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The Desire To Leave Everything Behind and Disappear

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    It was the last college summer.
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    Well,
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    for most,
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    but not me.
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    I was taking a gap year to focus on my small business at the time.
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    Things didn’t go as planned,
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    I got a severe burn-out and eventually gave up on the whole thing.
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    So I spent the rest of my gap year mostly inside my room,
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    distracting myself with video games and feeling like a failure.
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    That was when a few friends took me out to grab a bite.
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    They said I should go somewhere.
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    I said Alaska.
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    I asked them to ride with me.
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    They were hesitant, but they agreed.
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    The plan was then made, routes decided, bikes readied, and everything was taken care of.
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    The plan was to ride 04 motorcycles from Richmond,
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    then take route 76 and head to Alaska Highway.
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    But life happened.
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    As the day of the journey approached,
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    people started dropping out one by one.
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    On the day of the journey, the last and the final person backed out.
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    So, had to make a choice,
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    whether to give up on the plan
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    or attempt riding across the country on a 20-year-old motorcycle.
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    I decided, what the heck, let me have a go at it.
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    If I don’t go now, I would never get this mess out of my system.
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    So I made up a mental agreement,
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    the moment when the bike gives up is when I give up and head back home.
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    And I was on the road.
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    The road took me across the country:
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    Pittsburg, Sandusky, Michigan Lake, Seattle, and all the way to Vancouver.
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    I drove from dusk till dawn, and take a quick nap whenever I could
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    at the bus stops, by the rivers, and under the oak trees.
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    Recipe for a horror movie, I know, but I was too tired to worry.
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    Living in the city for all of my life,
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    I almost forgot how peaceful it was to just fall asleep under a sky full of stars.
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    Spending most of the time driving makes you appreciate small things.
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    A hot cup of coffee in the morning feels like a privilege.
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    A double cheeseburger at a local diner feels like a warm hug.
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    And sometimes I’d get lucky after a long drive
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    and chance into a dingy motel by the road.
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    I’d check right in because, after a few thousand miles of driving like crazy,
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    their rock-hard mattress would feel like a bed of sweet marshmallows.
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    By the time I reached Seattle, 04 weeks had passed.
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    It took a lot more than planned
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    because I took a lot of detours at every interesting turn I found.
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    I followed my gut and kept my fingers crossed that I’d not run into any Freddy Kruger.
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    And there was no Freddy Kruger indeed.
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    Instead, I found a secluded lake tucked away in the forest,
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    an abandoned mall where I played one hell of a basketball match with myself,
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    and a piano left in the middle of the desert.
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    There’s something so sacred about finding hidden gems on the road.
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    Sacred and Surreal.
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    Like they were made for me, my own little corner of the world.
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    I promised myself that one day I would return.
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    I promised, then I marched on.
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    But the rest of the trip didn’t go as planned.
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    My bike broke down when I reached Beaver Creek.
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    "What now?" - I think to myself.
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    I thought back to my initial pledge:
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    “When the motorcycle gives up is when I will give up”,
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    and was going to book a flight home.
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    But that felt like the easy way out,
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    so I told myself to hell with it.
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    So I sold the bike and walked.
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    I walked until each step was heavier than the last.
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    Until my breaths thickened.
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    I walked until I couldn’t, then I hitchhiked.
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    The miles ticked away and I found myself among the salt of the earth,
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    from the elderly couple who offered me cans of canned beef for the road,
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    to the veteran who offered me free lodging for a couple of days
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    just because we all loved Chuck Berry.
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    When I told them about my plan, they all told me to go for it.
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    On June 28, I reached Alaska.
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    I burst with joy when I saw Alaska Range.
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    The beautiful, majestic Alaska Range with its’ snow-capped peaks and shimmering glaciers.
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    I stood there, in awe.
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    At that point, I had no strength left in me,
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    but I was filled with this warmth of never-ending freedom.
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    I spent the next few days at a hospital after losing over 20 pounds and dehydration.
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    Then spent a week staying at home just to recover.
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    Some asked me if the trip solved my problems.
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    It didn’t. Running away from them didn’t help.
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    My problems were still there, patiently waiting for me.
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    But I will say this,
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    one morning you’d wake up in a strange land thousands of miles away from home,
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    and you’d be a nobody.
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    No expectation, no judgment.
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    So instead of acting how people expect you to be,
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    you act how you really feel, with complete agency
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    and without feeling guilty for not trying hard enough.
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    That was what I felt, on my first morning in Alaska.
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    The problems I ran away from no longer felt as heavy as it was.
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    They just felt less overwhelming, less upsetting, and less scary.
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    And for the moment, it was enough to stay alive.
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    That’s what I’ll do.
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    To seek.
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    To strive.
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    To ride.
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    And not to yield.
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    I said it before and I said it again.
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    Life moves pretty fast.
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    If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you might miss it.
Title:
The Desire To Leave Everything Behind and Disappear
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
05:31

English subtitles

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