In remembrance of William Elkins Johnson (1956 – 2023)
8:00 a.m., July 28th, 2024, sitting in the
car waiting for R, who stoops momentarily to fuss with a fern on the porch. The
Subaru is packed, including bottles of water and a small plastic urinal I
bought at CVS for emergency relief after days of struggle with two kidney
stones, one small, one large, stubbornly resisting the gallons of water I’ve
been drinking to make them dissolve and pass.
And no, didn’t use the urinal.
We decide to postpone breakfast till Tenino, little
diner called Scotty B’s at a truck stop, ample parking for big rigs, clean
showers and rest rooms, gas pumps full of diesel. Big traffic jam 10 miles out
from the Nisqually bridge, traffic at a crawl, no reason why, people going as
far as they can in the free lane, kind souls letting them in when they can go
no further. Faint with hunger, we regret our decision, should’ve had breakfast
in Tacoma. We get close to the source of the problem, expecting to see a car
accident, paramedics, crushed metal, or maybe bulldozers red flags & the tumult
of construction, but all we see is a group of men collecting traffic cones.
Exit to Tenino. Scotty B’s is gone, a victim of Covid.
We enter Tenino, quiet bedroom community with a franchise featuring tacos. I gotta
piss like crazy. We check the internet on a mobile phone, head further south to
Centralia, stop at the Country Cousin, sizable breakfast place packed with
people. Big plates of pancakes, scrambled eggs, bacon, glass of orange juice,
coffee, gaze out the window at some blue petunias, homeless guy in the parking
lot talking animatedly with his demons. Strange little birds in the parking lot
I’ve never seen before, a weird mixture of crow, dove and starling. R has a
conversation with a woman in the rest room who’d gone to the Willie Nelson and
Chris Stapleton concert in Seattle. Fans of both, we fill with envy.
We take highway 30 to Astoria, and to connect with the
southward vistas of highway 101. Narrow lanes, up and down, maniac in a white
Dodge Charger passing a lane of cars headed 80 mph toward oncoming traffic, R
driving, she avoids a near collision. Stop at a gas station in Clatskanie for
gas and rest room. Sign over the toilet reads “Men: don’t be shy, stay close,
it’s shorter than you think. Women: remain seated for the entire performance.”
Seoul Food, Korean restaurant way off the beaten path,
all by itself, surrounded by woods, closed, boarded up.
Mountain of sawdust in Wauna.
Collection of white propane tanks, like a cemetery for
gas.
Eagle Sanctuary.
We reach Seaside, stop to stretch in the Coastal Craft
Cannabis parking lot, Kool Shitshop across the street, skeleton in a rocking
chair.
Go down 101 Oregon coast, hilly, lots of curves, but
smooth, neatly marked with plenty of places to pull aside. Haystack Rock
spotted through thick forest.
Spot the occasional hawk, eagle, winging its way east
or west, north or south, over dense forests of Douglas fir, Sitka spruce, Oregon
ash, Ponderosa pine. I tell R a blue rock-thrush was sighted in Rockaway last
April, first time the bird had been sighted in the U.S.
Stop at the Community Center in Nehalem to avail
ourselves of the rest rooms. Big sequoia nearby. I take a picture of R with her
smartphone standing by the sequoia for scale. The trunk is gigantic. Must be
hundreds of years old. And to think it came from a seed the size of a pinhead.
Check in to our motel room, which is huge, big table,
refrigerator, stove, we could live here. Little packets on the bathroom
counter: Makeup Remover Wipes, Lingette Démaquillante, all skin types,
gentle cleansing, alcohol free, moisturizing, conditioning. Soap with little
bumps on one side to keep it from sliding, but doesn’t work, soap keeps sliding
wherever I put it. I feel like Stan Laurel trying to domesticate it, awaken its
responsibilities as an object, and train it to remain on the counter without
sliding into the sink, grabbing at it, juggling it, coaxing it into a
stationary position.
White towels on a rack folded to form a cup for another
smaller towel.
July 29th, 2024. Gloom. Drizzle. We go have
breakfast at Grumpy’s, small restaurant with twinkly lights in the windows,
kites on the ceiling, dragons and butterflies. I watch a lonely soul in a black
raincoat, hunched, walking the rails south, where the goofy Candy Cane Express
travels between Garibaldi and Rockaway. I wonder what the decibels are in
Grumpy’s, there are so many people, so many voices, so many kids, shouting, talking
robustly.
We go down to see the Pacific, but it’s cold. I remembered
to bring an umbrella but forgot a jacket. We go back to our room. I watch Jimmy
Dore and Due Dissidence on my smartphone, a short lecture in French about Albert
Camus, Le Paradoxe de L’Existence.
We meet up with R’s older sister and nephew and wife
from Texas and their two rescue Chihuahuas, rescue dachshund, & a very
skittish rescue mutt, step-niece, also from Texas, a warm, calming presence, constantly
vigilant over the hijinks, curiosities and explorations of her two kids, 3 yr
old girl and 1 ½ boy, cute as can be, sociable, good-natured, hilarious. Pizza
and conversation. D, now middle-aged, an archivist, regales us with bizarre
histories and nougats of anecdotal piquancy. Billy the Kid’s gravesite encaged,
ironically, in bars because people keep stealing the headstone. Travels to
Budapest and Romania. The medical ordeals of each dog. An explanation as
to why Whitman supported the Mexican-American War. Currencies. Surgeries. Dental
odysseys. Weird toilets of the world.
Went for a run down Miller Road, paved road parallel
to 101 which has hardly any traffic, down to the beach, felt good running on
packed sand, sand gives a little, unlike the unforgiving asphalt.
Shower. Relax. Lie on the bed watching some podcasts
on YouTube. Go for a walk down Miller Road to a small touristy business section
where I’m assaulted by a horde of bubbles emanating from a sinister Bubbletron
perched outdoors on a wall. We visit a small cannabis dispensary, which is
empty when we walk in. A short, middle-aged woman appears from the back with
the sourest disposition I’ve ever witnessed in a human being. I wondered if she
might be the reincarnation of Arthur Schopenhauer. We ask questions about the
products, to which she provides scant answers. We each buy a packet of 1:1
ratio gummies. Northwest Berry and Dragonfruit. 10 bucks each. 24 dollars
cheaper than Seattle, which puts a 37% tax on it.
We walk back down Miller Road. Small white house with
pretty white curtains. Call of a Eurasian dove. House with a lush shrub of pelargonium
sidoides.
We enjoy three days of vigorous conversation with
relatives convened from hundreds of miles for the memorial of R’s brother, who
passed away unexpectedly last November. The mood is upbeat with a tinge of
sadness, given the underlying circumstance of everyone’s being there.
Spritely conversations shift and migrate, changing
partners, mingling connections, memories, affiliations. Eruptions of laughter. Sparkly
counter, granite & quartz. Pop of cans.
We talk about the complexities and joys of raising
bonsai with B, who has a collection of bonsai. How to train the branches, sculpt
the plant into graceful sweeps and arching curves; the delicacy of root pruning,
wiring, the fulfillment derived from patience and ingenuity.
Day of the ceremony is warmer than the gloom and chill
of the previous day. We all enjoy a catered dinner, a veritable banquet from
the pages of Rabelais, so beautifully arranged and sliced and presented R takes
a picture on her smartphone.
The family walk down to the ocean, several holding
bouquets of blue balloons, wibbly-wobbling in a gentle breeze. D, with his
dashing handlebar mustache, standing in front of the Pacific holding nine blue
twitchy balloons. It looked like a scene from Fellini.
A prayer was given and R and her brother’s grieving
widow and sister and the three children he brought into this world, now adults
with kids of their own, poured the ashes into the ocean. Someone played Amazing
Grace. The sand felt fresh and good under my feet. It was rippled and grooved
with the tiny holes of razor clams. That sharp division between heaven and
earth was blurred, as if the beyond had been rendered weirdly attainable during
a moment of charmed transformations, the border of the infinite opened by wave
and surf. The two colossal shapes of Twin Rocks went in and out of focus,
contingent on the random shifting of ocean mist, imbued with muted, afternoon
light, creating a wistful sfumato. Champagne was poured. Kids played in the
surf. A flock of birds flew west, into the setting sun.
2 comments:
beautiful travelogue, john.
we just returned from our annual beach holiday on the Central Coast of CA. cayucos, the little beach town time forgot. we witnessed a similar scene a couple of years ago in relation to your reason for traveling. we noticed a largish group of people in a circle on the beach. an elderly woman was in the center. they were dressed more formally, not attired in the usual array of swimwear, t-shirts & shorts for a day at the beach. after a few moments, they stood on the beach right outside the large-framed window of our rented beach house, we recognized their purpose. each took a turn holding an urn, spoke in memory of the deceased, & then poured a little of its contents into the surf. it was beautiful, & a privilege to observe their ceremony.
your account of the road also mirrored our own experiences, but for a bit crazier & reckless drivers here, it might seem! one bmw passed us on the right side shoulder of I5 going about 85-90 mph! scared the crap out of us.
Thank you for sharing your experience, Richard. I hadn't heard of Cayucos, and I lived in the Bay Area for a little over 10 years. It really sounds nice. The ideal getaway. If you'd said you'd gone to Rockaway, and witnessed that ceremony, I might've said it was probably us. Wouldn't that have been something to somehow meet up?
I hate driving anywhere now. People have gone insane on the roads and highways. We also saw trucks, monster rigs, changing lanes within a hair of each other.
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