
I learned about post-tension cables when we were having foundation troubles. Post-tensioning is a technique for strengthening foundations where cables are stretched under tension after the concrete has started to cure. This tension keeps the foundation from bending, because although concrete is great at holding up under compressive forces, it is not very resistant to deflection. So for some things, and people, I suppose, the forces of tension provide the means to stay in one place; to keep a foundation from cracking. But for some of us, the tension in our lives is moving--and directing us not only to bend, but to discover new places. I inherited this wanderlust, this overwhelming desire to roam the earth, from my father. My sister and brother have it too; it's too soon to tell about my own kids.
When I recognize the trait in others, I am drawn in--for better or for worse. At the New York State Museum, I was intrigued with the paintings of Rockwell Kent--even as I learned he was somewhat a cad. Married three times, and always with a mistress, Kent felt the need (and dare I say the right?) to experience life at it's fullest--sometimes at a great cost to those he loved. Kent's wanderlust took him to explore the great North--Alaska, Newfoundland, Greenland. And his paintings are beautiful and haunting, as he must have been. Oh how I wish I could go to those places. And although I feel at home in many different places (already my senses have become accustomed to Haiti: the hot breezes, smells of burning trash, sight of people spilling out of brightly colored tap taps), I feel most pulled by the northern latitudes--Minnesota, Canada, Norway...from the Land of 10,000 Lakes to the Land of the Midnight Sun.
So today, I abandon the safety of Albany for the unknown North. Up Interstate 87, to Lake George, the refuge of Georgia O'Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz, I travel--just to be witness to the same beauty that inspired them. I park the car by the lake and get out in the cold wind to take a few pictures. The sun is bright, and the sky and lake are brilliant blue while the leaves on the ground are a rusty brown. Several ferry boats wait silently at the water's edge for the summer when the tourists will be back again. And I wonder what it would be like to go out now, in the freezing wind, to see this winter empress in all her solitary glory. It would be magnificent. But the boats have been abandoned by their captains, and so I get back in my car to venture further up the road. The map suggests a route through the Addirondacks up to Indian Lake. As I enter State Highway 28, I have no idea that in 30 minutes I will leave these rusty leaves behind, for a winter wonderland in white, and gray, and blue. As I ascend into the mountains, my ears pop, alerting me to the altitude, as if the color change alone wouldn't be enough. I stop frequently, taking every opportunity to park and see the frozen lakes and crystal steams from different vantage points. And each time I get back in my car, I am just as eager to be on my way to see what waits over the horizon.
During the past 3 weeks I have been exposed to an overwhelming amount of beauty--from the music of David Wilcox, to the paintings of Maria Katzman and Rockwell Kent, to the majestic vistas of the Catskills and the Addirondacks. What more could my heart hope for? And yet, there is still that hole, waiting to be filled. That hole in my heart the Bob Franke describes so eloquently in his song, For Real:
Lucky my daughter got her mother's nose, and just a little of her father's eyes. And we've got just enough love that when the longing takes me, it takes me by surprise. And I remember that longing from my highway days when I never could give it a name. And it's lucky I discovered in the nick of time that the woman and the child aren't to blame-- for the hole in the middle of a pretty good life. I only face it cause it's here to stay. Not my father, nor my mother, nor my daughter, nor my lover, nor the highway made it go away. But now there's too much darkness in an endless night to be afraid of the way I feel. I'll be kind to my loved ones, not forever, but for real...Some say God is a lover, some say it's an endless void, and some say both, and some say She's angry, and some say just annoyed; but if God felt a hammer in the palm of His hand, then God knows the way we feel, and then love lasts forever, forever and For Real.So is there a purpose to this Wanderlust? Or is it just part of our human condition? Why do some of us have a need to be constantly moving, while others just want to put down roots? Indeed, some have a passion for owning the land that is equal to my passion for wandering. George MacDonald's chief in The Highlander's Last Song loved his land almost as much as his God. And when he was commanded to leave it for the sake of his people, it was as if he was tearing apart his own flesh. He knew every rock and stream and creature that lived upon his land, and he was their keeper. To abandon them to a new society who did not care for them was painful beyond belief.
Is there a purpose for this hole in my heart? David Wilcox suggests that The Lonely is our proof that there is more to follow....I guess we just have to be careful about what we are following.....and to remember that God is the Real Love we seek; not adventure, or romance, or fame, or fortune. And sometimes, I will be called to abandon my Wanderlust, to remain at home for the sake of those I love.
 


