Insight from R.E.M.

True story.   This song came on the radio while stuck in LA traffic after dropping our oldest off at college.  In heavy air, it clicked with both my husband and me right away, and I pulled up the video on YouTube to explain to our daughter.  Ironically, it provided us all with a much-needed laugh.   

Although tempted, I did not get out of the car and start walking on the freeway.
 
 

Keep Hope Alive

It always amuses me when a song that has no meaning to me jumps in to tell me something.  And I usually listen.  I mean, if a totally random song to which I have no emotional attachment shows up out of nowhere at the perfect time, there has to be a reason.  Right?

Anyway, yesterday I was on the campus of my alma mater, the University of Washington, to hear a Political Science faculty panel discussion about next week’s midterm elections.  I took the light rail from my office downtown, hopped off at Husky Stadium, and walked up Rainier Vista to campus.  On a clear day, true to its name, Rainier Vista provides an unobstructed view of the mountain, framed by the Gothic architecture of campus, with Drumheller Fountain lying at its base.  It’s beautiful.  Yesterday was cloudy though, giving no hint of the mountain lying behind the clouds.   Seemed more fitting, somehow.  The past few days have been strange.

I was wearing headphones, but my playlist had been exhausted, and random songs began to appear from, I assume, some sort of Spotify channel.  My phone was in my pocket, and I was too indifferent to change the music.  I wasn’t really concentrating on it anyway.   Instead, I was thinking about my son, and how he is starting to look at colleges.  How I hope that he will find a place where he is as happy as I was during my time at UW.   How he will be in college, and able to vote in the 2020 election, and that I hope the political climate will be better than it is now.  I remembered seeing Jesse Jackson speak on campus, in what must have been the fall of my freshman year, right on Rainier Vista where I was now walking.

One of the things I always love about being on campus is that it is a touchstone — a reminder of my younger self.  I mean, music always does that anyway (“Express Yourself, 2012 Style”).   Of course, back then, it was hard to picture that I would ever be as old as I am now, but here we are.

My mind clicked back to the music for a second, in time to hear that Soul Asylum’s “Runaway Train” was playing.  Just in time to catch the line:  “How on earth did I get so jaded/Life’s mystery seems so faded”.

I sat with that one for a moment.  I have been in my head a lot lately.    And while I wouldn’t necessarily describe myself as jaded, I do have my moments.  I can always use a reminder to focus on the good things which are always there, even if they are momentarily obscured.  Just like Mount Rainier, behind those darn clouds.

Free (Fallin’) Association

Early morning in the car, traveling to Vancouver for a work obligation.   Can’t say that I mind the solitude of a three-hour drive, and the space that it provides.

I toggle through the radio stations until something sticks: Tom Petty, “Free Fallin”. And then comes the same memory that it always conjures up for me: road trip to an early 90’s Apple Cup in Pullman, in a rented RV. Most of us are busy with keg cups and Tom Petty in the back of the RV, while one lonely friend has drawn the unenviable task of driving our sorry drunk asses across the state. In the snow. (Also musically relevant to that trip: “Radar Love”). In all fairness, however, there were two Apple Cup road trips, and the two have mostly merged in my brain as one memory, with the exception of the game outcomes.

Thankful that I am not in a beer-soaked RV on this morning, these things now come to mind:

  1. I can’t believe there was a rental company who would rent an RV to a bunch of kids in their early 20’s;
  2. Thank you Karl, for driving, which had to have sucked almost as much as whatever damage deposit you probably didn’t get back;
  3. Damn, I really should have gone to see Tom Petty in concert at some point before it was too late.