We made it home to Massachusetts and the fall colors are
out. We have been away for a whole
season and then some. We started on June
17th right before summer officially began and now it is well into
autumn. A lot has happened in one short
season: we made it across the country on our bicycles; Peter (one of my best
friends, my ex-husband, and the father of my daughter) was murdered; I turned
fifty-one; I met David’s family for the first time in the seven plus years we
have been together; I visited the site of the Topaz Internment Camp; and we completed
our road trip back to the east coast.
All of it is hard to process and fathom.
Picture from our last day of touring |
We made it to Washington State! |
I am proud that we made it across the country. It was the hardest thing we have ever done
physically and there were times it challenged us emotionally and spiritually as
well. Overall, it was the heat at the
beginning of the tour that challenged us and the climbing and smoke from the
fires in the middle. Yet it was truly
wonderful to experience the country so immediately, and at a pace that allowed
for new experiences every day.
We have many, many wonderful memories – especially of the
people that made us feel connected and part of a bigger plan even as we were
travelers and strangers. We loved the
little towns that hosted cyclists in their pavilions and parks; the strangers
who became friends who opened their homes to host us; and the out of the
ordinary kindness shown by those who helped us along the way. I know the trip has changed me, yet I have
not yet had the time to figure out exactly how.
I do think that it has given me more faith in people. Despite our differences and our issues and
our political views, people can be compassionate and kind to each other. It happened to us many a time. The bicycle touring slows life down too and
really makes living in the present moment a reality, which is another lesson I
hope to remember in my day to day busy life.
Peter's typical response to a camera. RIP |
The sudden ending of the tour was a shock and horror. The murder of my ex is still unfathomable and
perplexing. His death on the heels of my
father’s death in May made the past season on of extreme loss. What these losses mean to me will unfold in
time. At this point, my grief comes in
waves as I remember these important men in my life. I can’t count how many times in the last week
that something – a funny remark on the radio or an odd tie in the thrift store
or traveling through Utah (the site of our first vacation) that I have thought
I should call Peter, only to realize that I could not. He is missed by so many people and in so many
ways. I am also aware that Thanksgiving
is approaching. It will be the first set
of holidays without my dad, or Peter for that matter. I have a slight dread about the holidays –
about the grief they will bring. I am
aware that death is part of the cycle of life, but this only provides a small
comfort in what is otherwise overwhelming loss.
Somewhere in all of the pain and confusion of Peter’s death,
I had a fifty-first birthday. I have
friends who are going to celebrate this event when I get back as it was not the
time when I was in Baltimore dealing with Peter’s death. Fifty-one feels uninspired in some ways. I have crossed the fifty threshold but still
at the beginning of this decade. I am
securely middle-age, “old” according to my eighteen year old daughter. But I still feel that I am learning and
growing, which is one definition of living.
I am in better shape than at other times in my life. So, fifty-one is not that bad really.
After staying in Baltimore for a week and a half, I flew back
to the West coast to meet David and finish our road trip in the car to visit
his extensive family. We bought a car in
Portland where David had landed after I left him in Dayton, Washington. Joe, an old friend from high school, picked
him up from Dayton and brought him to Portland where he lived.
When I rejoined David, we went down the pacific coast first
to Folsom to meet Sarah and Kent and ride the bike trails, then to Santa
Barbara, where I met David’s sisters Annie and Becky, and Annie’s partner Robert. At Annie’s, Rosie the Bear was an honored
guest and was invited to sit at the dinner table. (Even I don’t invite Rosie to dinner, after
all she has no tummy, but she was honored.)
We then went to David’s mother’s home in El Segundo. While we were there a gathering of his family
occurred. I met his brother’s Jon and
Paul, and Jon’s partner Diana. Annie and
Robert also came down because it was Annie’s and Paul’s birthdays (They are
twins.) It was a week of dinners out, family conversations, and late
nights. I was glad to finally meet
David’s family. I have heard about them
but hadn’t met any of them. They made me
feel part of their family which was very kind.
After the family whirlwind, we set out in the car to go back
across the country to home. We drove to
Las Vegas where we had intended to stay.
So, we went to a small motel a bit outside the main casinos, thinking it
would be quieter. However, as it became
evening, it got seedier and seedier.
When walked across the street to get a toothbrush at the Walgreen’s, I
got motioned to by a Harley rider who thought I was a hooker. (A hooker in a bicycle cap??) Anyway that was a rather strong hint that we
were not particularly safe. In fact, all
of Las Vegas feels creepy to me – a lot of indulgence with little thought. (I am not particularly moralistic about it;
it just feels like a lot of people waste a lot of their money and lives
there.) So we left the motel and ride
another sixty miles or so to a small town in Nevada at the border of Utah. We slept better there than we would have
worrying about the safety of our car and persons.
Topaz |
The next day we traveled through Utah to the site of the
Topaz Internment Camp. Riding through
Utah brought back memories of that first vacation I took with Peter. We had flown into Las Vegas then drove to
Bryce Canyon, Zion National Park, Kodachrome Valley, and Canyon lands. We camped and hiked. It was a wonderful vacation. There is a great picture of me lying on a red
sand dune. Driving though that area
reminded me of that time so long ago.
However, on this trip we didn’t take the time to visit the national
parks, and instead went for a more somber visit to the site of the internment
camp.
I wanted to visit because the internment camp had a huge
impact on my father. About fifteen years
ago, my father and step-mother went to a reunion of his junior high school
class at Topaz. It was in San Francisco where I was living at the time. My dad invited me to attend with him. I was the only sansei present and I felt
honored to meet these people from my father’s past. I loved hearing the stories about him – about
how he was a school leader and led his class on a walkout after a teacher made
a racist remark. His peers talked about
how smart and good looking he was in junior high as well as at the time of the
reunion. My step-mother was told by more
than one woman that she “had got the best one.”
However, when my dad got out of the camp there racism in the
country was rampant. He and his family
moved eastward to Cincinnati, Ohio where he went to high school. He was told by a math teacher that he would
never amount to anything. He went on to
finish a Ph.D. in mathematics at the University of Cincinnati. However, the man I knew as my father was very
quiet, reserved, and understated. He was
not the activist he was as a youth. I
attribute this to the racist atmosphere he had to negotiate when he got out of
the camp. This is all to say that the
internment camp experience and the years afterward shaped my father. Given this, I felt it was important for me to
see the site of the camp. I wanted to
experience the place.
So we drove the forty miles out of our way to the site of the
camp. It was outside of Delta,
Utah. Delta, Utah is in the middle of
nowhere and the camp is in the middle of the middle of nowhere. David said there is an evil spirit
there. It could be. I felt an energy of pain, grief, and longing
– perhaps spirits who hold the history of the place. The site has been reduced to two plaques, an
American flag, and the remnants of gravel roads, cement foundations, desert
plants and dust. The only sign of life I
saw was a huge jackrabbit hopping across the landscape. I was struck by how desolate a place it was
and tried to image it filled with people of Japanese descent – filled with my
people; my family. I am glad I made that
pilgrimage, although it was emotion filled and difficult. We were glad to leave and move on. However, I won’t forget it and what it meant
to my father and our nation.
After Utah we drove through Wyoming, Nebraska, Iowa,
Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York State, and then came into Massachusetts over
the course of a few days. In Iowa we
revisited a town in which we stayed on the bicycle tour. We stayed at a small “mom and pop” motel called the Wilton
Motel. The owner, Lois, remembered us
from our first visit. It was odd to
drive the car around town when before all I had to get around was my bike. It was funny; I did basically the same things
I did during the first visit – I went the Candy Kitchen and got a chocolate
malt, then I did a load of wash at the laundry mat, and got a few
groceries. It was a fun flashback which
highlighted how far we rode our bikes.
Pata on the road . . . She'll be back there soon. |
The driving
portion of the trip was 4460 miles in the car (starting from Portland driving
down the coast (971 miles) and then back across the country (3489 miles)). We rode our bicycles approximately 3760
miles from Bedford, MA to Dayton, WA. As
I have said before, as we drive back it makes me realize that traveling across
the country is a long trip, anyway you travel.
A lot has
happened in one short season, yet we know there is nothing constant but change
anyway. The leaves are changing colors
and will soon fall and the snow will fly again and then the buds will
return. Cycles of nature continue as do
the cycles of my life. Tomorrow I will
get on my bicycle (a road bike to boot) again and ride in the glorious fall
weather and be grateful for this moment and what blesses me each day.