
do things.”
You’re right, I got carried away. But that’s how perfectly still it was. If tree trunks could do things, they wouldn’t have.
Here’s the thing.
Forget that.
Here’s the real
thing.
We do not know how we live till we go someplace else and
live differently. Michiana reveals the
contrasting clip of our regular “metronome.”
Suddenly it’s,
“Wow! I go faster at home. ”
Even in laid-back L.A.
(Let alone hurtling Manhattan, where it’s, “Wow! I am deliberately killing myself.”)
Believing I am sensibly “slowing down” through assiduous
meditation, I am, in fact, still “racing along”, thinking I am soothingly serene
when I am one level less frantic.
Michiana tells me I have a long to way go before “calm.”
FOREIGN OBSERVER: “You ought to try India.”
Some places are better.
But you can’t get a burger.
You want tangible proof of the contrast in rhythms?
I read two books in six days in Michiana. I mean, long
ones. Day after day, I sat, swiping the
pages – I read on Kindle – and not
moving for hours. At home, I read five
minutes, and I am racing for television.
There is no television in our cabin. More importantly, there is no jangling “urgency.”
(“Urgency” in quotes, because things could just feel urgent.)
Michiana is a slow place with a slow pace.
MIDWESTERN OBSERVER: “You ought to try Iowa.”
We are not competing,
okay?
“Fine. And by the
way, calm down.”
Fine!
(TAKING A RESTORATIVE BREATH)
I even think
differently in Michiana.
Being a writer, one of my nagging concerns involves how
writers of yore scratching away with a feather were able to keep up with their
own thoughts. (When I am unable to,
typing.)
While away, it occurred to me that maybe I am pondering that
backwards.
Maybe they are not writing too slowly.
Maybe I am thinking too fast.
(Note: This was a “Holiday Insight.” Perhaps, like a “great singer” enjoyed on a
cruise ship, I will awake to its actual mediocrity upon further reflection.)
I would love to “beat with the ‘still’” of some placid
surrounding. Unfortunately, my natural
environment is not that.
So I come home, “steeped in the feeling.”
Until reality sets in.
That sounds like my ideal vacation. No distractions and a pile of books. My family would have to drag me out to eat. Well, maybe I'd do that myself.
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