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Earth Day and Memories

Earth Rise

Today at the 2UU we celebrated Earth Day. At the end of the service people related what places on the Earth meant the most to them. I was filled with memories of two places that were important to me from growing up.

The first was the woods behind our house. I loved to go out there in the winter after a fresh, heavy snowfall. The snow was beautifully pristine upon the trees and the ground, and I always found the woods to be the most still and serene at such times. I could hike back there for 2 hours at a time, all alone in the snow-covered woods and hills, wandering without reason, want, or worry.

During that time and for years following, I found a similar sense of connection to the world (and not people) though riding my bicycle. In high school in the summer I would often get up on a Sunday at sunrise and ride my bike into town - about 4 miles over gravel. I would just ride though the still and silent small town of Louisburg, Kansas, with absolutely no point or destination whatsoever. I enjoyed being totally alone in the middle of a population of people I knew were there but would not see, unknown and unseen to them. The gentle click of the coasting 10-speed bike was all that could be heard, and all I wanted to hear. I'm not sure why even now, looking back from a distance of 30-odd years. I did it for the simple joy it brought to me, and maybe even because it had no point.

For years after high school I rode, reveling in the solitude of my thoughts on the open road in the middle of nowhere, with my heart pounding in my ears as I struggled against the Kansas and later Nebraska hills and wind. It was not enough to merely be alone - I had to be struggling against my own physical limitations as I would ride 50 or 100 miles in a day for no reason other than to have that time for my mind and for my body. As I got older it became mostly just riding 12-15 miles in a day to and from work, but it was time I can realize now I needed for me.

I can't say I miss these things, really. All of our experiences bring us to who and where we are now - and you can never really go back again, except in your memories.

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