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hear me roar

Jessica Evans

Posted on June 13, 2006

The road taught me an important lesson. Life cannot be controlled. I used to be a bit of a control freak, needing things to be a certain way, believing that controlling the little things in life would somehow make me happy.

On the trip, I searched for basic truths, about life and about myself. I found that life is about following the currents, and being happy with the little things.

On the trip I talked about needing kindness from strangers. Well, I’m still alone, and although I have some friends to hang out with and a not-bad social life for someone who’s been here about a month. Today is going to be a day where I go without talking to anyone all day. I have learned to enjoy this, to just be invisible. Some days i feel desperate to have someone to talk to. i email like mad and sign onto all of my messenger accounts. I turn up the ringer on the phone, check all of my email accounts, and catch up on the internet forums. Being on my own is something that I should be used to, so i have to curb the people-dependent behaviour. Going a full day without talking is a great behavioural science experiment for me to conduct on myself. It sure beats television.

I had to get used to being looked at as “the weird girl” just because it’s “weird” for a girl to be on her own. Cities are great places for single or gay people. Today I’m out wearing what I want, with very big hair. It’s a bit of a social experiment. I truly believe in not judging people by their appearance and I count on the same in return. The way someone chooses to dress tells us a lot about them and we can interpret the image they choose to project – but it’s a fickle science…

They’re classic Canadian rednecks. In their broken English (English being the only language they’ve ever spoken) they talk loudly about doing time in jail. The store is cramped, small, and has that strange “used stuff smell” about it. But it’s a great place to get some ugly used dishes, so I like to drop in before my shift at the pub. On Saturday, I walked in and fell in love. There’s a green velvet chair just inside the door. Inside the door means it’s a new arrival. It doesn’t even have a price yet. I walked around a bit and looked at dishes, searching for spice jars, specifically. This place has everything you could ever imagine, broken up into specific departments as indicated by the spelling error laden signs displayed everywhere. “Rackchets” is my favourite.

I ask for help from the elderly woman who runs the store and is obviously the hardened family matriarch. She’s the one that tosses the other family members around with verbal abuse from her solid stance at about 4’11.

I’m late for work but I don’t care because I hope to be quitting that job soon. I really just drive up there since I have to check my mail in squamish, maybe climb a bit and oogle the mountain biker and climber boys who frequent the restaurant. Oh, and I need the money. On my way out the door I have to pass the Gorgeous Green Chair (GGC) and I stop in my tracks. Okay, I’ll just sit in it. I sit down and am enveloped in comfort. It rocks, it swivels, it is so mine. I ask the elderly matriarch the price and find it pleasingly affordable. I arrange to pick it up the next day and head to work.

It’s a full moon, which is something I learned to celebrate while on my trip. I’ve turned semi-superstitious; if I notice a small pattern in my life, I’ll call it good luck and try to repeat it. It provides me with a way to follow life, and provides me with a small sense of routine. I camped out at the chief on my own that night to celebrate the full moon, and to dodge the impending but much needed doom of obtaining full-time employment. When I’m pitching my tent

, I reflect on the first time I pitched it – 4am in West Virginia. That was about four years ago, I cracked one night, drove into work early the next morning, bought the tent at MEC on lunch break, and hit the road straight into Friday Afternoon Toronto Long Weekend Traffic. I was fatigued from being awake for so long. This was my first road trip with betsy who was only 14 at the time and hadn’t been checked out before the trip. it was so late and this was my first time experiencing solo-roadtrip delirium as i ripped the tags off the tent and figured out how to pitch it. I then found myself wide awake as my brain filed through and replayed scenes from every horror movie i had ever watched. there’s a good reason why i don’t watch horror movies anymore. In contrast, my Sunday night at the chief was so comfortable and it felt good to be out camping by myself again. I make a mental note as I fall asleep to the roar of Shannon Falls: camping by myself is something I’m going to need for the rest of my life.

It’s back to the mini flea market, to adopt the GGC. I have a few theories on how to fit it in my car. Hey, sometimes you just have to believe. A lady in the store offers to help and at first I decline, pick up the chair and walk out the door. Oh my god it’s heavy. Jane runs out to help. She’s a somewhat trashy looking woman in her late 40’s with lots of ear piercings, big 80’s glasses and about six necklaces that sit on her proudly displayed bosom. We carry the chair out to the car and I inform/warn her of my determination to fit it in my small car.

For Christ’s sake, I lived in that thing, it can fit a chair. We try the first theory. Front door, passenger side, seat down. It almost makes it, but the frame of the chair base is just about 1.5” too big to get in the door. Darn. I’m laughing at the situation and thanking jane for her help, while we share quips about the humourous side of being women struggling to get a big chair in a small car. She tells me how muscular she used to be, and I tell her I used to be pretty muscular too, and we share a laugh about how we used to feel manly with all that muscle tone, and we’re adjusting to feeling feminine. So anyway, we’ve established that we’re stubborn and strong and we can do this. The trunk is the next option for the GGC to come home, but it’s full. I keep chatting with jane as I empty the trunk of a lot of roadtrip leftovers of climbing and camping gear. I push loose socks, shoes, and empty starbucks coffee cups around while unloading backpacks. This used to be my closet, and now all my stuff is on the road, including the soup I bogartted home last night from the restaurant.

The trunk/closet turns out to be pro-choice and the GGC won’t fit. Okay, I can give up, I’ll just take a store credit and get some dishes or something. Jane and I stand on the side of the road, taking in the scene. Bouldering pad, back pack, duffle bag, and a whole lotta crap surround the GGC on the road. It’s a shame I can’t take it home. Jane and I look at each other with the same idea – why not try the back seat? I run to put the front seats up as far as they’ll go, and we laugh at how with great drama I release the driver’s seat, only to have it click up just one damned notch. Yeah, I’m short and if the seat was any further back, I wouldn’t have been able to reach the pedals. We manhandle the base off the chair, there are tools involved now so we’ve had to do a bit of grunting. We get the base off and squeeze the chair into the backseat. There is a lot of rejoicing when the chair finally eases in and I’m jumping up and down. The chair is mine. What’s mine fits in the car, and the GGC is IN the car. Fuck yeah.

I calmed down enough to offer Jane a coffee to say thank you and she politely declines. “The smile on your face when we got that thing in the car was enough for me.” She says.

She asks if I have someone in the city to help me get the chair back in the car and I say that no, I don’t really know that many people. She looks concerned so I reassure her that I could always ask my landlord to help. She’s amazed that I’m on my own in the big, scary city and I tell her about my roadtrip – about traveling around the states on my own in this little car. Doesn’t it look a little bit lived-in? She looks a little distressed and scolds me about all the bad people you have to watch out for. I politely correct her and tell her that there are plenty of good people out there too, and this is something I learned on my trip – just to believe in and look for the good in people. I’m not a crazy hippy, I tell her. I mean, look. You’re a complete stranger and you just helped me get my GGC home. You didn’t have to do this, but this is something that helps me to believe in people, so thank you. It isn’t just about getting the GGC in the car, here. Her expression softens and she smiles. It’s like her face cracks when she smiles – the stress in her life has set some very stern lines on it.

Well, it was great to meet you and thanks again. I tell her. She extends her hand out to shake mine. Good to meet you too. I drove away high on life, with the base of a big, velvet green chair in my rearview mirror, at kissing distance from the steering wheel with the seat up all the way. This was one of my favourite things, and my sure-fire way to be happy: a quick burst of human interaction where I observe myself as a third party and I’m glad that I triggered a bit of happiness in someone’s life in return. Life is good. Now it’s time to climb.

Categories: Big Fat Roadtrip

Tagged: camping, climbing, roadtrip, rock climbing

3 Comments

stats!

Jessica Evans

Posted on May 22, 2006

I’ve been back in Canada for a month now – life is busy as I try to get settled down and gainfully employed in BC. I’ve compiled some statistics from the trip….

Approximate amount of money spent: 3,000 CAD (not bad for 4.5 months)

Dates of trip: December 13, 2005 – April 20, 2006
Total Days: 128
Nights staying with friends: 9
Nights in a hotel: 3
Nights in a tent: 102
Nights sleeping in the car: 13
Driving overnight: 1
Days with a dog: 22
Longest amount of time spent in one destination: 4 weeks (Hueco Tanks, Texas)

Car
Name: Betsy
Make/Model: 1988 chevrolet cavalier
Color: blue
Maximum occupancy reached: four people, three crashpads and a back pack
Kilometers driven: approx 19,000

CAA rescues: two, one when the starter died, and one when some helpful strangers helped me swap the alternator out in front of an Auto Zone, only to find that the old alternator was fine. AAA came and put my car back together for me.

America
States visited: 19
States climbed in: 8
States driven through with no overnight stops: 6
Shortest amount of time spent in one state: new york, 1.5 hours
Annoying thing I’ve heard a lot: “you’re from Canada? I’ve been there.” (it’s a big country, you know)

Best driving CD: Beck – Sea Change
Longest driving push with a passenger: 23 hours, Tennessee to El Paso
Longest driving push alone: 19 hours, Utah to Washington

Food
Approximate amount of peanut butter ingested: 5 jars
Cans of tuna ingested: feels close to infinity, probably between 50-100
Favourite recipe created, and then promptly overdosed on: tuna coleslaw pasta salad
Grocery item carried from Toronto, through the entire trip and on to BC: sesame seed oil
Lessons learned:
“how would this taste with tuna?” is a question better left unanswered
Macaroni and cheese by any other name is still just macaroni and cheese
Worst meal eaten: rice, cilantro, Portobello mushrooms, ruined with about a half cup of mayonnaise

Climbing
Number of climbing locations visited: 11
Crags visited total: 15
Crags trad: 3Crags bouldering: 8
Crags sport: 4

Grades:
Hardest send (bouldering): V6
Hardest flash (bouldering): V4
Hardest send (sport): 11b/c

People:
Climbing “celebrities” met: 7
Climbing celebrities that remember my name: 0
Bizarre meeting: Met a guy in hueco who went to the same high school that I did.

Strangest slang terms:
“Ressy” pronounced “rezzy” – short for a reservation for the Hueco Tanks north mountain climbing area.
“Rig” so cal slang for just about anything. You can rig the rig in the rig while riggin’ it. Confused? Me too.

Dirtbagging
Score boiled eggs from a continental breakfast – save them for sandwiches later, take the coffee for now.
Get a few paper towels from the gas station everytime you put gas in the car so you don’t have to buy any.
Dirtbag record: Went 6 days without spending money on anything but gas for the car
Attempted to cook potatoes via heat in the trunk on a sunny day (saves on fuel)
Times viewing family guy movie: 6 (it’s the only movie on my laptop)

Pants
Pairs of pants brought: 10
Pairs of pants acquired:2 pants, 1 pr shorts
Total amount of pants: 13
Note to self: 13 pairs of pants? A bit excessive.

Blog
Did you know that as you’ve been watching my trip, I’ve been watching you? I’ve kept track of the hits on my site with a counter, and after leaving hueco, I would check in to see who was visiting. The final stretch of my trip, I would pull up to a hotel to obtain a wireless internet connection, and check to see who had visited recently. This gave me some company.

total entries: 60
entries that never made it out of draft mode: 6
Total visits: ~2,500 (during the trip)
Most interesting hits from a web search: “Toronto homeless”, “girl on road stripping”, and my personal favourite: “quebec swingers pictures”
Furthest away regular visitors: Italy, Singapore, Australia

just a note: I’ve enjoyed writing for a web audience. Sometimes it may have seemed quite personal. I talked about a lot of things, but there are topics I have intentionally excluded. There’s no clandestine reason, this just isn’t my diary or journal. This is a collection of stories, experiences on the road, and observations on life on a solo roadtrip. I hope you enjoyed it.

Categories: Big Fat Roadtrip

Tagged: camping, climbing, roadtrip, rock climbing

4 Comments

familiar yet foreign

Jessica Evans

Posted on May 15, 2006

the big move out west climaxes tomorrow when the moving company shows up to transport my things to Vancouver. i saw my family tonight for the first time in six months, and a few of them asked me why i was moving so far away – why to BC? the truth is, i can’t really answer that right now, except to say that i’ve always wanted to move out there, so i am.

being in toronto has been intensely comfortable. I know what neighbourhoods are where, and the bike-friendly route around toronto. it’s so nice to see old friends, and stay in my old apartment. i was reading back in my journal today, where i made a comment that i always feel fucked up when i leave a location. i guess that the roadtrip was preparation for the actual move… making toronto just another place to leave.

i have two different places to stay out west, and three different part time jobs lined up between squamish and vancouver. i have an interview for a full time job next week, and need to find an apartment by June 1. this is more than a crossroads of life, it’s a freakin’ cloverleaf interchange.

Categories: Big Fat Roadtrip

Tagged: camping, climbing, roadtrip, rock climbing

0 Comments

the real world strikes back

Jessica Evans

Posted on May 12, 2006

being back in toronto has been very busy. i’m trying to see everyone – friends and family – as well as pack up all my things for the big move out west. it’s been a toss up of visiting my old self, or being a guest in my old home. i’ll be writing more later but for now, here are some pictures of the climbing i’ve done in the past week.

I climbed five out of six of my last days in BC before coming back to Ontario. My rest day was spent on the plane, and it was climbing the next day at my old home crag, the Niagara Glen.

meg leads up the “weird” warm up route in Chek Canyon, Whistler BC

kevin figuring out his beta and trusting those crappy intermediates on Easy in an Easychair – Squamish BC

Brian demonstrates his super smooth beta for us in between our attempts.

hey look, the earth really is round. a view of the rocky mountains on the flight back to toronto

The boys warming up at the glen – Niagara Falls, Ontario

Damian matching the rock and setting up for the toss on a glossy, shiny warm-up.

Paul’s send of the day, and a shirt to match the pad as well.
Categories: Big Fat Roadtrip

Tagged: camping, climbing, roadtrip, rock climbing

0 Comments

never was a cornflake girl

Jessica Evans

Posted on May 2, 2006

Moving to Squamish was a very romantic idea that my partner and I agreed upon almost three years ago when we visited the area for less than a week. It seemed like the ultimate sacrifice, and the way to be “real and hardcore” climbers. Well, I just quit my well paying job and drove around the states climbing for almost five months, so I have nothing to prove about being a real climber or not.

As humans we have many classifications, and I was raised with a religious identity assigned to me from my family. While I enjoyed the community aspect of it, I didn’t agree with the belief system imposed on me in exchange for security. I wanted to know how I really felt about the world, so I ventured out on my own. It was tough to find my place in the world; my community had been taken away from me and it felt as if I had nothing to fall back on. It was at that time that I found climbing, and quickly adopted it as an identity. It was an emotional “quick fix” and something to immerse myself in.

This trip was not at all what I expected. Besides wanting to travel and see new places, I must admit that there were some very selfish and shallow expectations from my trip. There were grades I wanted to tick, an appearance I desired, and I wanted to really focus on being a physically strong climber. Instead of being a stronger climber, I feel stronger emotionally and mentally. I’ve defined my own personal belief system and I feel secure standing on my own.

I’ve obviously had a lot of time on my own, and I’ve had time to think about my relationships with other people, and really reflect on my life thus far. I have been able to make peace with and let go of so much. Really, We control our own destinies.

This year has been like those “choose your own adventure” books that my brothers and I used to enjoy when we were children. instead of navigating my way through a mummy’s tomb, (those books always had mummies) I am shaping the sort of person I will become. Every so often I catch a glimpse of the sort of old lady I will be, and I like her.

The reason I’m not roadtripping anymore is because it’s time to make money. In squamish the climbers seem to be established locals, or dirtbags. I just can’t dirtbag anymore. Not when there’s a city so close (Vancouver) where I can get a job that I’m qualified for, and make enough money to pay my rent. I don’t need as much money as I made at my job in Toronto, but there’s no need for me to be poor while I have a desire to work, and head on my shoulders and brain in there as well. I’m really excited about this decision – to get to know a new city. I’ve seen so many new places these past six months but this one I get to explore as a potential home. What a great year this has been so far. Living on the road I was able to shed my old ways: meticulously navigating through a new place, paying more attention to a roadmap than to my surroundings. Instead I find it fun to just drive, get lost a little, get my bearings, and figure things out as I go.

On the weekend I just decided to get in the car and left the house about 10 minutes after my decision. I miss that old “hitting the road” feeling. I drove to Vancouver, took an exit and drove around looking for a café with wireless internet access. I emailed friends and looked at apartment ads for the city, and got a feel for being there on my own. Eventually I found good friends to hang out with, and ended up spending a very refreshing evening with them.

The next big step is my return to Toronto. I need to pack up my things and figure out a way to ship them out here. I know it’s going to be incredibly busy, and probably pretty tough. I’m looking forward to seeing so many friends again – faces that I’ve thought of fondly during my trip.

Squamish has been a great introduction for my re-entry into society (sounds like a reentry from space) and I’m eternally grateful to my friends for putting me up and putting up with me for a couple weeks as I recovered from the road. I showed up with the social skills of a wet dog, very disjointed from the world around me and not sure where to start to get a life of my own.

I just really believe in myself again. Squamish has helped me slowly get back to society but for now I have to believe that I will succeed and have a happy life in Vancouver. If something changes there, well, I guess I’ll just have to hit the road.

Categories: Big Fat Roadtrip

Tagged: camping, climbing, roadtrip, rock climbing

2 Comments

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