A Psychological Portrait of Deschutes County, Oregon
Today, I'm writing from a town called Bend. It's in central Oregon,
the site of this year's Thompson Tour.
(Long story short: instead of getting together at Christmas, when everything is crowded, closed, and/or seething with winter plague, we gather the clan in the fall, at a different place every year. By spending the money on travel instead of presents, we can see all kinds of fun and interesting places, and nobody has to cook!)
I've ventured out from my North Texas hobbit-hole a fair few times now, and let me tell you – there is really something special about going out west. It's not because the nature out here is somehow magically better than anybody else's nature. It's not necessarily some epigenetic American pioneer fantasy, either. I think maybe it's because the ratio of earth to civilization is still so high here, even after all the Manifest Destiny and Go West, Young Man and Get Your Kicks on Route 66 of the last three hundred years. Look here:
Isn't it striking? Out here on the
left side of the country, the constellations of our towns and cities are still –
even in the year 2013 – such sparse little specks in the vastness of the
world... and you can't stay here long without feeling that.
It's frightening, really, to drive up roads that close for snow six months out of the year, and wonder what it would be like to break down in a blizzard and find yourself helpless, miles from any other human being.
Or to sit by a still lake, your phone at zero bars, and imagine how long you would go unfound if you suddenly had a heart attack.
I have a taste for that kind of fear.
Even experiencing it in this safe, limited, touristy way pulls you back
through thousands of generations of humanity – to people who huddled around
fires in the dark, hoping to get through the night unnoticed by the things that
lived outside the light.
Actually, I think that's one of the Western's most powerful attractions. It's the only genre I know of that centers on a place – and more than that, a place so immense that it affects every living thing within its boundaries. You had better step lightly and stay wakeful, it says, because nobody is coming to help you if you can't. It's not horror – there's nothing malicious about it – but a place so vast and ageless as to be almost incapable of noticing you. Human emotions like love and hate have their opposite here, in hundred-mile stretches of geological indifference.
Of course, while I-the-individual am tiny indeed, we-the-species are not,
and it's dangerous to forget the power we have to alter our planet. Still, in many ways, coming here feels like
going home to my parents' house: we are bigger now than we were even a thousand
years ago, and maybe even slightly more mature... but it's good to visit every
now and again to remember where we came from, and to reflect on our smallness.
Happy birthday, me. And thank you, Earth, for letting me live on you.
And Spring herself, when she woke at dawn,
Would scarcely know that we were gone.
(Long story short: instead of getting together at Christmas, when everything is crowded, closed, and/or seething with winter plague, we gather the clan in the fall, at a different place every year. By spending the money on travel instead of presents, we can see all kinds of fun and interesting places, and nobody has to cook!)
I've ventured out from my North Texas hobbit-hole a fair few times now, and let me tell you – there is really something special about going out west. It's not because the nature out here is somehow magically better than anybody else's nature. It's not necessarily some epigenetic American pioneer fantasy, either. I think maybe it's because the ratio of earth to civilization is still so high here, even after all the Manifest Destiny and Go West, Young Man and Get Your Kicks on Route 66 of the last three hundred years. Look here:
from Wired Science, and more specifically, NASA's Suomi NPP Satellite |
It's frightening, really, to drive up roads that close for snow six months out of the year, and wonder what it would be like to break down in a blizzard and find yourself helpless, miles from any other human being.
image courtesy of my sister's enormous phone |
Or to sit by a still lake, your phone at zero bars, and imagine how long you would go unfound if you suddenly had a heart attack.
taken by me |
Actually, I think that's one of the Western's most powerful attractions. It's the only genre I know of that centers on a place – and more than that, a place so immense that it affects every living thing within its boundaries. You had better step lightly and stay wakeful, it says, because nobody is coming to help you if you can't. It's not horror – there's nothing malicious about it – but a place so vast and ageless as to be almost incapable of noticing you. Human emotions like love and hate have their opposite here, in hundred-mile stretches of geological indifference.
sister again |
...and again. No, I don't know how she does it either. |
And Spring herself, when she woke at dawn,
Would scarcely know that we were gone.