Thursday, June 9, 2011

Epic Trip Out West: Final Budget Stats

Hello from Missouri, my dear blog readers.
The past few days have been a tranquil madhouse of learning to Be Home for the first time in two months. Bits of cactus still working out of my skin— worried conversations with my mom— endless wardrobe choices— lunch dishes— the guts of my backpack spilled across my room— impossibly lush trees and grass— catching up get-togethers with best friends— muggy heat, distant Midwestern sun— all signs that I’m back home, if only for a couple weeks.
In these whirlwind days, I’ve taken the time to sort through my receipts and give you a run-down on my budget for my Epic Trip Out West. If you’ll remember, I had decided not to count the plane tickets to Denver and then Utah in my overall budget, but I’ve added them in just to give a fair account of the entire trip. Also take into consideration that I was given $36 from kind people on my trip, and I spent only about $10 of it. 
As you read these stats, keep in mind what I got to see for free: Zion Canyon, Antelope Island, Temple Square, Flaming Gorge Recreational Area, several concerts and a dance recital, a seminar on suburban gardening, Saguaro National Forest, Grand Canyon, Petrified National Forest, the Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, and the OU History of Science Library. That’s only listing the places and events— it didn’t cost anything to meet the awesome people who shaped my life forever.
So, with that in mind, here are the final stats for my Epic Trip Out West. 
Number of days on the road: 59
Total money spent on this trip: $841.91
Transportation: $523.50 (mostly Greyhound tickets: I walked where I could and only used the city bus once)
Food and supplies: $315.41 (I had trail mix, energy bars and a whole jar of peanut butter left over, and next trip I shall be sure to avoid the budget-breaking purchase of a book of stamps. Also, much of this is food that I bought Amanda to thank her for carpool in her RV.)
Entertainment: $3 (workshop on healthy cooking. Everything else was free or given to me.)
Lodging: $0
Average per day on transportation: $8.88
Average per day on food and supplies: $5.35
Average per day on lodging and entertainment: 5¢
Final average per day: $14.28

The point? I got to see the great American west on only $15 a day, including every single expense, with a few bucks to spare. I didn’t starve myself, I didn’t sleep in homeless shelters, I didn’t beg for money, and I didn’t put myself in danger. I was smart, sensible, hard-working, and accepting of the incredible gifts given to me on the road (with the intention of paying this generosity forward). I leave it up for you to decide: What could you do with $15 a day?
~Lisa Shafter

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Epic Trip Out West, Day Fifty-Eight: There and Back Again

June 2nd and 3rd

“There is a long road yet,” said Gandalf.
“But it is the last road,” said Bilbo.
The final day of my Epic Trip Out West is a blur of color and memory, verdant, gritty, shot through with a headache that split down the roots of my neck into my whole body. A final walk of the OU campus with Aunt Candace amid the humid air: statues cast in bronze, vivacious dancer, giant half-submerged in grass with hands behind his head, Cherokee warrior with serenity written in his hawklike features. Weeping willow strands. Rose garden, vibrant blossoms without any smell. Final goodbyes, hot concrete curb at the gas station, chewing on a banana-bread energy bar. 
Right on time, the Greyhound arrived, with its gray seats and its gray floors and the man with I LOVE JESUS stitched onto his ball cap, who sat next to me. Michael was his name. Michael was a preacher, he said, talking to me through a grizzled white beard that almost glistened against his skin the color of coffee grounds. He was going to write a book and found the title in St. Louis when he was thrown in prison for being a troublemaker. “They took all my clothes and threw me in the cooler,” he said. “And I was curled up, butt-naked, and that’s when it came to me: ‘The Butt-Naked Truth.’ That’s the title of my book. That’ll get folks’ attention.” He gestured with his hands as he spoke, leathered but with a silken quality, etched with thin lines of mocha-colored flesh. We talked from Norman to Oklahoma City, and before we left he clasped my pale hands in his dark ones and prayed that God would grant me a safe journey, guidance in my life, and a young man who would be my husband.
The twelve hours that followed (it was only supposed to be ten) grow even blurrier in my mind, with splashes of vivid memory. Joe, a middle-aged man with a sneering smile and a booming voice, sat at the front of the bus and talked at everyone around him. “I only follow the Bible,” he said. “Not a word added, not a word taken away. I only follow the Bible.” He then went on to misquote and add extravagantly: “God says, ‘David scourged you with whips, I will scourge you with scorpions.’ That’s what he’s doing in Joplin right now. The wrath of God. Scourging us with scorpions, leveling out the field… I don’t take no money. Money is the root of all evil. If you’re taking money for your ministry, then you’re cursing God. You don’t wanna curse God. If anyone insults my God, I defend him. This lady I talked to, she said her God wouldn’t cause the tornadoes and the earthquakes. I said, ‘Well your God might not, but my God does, and who’s gonna stop him?… All religions are right, they’re all good. ‘Every knee will bow…’ When God came into my life, it was a total change, overnight, 360 degrees.” He also mentioned that Jesus was incarnate at the time of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and that the Americas are what God is referring to in the Bible when he mentions “Jacob.”
One of my first sights of Missouri after nearly two months on the road was Joplin, a town ravaged by the recent tornados, the houses splintered to fragments, facing torn off, siding thrown all about: a heap of misery that I had never seen before. Joe got fidgety as we approached his stop, slavering like a dog on a short leash. He was eager to preach his Gospel to the people of the city, to let them know why they should be grateful for everything that they had lost.
For the whole journey from Oklahoma City to St. Louis, Heather and her three-year-old son Aaron sat in front of me. Heather was petite, despite the appearance of her baggy Mountain Dew pajama pants, with a t-shirt and blonde-highlighted hair. She was beautiful when she smiled, with catlike eyes and a glow about her face, but she looked worried ninety percent of the time. This was because she was deaf, and had to rely on the people around her to figure out what the bus driver was announcing, and couldn’t tell that her son was making noise and disturbing people unless she was looking right at him (and sometimes not even then). I could only finger-spell, but she gave me a smile of gratitude for the only person in range who could at least speak fragments of her language. Later, she and another mother used their cell phones to show each other typed messages— the best use of texting I’ve ever seen. She could speak her son’s name, with an artificial sound that told me she had been deaf all her life: “eh-Rahn!” she would exclaim when he acted up, rolling her R with impressive dexterity.
For a while, I became happily lost in the scenery that flew by the window, and I was reminded once again that Missouri is truly beautiful. The landscape undulated in subtle hills and bluffs, clothed in trees in a million shades of green, exquisite, thriving from the rainy spring. Limestone cliffs often hugged the highway, Missouri’s grand canyons overshadowing the river of the road. I forgot my headache for a while and I intermittently watched the scenery and read the final chapters of The Hobbit. My eyes stung with tears as I read the ending, even as I approached the ending of my own journey.
My bliss, however, was short-lived. The bus was packed from Joplin to St. Louis, ever taking on more passengers until there was only one seat left, and this was a noisy group. I was hemmed in by children— behind, in front, and two to the side— and the parents all seemed to think that slapping their children was the best way to make them quiet, which was not, as you can imagine, the best idea. A couple rows behind me, an ignorant close-minded conservative and an ignorant close-minded liberal started up a barely-controlled shouting match about homosexuality. My ears buzzed, my head throbbed, but none of the conversations were close enough for me to interject the comments that pounded at my thoughts. I plugged in my earphones, clapped my hands over them, and tried to bury myself in music. Snatches of songs wound through the conversations I still heard through my fingers, from behind and in front.
Some may pray to their mirrors, some may kneel before the sun. Me, I say there’s a mirror in the heart of everyone…
“So if Eve was created from Adam, that means they were related. That means the Bible says incest is okay!”
And on my best behavior, I am really just like him. Look beneath the floorboards for the secrets I have hid…
“I’ve always just thought, if the Good Lord wants my husband to beat me, then I have to be okay with that.”
I hope you understand that I, tried to make a move just to stay in the game, I tried to stay awake and remember my name, but everybody’s changing and I don’t feel the same…
“Jesus is the way, the truth and the life. When you read the Bible, it all becomes clear.”
There’s a road, calling you to stray. Step by step, pulling you away. Under moon and star, take the road, no matter how far. The Road goes on…
The last few hours were an agonizing wait marked with flashes of light, low cloud cover, and children screaming as the fight about homosexuality turned to religion in general. For perhaps the first time, I realized why people don’t like riding Greyhound. I just wanted the ride to be over. I wanted to be home.
The last half hour was torture. The landscape was familiar as my own face, and yet we weren’t to the airport stop yet. Finally, finally— we pulled up to a parking lot lit with harsh florescents. Everyone asked if this was the downtown St. Louis stop, and I grabbed my bags and rushed off the bus.
I stood alone under the street lamps, listening to the roar of traffic, the sidewalk painted golden-orange with the buzzing lights. Then I pulled out my cell phone, and dialed home.
My friend Ryan drove to pick me up, along with my sister Mary and my mom. I collapsed into the seat, feeling off-balance, hearing and feeling their greetings through water. I acted like a stoner the rest of the night, as I saw the rest of my family, felt the familiar countertops and tabletops, warmed up some chicken in my favorite iron skillet, smelled the fragrance of home on every chair and nook of the house, and felt the stickiness of the St. Louis air on my skin. I crawled into the bed I had slept on before I left home, and I remembered no more.
Today, I woke up at 6:00am to get ready for a friend’s wedding. I walked to my dresser and opened up a drawer. I stared at the dozens upon dozens of clothes combinations I could try, all with clean clothes, and the possibilities dazzled me. I grabbed a pair of torn jeans decorated with phrases in several languages, written in Sharpie by my sister three months ago. I pulled on a purple shirt that didn’t have holes in it, that hadn’t lived through a Greyhound ride, that didn’t smell like stale socks. For a moment, I just stood— in my room, in my house, in my state, in my Midwest— and felt my clothes on my body. Clean. The feeling of home. The feeling of a weary traveller come to rest at last.
~Lisa Shafter
(Final stats on the trip’s budget coming soon.)
Song quotes, in order of appearance:
A Mirror in the Heart by Duncan Sheik
John Wayne Gacey, Jr. by Sufjan Stevens
Everybody’s Changing by Keane
The Road Goes On from Lord of the Rings: The Musical

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Epic Trip Out West, Day Fifty-Seven: Books

June 1st

Uncle Kerry turned the key in the lock, and we stepped into an arid refrigerated room, a sudden change from the muggy heat that permeated the rest of the building. I hugged my bare arms and breathed deeply, taking in the fragrance of thousands upon thousands of sheets of vellum and parchment. This was the vault, the holy of holies of the Oklahoma University History of Science Library collection. And, since my uncle is the curator, I received the honor of being Visiting Scholar for the day.
He pulled out a book bound in handsome leather, dating from 1600s Germany, and flipped it open. “This is the original cover,” he said, pointing to a sheet of vellum that surrounded the pages, marked in neat handwriting with the words and rhythm values of a Gregorian chant for Easter. He let me touch the brushed vellum next to the carefully marked notes, which had a milky smooth texture. The book itself was from the 1400s, he said, “but the cover paper dates back to the 900s.” I had just touched a piece of music over a thousand years old. As you can imagine, the chills I felt at that moment had little to do with the air conditioning.
That was only the beginning. He showed me book after book, bound in leather or vellum, pages feeling as fragile as butterfly wings in my fingers, words printed in dark type, accented with aesthetically-pleasing strokes of red: herbals, animal guides, astronomy histories. I read the entry on Astronomy in the first edition of the Encyclopedia Brittanica. I paged through a tome published in the 1500s by Nicolaus Copernicus. Uncle Kerry showed me a first edition of The Starry Messenger, the book that made Gallileo famous overnight— and when he flipped open the front leaf and showed me Gallileo’s original signature written in brown ink, I cried.
On this trip I’ve touched trees as old as the dinosaur, hiked among rocks older than the human race, and viewed landscapes that told of history from millions ago. Although those were remarkable experiences, the moment of true time-travel in my journey was touching the books from hundreds of years ago, and seeing the handwritten notes scrawled in the margins (including little hands pointing to important passages, sometimes with a bit of robe sleeve drawn in), and realizing that four hundred years ago, a person just like myself was reading this book. For all the wonders of the natural world, there is nothing more beautiful than a human connection.
I also got a chance to visit the Bible collection at the University: I touched a Bible written in shorthand, clustered in three volumes each the size of a miniature souvenir deck of cards. I was introduced to four-corner painting when Uncle Kerry pulled out a Bible with gilded pages and curled the paper under his fingers to reveal a landscape drawn on the  edges of the pages. When he curled the pages the other way, they formed a new scene.   I held and read a Geneva Bible, precursor to the King James version, the Bible that Shakespeare quoted, the Bible of the common man, printed in small type that was a wonder of engineering.
At last, I celebrated the year of the King James Bible’s 400th anniversary, seeing two first additions of the altar-sized books, one uncorrected and one proofed. I read the words aloud, sometimes stumbling over the archaic S’s that look like F’s, and the reversal of the V and U characters. I read Psalm 23, just as I had memorized it as a kid, from a Bible that was 400 years old. To touch history like that, to realize that the Bible hasn’t changed, even in all that time, brought tears to my eyes once again.
Today I was given an incredible gift, a window into the past, and a memory that I’ll hold with me forever.
~Lisa Shafter
Money spent today: $0
Deficit: $123.31