June 19, 2017

I kept seeing those days getting marked off on the calendar and June 19th was inching closer. With each giant X Henry drew, my anxiety and excitement grew.  Was I crazy? I swung between “this is a horrible idea” to “this will be amazing” until the day finally came and the car was packed. We left on a Monday morning not to return for six whole weeks. That is a long time away without the comforts and safety of HOME and my partner. Once you get on the road though, something inside you just changes.

Our first week on the road took us from Oregon to Wyoming with stops in Boise, Craters of the Moon NP, Arco, Yellowstone NP, Grand Tetons NP, Dubois, and Rock Springs.

I will say more about these beautiful spaces we passed through another time. This bit is about the places my mind passed through. Anger. Resentment. Love. Jealousy. Joy. Disappointment. From the first day I started counting the time and miles until I saw my Dad. 16 days. 2500 miles.

I grew up with two broken people as parents. Neither one of them healed or even on a path to figure it out. After my parents spilt when I was seven, my mom took first place for most disappointing parent. I kept her there on that pedestal until my dad passed. She bore most of my anger and bitterness and caused so much hurt that I just never took her down. She has her own story for another time. This trip is how I started to see that my dad was broken too. I never thought he was perfect, but I had cooked up quite the nice and neat story in my head and made him the hero. I had erased memory and altered history to make it so. Because honestly I had to in order to survive. To live through the really hard parts of my mom and her disease.

Week one of this trip was filled with an onslaught of conflicting feelings and memories. I started to see cracks in the story. Lots of “holy shit” mumbled under my breath. Things happen when you become a parent. You start comparing your parenting to that of your childhood. You start reliving memory. You often have to reparent a very under cared for part of yourself in order to properly parent your own child. I saw more of the ways that my dad was not the character I wrote him as. I also had to start preparing for the very real in person goodbye that would happen soon.

This is the real stuff of life. We are not all pretty pictures in scenic places. There is a real life that happens behind the scenery. We are anxious parents vigilantly keeping our kid safe and free at the same time. We are daughters grieving what we thought we had. We are adventurers who would sometimes rather be home. Tucked away.

This first week, I saw my son bloom. Seeing the great wide open through his eyes broke me clean through. I knew then that I would never stop breaking for him. I would never stop healing either. Not until the work was done. This long drive to say goodbye was a big first step.

Every warm ray of sunshine and inhale of sweetgrass is etched in my mind, from Portland to Rock Springs. Favorite moment of that week. Sitting in some grass on the sideline at the local Friday night rodeo in Dubois, WY. Listening to the sounds of strangers and hearing my kid laugh at the craziness of it all.

There and back again.

Okay, I have been dreaming. I mean big dreaming. For a long time. I love planning road trips. Especially long and challenging ones. This little bit of sand idea in my head has been kicking around for years and has finally formed a pearl. This summer I am going on a road trip with my six-year-old boy for six weeks. We are headed to my native Texas and back. Taking our time to explore.

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Along the way we will see fifteen national parks/monuments. On the list are Craters of the Moon, Yellowstone, Grand Teton, Dinosaurland NM, Rocky Mountain, Capulin Volcano NM, Big Bend, Guadalupe Mountains, Carlsbad Caverns, White Sands, Saguaro, Joshua Tree, Yosemite, Lassen Volcanic, and Crater Lake.

I could not be more excited to get on the road with my boy. I have tried to instill in him a love for adventure since he was very little. In part dreaming of trips like these and also in the hopes that it creates in him a love of nature and the beautiful world we live in.

Years ago, ten to be exact, B and I went on a month-long road trip that started this blog. One thing that I loved about that trip was all the people from different places we met and saw along the way. Sometimes being in one place too long you start to feel unraveled from the tapestry of the world. You ask how am I really connected to those far away? Meeting people on the road weaves you back in and you start to see the whole picture again. You hear their story and what brought them and you to this same point in time. I cannot wait for Henry to meet new people and see old friends and family.

B and I are so lucky to have a jobs that allow us to follow our dreams.  I can do my work on the road while he gigs on the weekends. The big plan for B is to finish another album while I am away this summer. He will have a quiet house to make noise in with no interruptions.  Midway through the trip he will fly to meet us in Austin. We will show Henry where we lived and feel in love and were married.  In truth, the roots of where he comes from. These trips are never without their challenges. There will be days where both of us are done and homesick. But I hope to remain focused on the positive and rich experience of it in the end.