That
cold got me thinking while I drove home after dropping Grace off at doggy day
care. My mind returned to the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia and their
constant presence at the edge of the Hollins University campus. It journeyed
back over a year to the expanse of road and land around me as I drove away from
Charlotte, North Carolina. All the while in the present, I drove down a
two-lane road with frost-covered houses and trees crowding the gutter on either
side of me.
I’ve
always been a touch claustrophobic while in crowds. But I didn’t realize the
nervousness and tension applied to the physical world around me until I stood
at the top of a hill on campus and looked at the buildings below, the mountains
encircling me, and the wide open sky above.
I miss that sense of space.
Even
now as I type this entry and look out my window my view is crowded by the
leafless trees in the swamp across the street. And the trees’ sharp branches
scratch the sky, blocking any hope of seeing the openness I came to love in
Virginia.
I
admire the charm of New England’s old homes and the diversity in their architecture,
but the houses sit close together on small plots of land. A few sit back away
from the road, at the end of long, winding driveways which lead into the woods.
But the streets I drive through my hometown and the surrounding ones still feel
small.
At
least once a week, I think about packing up the car and the dog. I’d drive west
along I-84 until I hit Scranton, Pennsylvania and then pick up I-81 for a ride all
the way down through southwest Virginia. Then branch off that south of
Blacksburg, near Wytheville, onto I-77 and head straight for Charlotte.
It
wouldn’t take the whole drive south to ease the tension hovering in my muscles
and bones. There’s a section of 81 in Pennsylvania where the mountains on one
side of the highway give way and reveal the valley below. The mountains
surround the town in the valley much like the sides of a bowl around the base.
And the blue sky seems to stretch above and around the valley for miles.
Whenever
I drove this stretch of highway on my way to or from school, calm resonated
outward from the deepest part of my chest. I would feel at peace.
But the
promise of the south and its expanse of space aren’t enough to uproot me right
now. Responsibility always breaks that daydream. My savings account isn’t exactly
full right now and what about a job to bring money in? I’ve had a hard enough time
finding part time work here in Massachusetts, and even that isn’t coming close
to paying my loan payments and for Grace.
Responsibility
also reminds me about my plan to attend dog trainer school at National K-9 in
Ohio. I know that I’ll love being a dog trainer and that it’s a career I can
take wherever I want to live. I’m budgeting just over $10,000 for tuition,
housing, and expenses. I already have a quarter of the money, but saving is
slow going. I can only afford to put a few hundred away toward it a month. Being
me, I did the math and figured out that it’ll take me a couple years to get
there. I also have to save for a German Shepherd Dog to take with me and train
while there; well-bred shepherds aren’t cheap.
I’m
impatient. I also feel guilty about admitting to being impatient. I hear news
stories every day about the unemployment rate in the country, and I think that
I should be grateful to have two part time jobs. I should be thankful that I’m
getting around thirty hours a week between the two jobs. Heck, I’ve even heard
that I shouldn’t get on my employers’ bad sides by cutting hours one place to
work at the other because of the flailing job market.
I’m done
feeling guilty. I shouldn’t have to feel bad for being dissatisfied with my
jobs because I’m not making enough money to support myself. I shouldn’t have to
put a smile on my face when I’m told for the twentieth time that I’m way
overqualified for the position I applied for or the job I have.
I’m
tired of waiting in cold, claustrophobic Massachusetts. I want warm weather, my
own apartment with Grace, and a job that’ll actually pay my bills. But what I
want most of all, with every fiber inside of me, is the calmness I felt when I
stood at the top of the Hollins campus and looked out at the mountains and the
open sky. I want to feel free.
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