Sunday, July 5, 2015

American Story: Thirty Days by Greyhound and a Meditation on Patriotism


I’d done a year and a half of college, done okay, sort of, but must have felt that it was a path that was being mapped out by someone else, so that summer in 1980 I mapped out my own course, a bus trip across the country by Greyhound, staying at youth hostels, and lit out. I was 20 years old.
   I remember plotting it out over a map of the United States spread out before me on the floor of my bedroom in the suburban home I grew up in. I would go to New Orleans, then up to St. Louis, out across the Rockies to Colorado, then to Salt Lake, then to San Francisco. Id turn back east stopping at the Grand Canyon; make a stop in Ohio to see my grandparents. And then I would come home. That’s how I decided it, just like that, sitting on the floor and looking at a map. I would do this using a Greyhound Bus Ameripass, which in 1980 allowed you to travel for 30 days, wherever and as much as you needed to, for $300, staying in youth hostels along the way.
   It was a humidity-sodden day in July—the kind of day in D.C. when everyone seems to be somewhere else; the kind of day that feels like you could lose it like so much soggy lint in your pocket—that I boarded a bus at the depot in Silver Spring, Maryland, the neighboring town to my own Bethesda, Maryland. Silver Spring, then, was (at least in my memory) a smoggy, congested concrete attachment to the nation’s capital, surfeited with carry-out joints and failing strip malls. This was just how I remember my departure on this adventure of mine across the country—humid, non-descript, a lost little day in mid-summer. The bus depot manager was a moon-faced fellow in a baseball cap from whom I bought the Ameripass that same day, but I told him I was headed to my first stop in New Orleans. I’d be taking the regular bus south to Richmond—it left two or three times a day—and all of the dozen or so other passengers waiting in the dingy little station were heading either to Richmond or to points north of there along the way. I would be switching buses several times in several stations in the old confederacy before reaching my destination; it was early afternoon when the bus departed and the plan was for me to arrive in New Orleans mid- or late-afternoon of the next day, something more than a 24-hour journey. But when the bus was ready to board the moon-faced manager called out “New Orleans” as if I was heading, maybe, across town or across state. I was in gym shorts, sneakers, and a T-shirt carrying one large grimy yellow knapsack stuffed with clothes, a smaller pack with books, a camera, snack food and the like, and a waist pack where I carried cash and my packet of bus tickets.
   It was a young man’s adventure, the kind of thing undertaken with not much more forethought or cautionary planning than I have just described, and it’s easy to look back now and say that I was, perhaps, more than usually immature. I had tried the college thing—both my brothers had gone off to schools before and were now graduated into the world—and while I hadn’t done badly, it hadn’t been a good experience. I had taken the second semester of my sophomore year off, come home to live with my parents, and worked at a drug store (a local chain then called “People’s Drug Store,” that would be bought out later by CVS). There was a plan in the works for me to attend a different school in the fall, but truthfully I wasn’t much focused on that; what I wanted to do was get out from under what felt like everyone else’s script and scout around the great world of my own country.
   It was an idea born of books I had read—especially, as a teenager John Steinbeck’s "Travels With Charley," "Grapes of Wrath," "Tortilla Flats" and "Cannery Row"—and an ethos I had absorbed from other writers and poets and singers and songwriters, the idea that to discover the country you had to go out and visit it, and in visiting it you would be transformed yourself. So that your own self-discovery was intimately linked with your discovery of what it meant—or some small piece of what it meant—to be an American.
   Something like that. Contemporary sophisticates may think that a tad melodramatic, but it’s a theme that runs deep in American literature. But I’ll confess up front, it’s really not such a dramatic narrative I have to tell—there are some high ights, but viewed from a certain vantage point it can look mostly like a kid in sneakers and a t-shirt on a bus, drinking a shitload of beer wherever he was able. (And I should add that the reader will have to trust me; I have no documentary evidence of this adventure, neither pictures nor the diary I carried have survived, and some pockets of this excursion have blurred with time.)
   But I have today, almost 34 years later, a great affection and respect for my younger, adventurous self, and it was a journey that has stayed with me. It did change me, and it was one in which I did come to know my amazing country more intimately. This is an American story.

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It went mostly as planned. I toured the French Quarter in New Orleans, then stayed two nights in a dormitory at Tulane and rode the streetcar up and down the Garden District; spent one night in a homeless shelter in sweltering St. Louis (it was something like 111 degrees) because I arrived on a Sunday and the hostel was closed (so that didn’t go quite as planned); spent four nights in Boulder, Colorado, trying to absorb the fact that people there casually walked around doing their business with those mountains in their backyard; spent a couple of nights in Salt Lake, treating myself to a Holiday Inn (what I mostly remember is how clean the city was, and my amazement that there were non-Mormon churches, plenty of them, there.) From San Francisco, I hitchhiked north to the wine country, and south down the coast to Carmel (receiving a ride in a pick-up truck I will never forget). Turning back east, I stayed in Flagstaff, Arizona where the youth hostel at the time was atop a bar-cafĂ© called Charlies; because of its proximity to the Canyon, it attracted young people from all over the world as well as students from Arizona State, and folks from the town--it was a lively place at night and in the morning you could hitch a ride to the Canyon, 90 miles north.
    I learned a lot that summer and I wonder why it feels slightly embarrassing to say that one of the things l learned was to love my country. Certainly I thought I loved my country before, or would have said so if someone had asked me—after all, I had said the Pledge of Allegiance in grade school and sung (or lipsynced) the National Anthem at ballgames, and had been told through twelve-plus years of American public school that I had everything to be grateful for being born here. But getting to see the colossal land of my birth or a fraction of it, gave me a physical, sensual sense of the country I hadn’t had before. I suppose it may have first come to me with my first glimpse of the Rockies; it was a breathtaking source of wonder to awaken in Boulder, Colorado and step outside and see a mountain—not the little green hills we call mountains back east but a great, jagged-tooth eruption of God’s earth tipped at the top with snow—looming over you. It will humble anyone’s provincialism. Standing on the grounds of the youth hostel in San Francisco on Fisherman’s Wharf at night, looking out at the twinkling lights of the city, I marveled at the distance I had travelled, and at the vastness of the country, aware for the first time and in a way that has stayed with me, that we are part of something that is larger than our own narrow ideas about it.
   But “patriotism,” the word we attach to the virtue of loving and appreciating one’s country, seems to be badly abused—overvalued, on the one hand, and valued in the wrong ways. Certainly, anyone who does not appreciate the enormous advantages of being born an American (material advantages, certainly, deriving from the world’s most colossal economy, but more importantly the advantages of freedom and the rule of law written into our founding documents) is an ingrate (and needs to get out and see the world); anyone who begrudges praise for the bravery of young people who serve in wars, even those we may think are seriously misguided or even morally wrong, is seriously lacking in humility and a capacity for respect; and anyone who doubts or rolls his eyes at the mention of the beauty and majesty of our country is lacking in imagination (and needs to get out of his house and visit America).
   So let us stipulate that patriotism is a virtue, and deserves a day—at least one!—devoted to celebrating and expressing this virtue. But forgive me if I dare to suggest that among the virtues—kindness, compassion, the ability to forgive, a capacity for acknowledging when one is wrong and owes an apology, loyalty to friends and loved ones—it strikes me as one of the lesser ones. Who wouldn’t be suspicious, and wary, for instance, of someone who was proud of being a patriot—and even had deeds of valor to his credit to prove it—but neglected his children, or treated animals or weaker humans with cruelty?
   Years ago Joan Didion wrote in an essay, “On Morality” that she distrusted the use of the word “morality” in any but the most concrete sense, distrusted its use as an abstract ideal and as a weapon to attack those who didn’t live up to it. I feel roughly the same way about patriotism, about love of one’s country. To me it means something real—that awareness that struck me when I first saw the Rockies, or looked back across the country from the wharf in San Francisco, of the vastness of the country, the realization that it was larger than my, or anyone’s, imagining. I carry it around with me, this awareness—just as I carry around with me the awareness of my name (though I don’t spend a lot of time thinking about my name, or boasting to others, “I am Mark!”).
   Four centuries ago an Englishman observed that “patriotism is the last refuge of scoundrels.” Today, it seems this refuge is turning into an ideological snipers nest. Candidates for office are asked about “American exceptionalism,” are asked, “Do you think America is exceptional?” and the answer—the only, obvious, acceptable, answer—is “Yes! Yes! Yes!” Unless you think enough to say, “Well, yes, I do think America is exceptional, and so I think America has a burden to live up to exceptional standards.”  People of the left—standing outside the status quo and typically demanding a change, typically demanding that America do better—have always been suspected of “blaming America first.”

   It seems easy enough to respond that people who agitate for the end of the death penalty, or for universal access to healthcare, or for amnesty for some undocumented immigrants, or for a tax policy that is fairer to the less well-off, or for policies that are protective of our natural resources, are arguing from their own awareness of what it means to be American, from their own inborn sense of what America should live up to—just as are those who march for the rights of the unborn, or for school choice, or social conservatives who believe that too much of American popular culture is noisy, celebrity-obsessed and borderline pornographic (causes with which I share some sympathy).
   But today there is an industry of right-wing megaphones working the theme that liberals just don’t get America, or worse, just don’t like it. Ann Coulter, for instance, has built an entire multi-million dollar enterprise around this shtick. Her latest screed is against proponents of amnesty for immigrants illegally residing in our country in a book colorfully titled, “Adios America: The Left’s Plan to Turn America Into a Third World Hellhole.”
   It occurred to me that Ms. Coulter or anyone seeking a picture of our possibly bleak future should contemplate not the “illegals” coming over our border, but the face of a white man legally born in the United States—the 21-year old gunman who shot nine Charleston, South Carolina churchgoers at a Bible study. I suppose this young man might be able to name the author of The Declaration of the Independence, and possibly “Huckleberry Finn.” But I doubt seriously he could say who wrote “The Scarlet Letter,” “The Great Gatsby,” “The Grapes of Wrath,” “Leaves of Grass,” or “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Eve”; doubt seriously he could say the historical significance of Plymouth Rock, Jamestown, or Williamsburg, let alone Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Pearl Harbor, or Selma, Alabama; doubt seriously he had ever visited a National Park, or could even name the state where the Grand Canyon is.
   Illiterate, or anyway sub-literate, bereft of any knowledge of our history, literature or geography, he is only nominally American. Jobless, mentally ill, vaguely aware that he is somehow falling behind, he does not have a high school education, but he does have enough information, gleaned from surfing the Internet, to determine that it is someone else who is the cause of his troubles. And he does have access to a gun. There are countless young men just like him. Who is to blame for this waste of a generation? Is he the face of our country’s future? 

   To carry your country around with you--that is the beginning and end of patriotism. It deserves its day on the 4th of July, but we need to drop it as a metric for judging others; we should be suspicious of those who noisily proclaim their love of country--no less than we would be of someone who went around loudly and repetitively proclaiming how much they love their wife, and accusing others of not loving theirs.
   Two of my favorite writers and thinkers are Andrew Sullivan and the late Christopher Hitchens—both of them Anglo-immigrant writers who never declined to extol the virtues of America. But Hitchens had this to say on an interview show when a caller asked him to say whether America is the greatest country on earth: 

"I think I like America most on all the days when people are not going around `USA! USA! We're number one! We're the greatest!' I prefer the days when they don't do that. It's a matter of always think of it, never speak of it."

But then Hitchens reflected and added, "Of course, objectively as well as subjectively, the American Revolution is now the only revolution with a fighting chance of survival and success: the idea that you could create a multicultural democracy over a vast expanse of the earth's surface that could possibly be emulated by other people.” 

******

I was on my way back from the Canyon, my last day there, hitching south back to Flagstaff, and I had gotten started late because I had lingered in the Canyon for a few hours before heading back up and by the time I got to the lip and began hitchhiking back it was late afternoon. The traffic going south from the Canyon is on interstate 180, which breaks southeast toward Flagstaff about 45 minutes in, at a little spot on the map called Valle; but some of the traffic continues due south to Williams, and my first ride dropped me at the intersection with Flagstaff still the better part of an hour away.
    The traffic had seemed to slow—most of the families had headed back to wherever they were going earlier in the afternoon—and I looked around at a vast desert around me as the sun began to set. There was, I think I remember, a building of some kind in the middle distance, but it was pretty lonely out there and a sense of foreboding began to build as I scanned the empty highway for southbound traffic. Darkness was not far off.
   It’s a moment that has stayed with me, as defining as any of the other more dramatic points along this journey—arriving at night in New Orleans, seeing the Rockies for the first time, the ride in the pick-up along the Big Sur, the Canyon, looking out at San Francisco at night from the Wharf—but to anyone viewing the scene they would see only a guy with a knapsack and his thumb out over an empty highway. It was an entirely interior moment, but I have never forgotten it, and have come to believe in it as a kind of hinge in my life.
   It was, simply, a decision not to panic, a determination not to be scared—although I was. That’s all I can tell you. I had come this far, I had charted this journey on my own, I had staked a claim of sorts on a vast, vast country, and now I felt myself to be a different, older person than when I had left—and somehow I would work this out. (In truth, I’m not sure what I could have done had the situation really gotten desperate; there was, maybe, that building in the distance—it might have been a post-office or some such thing—and there may have been a payphone there; maybe I thought I would stand on the highway and force someone, or a truck, to stop. Who knows? ) Anyway, I stuck my thumb out and waited. It did start to darken, but of course in time a ride came and I arrived back at Charlie’s well before nightfall.
   Maybe a lot of the most important moments in our life are like that moment of mine on the desert highway—private, interior transitions and epiphanies that can scarcely be conveyed to any others. A few weeks after returning home, I was off to a new school experience, a little bit more mature, more confident that I was capable of writing my own script. I had changed.
   Someday, I would like to recapitulate this adventure (although now I’m not sure I could deal with 30 days on a bus!). I’d like to travel a northern route, through the Great Lakes region, the iron range of Minnesota, the Dakotas, the great Northwest. I’d like to visit my country again.
   At the conclusion of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” Chief Broom, newly escaped from the institution to which he had been harnessed his adult life, contemplates the open road and the continent that surrounds him. “I might go to Canada eventually, but I think I’ll stop along the Columbia on the way. I’d like to check around Portland and Hood River and The Dalles to see if there’s any of the guys I used to know back in the village….Mostly, I’d just like to look over the country around the gorge again, just to bring some of it clear in my mind again.

“I been away too long.” 


 Me too.