…What country I was in. Then I realized I couldn’t remember what continent I was on. Then came the largest shock. I couldn’t remember who I was. Obviously figuring out where I was would be easier than who I was so I started on that. I was on a train. The body knew that before Eye even awoke. The motion the feeling of a moving train shimying and gently turning on its rails across the surface of the earth was unmistakable. So… I’m not on a maglev train or even a bullet train like in Japan. I opened my eyes. This wasn’t a we can’t insure you if you insist on travelling by that vehicle train in India. Furnishings looked modern but slightly worn. Other passengers were mostly white fairly well dressed and they obviously hadn’t been sleeping on the train. So… This was either england, eastern europe or north america. Signs were in english. England or America. Canadian signs would have had english and french. Slowly this scene became more familiar to me. This was an Amtrak train. Business class. All the signs were there. I figured out how to open the curtain and looked out at the country side sliding by. West Coast. Oregon or California. I was taking a day run off of one of the west coast hubs to a specific city. I’d just travelled across the continent by train. That explained how I felt and why no one else needed to sleep. Means that wherever I’m stopping here is likely the destination of travel not another time to make another connection.
Now came the stickier problem. Who am I? How will I know where I’m supposed to get off. I did my best impression of a bleary eyed traveller and scanned the other travellers for someone who would make eye contact. Someone did and I asked, “uh, where is this train heading?” as I rubbed my eyes.
He gave me one of those dirty you should already know looks before answering, “San Fran.”
Ah, SF the city of the future. Powerful node. Must be either important business I’m embarked on or important fun.
“Thanks,” I replied simulating sheepish embarassment at my confusion. Location-locked people have such a solid and certain experience of reality and they never really appreciate the fundamental nearly schizophrenic confusion of the nomads. You see people are defined by their habits. The sedentary wake up in the same place, in the same way, get up eat the same foods in the same places in the same way, go to work where their time is defined by others doing tasks defined by others. Go home in the same way talk to the same people fuck the same people in the same way. Go to the same bed. Sleep in the same way and wak up in the same place. The loading stabilization of a “normal” life is so solid that people actually think they have a stable self. and worse they think that everyone has a stable self. and that anyone who doesn’t is crazy.
They have no idea how much work they are unwittingly doing to maintain the illusion of a proper self. Anyone who isn’t living the way they are… is immediatly at a disadvantage to holding onto their self. Not that I think losing your self is a disadvantage. Just that its very easy to do as a nomad. In general all nomads are insane by sedentary standards. Everyday I wake up in a different place, eat in different foods, see different people, hear different languages, smell different atmospheres, live by different clocks, define my tasks in relation to new stimulus. The stability of the sedentary self is defined by the stability of their stimulus. The instability of the nomad self system is defined by the instability of our stimulus. We have a minimal framework of similarity of practice and tools that we carry with us. Anything that we can’t carry with us must be acquired as needed in whatever space we find ourselves. That minimal stability leads to a much smaller stable structure of selfness. Its ultimately not a whole self but a structure for organizing different modes of self, modes of awareness that arise in relation to our environment and our needs.
The sedentary are defined by habits. Nomads have to define themselves by ritual. The main self-modes I seem to have are Travelling, Staying, Finding, Exploring, Allying, Warring, Enjoying, Escaping, Maintaining, Centering, Visioning, Negotiating, Investing, Divesting, Toiling and Loving. However it would be a mistake to think I am a multiple personality with sixteen personalities. These are attitudes that I can approach the environment with depending on what I need or want to do. In moving out like this I face different spaces every time and so an unique indentity is expressed in each collision between my experience and attitude and the environment that presents itself to me. These aren’t selves this is a framework for generating a new self in every moment.
So waking up on a train and being unsure where and who I am isn’t new to me. It’s how I wake up on a train. It’s how I wake up anywhere. Centering begins as I look for cues from my environment and my memory to explain where I am and what I am doing. To be honest telling you that I wasn’t sure of who I was was a bit of a trick, an excuse to explain this to you. I’m not overly concerned with who I am. I’m much more interested in what I am doing. and What my intention for this doing is.
I know where I am now. So what am I doing? Why am I on a train going to SF?
The body feels healthy. I’m fully dressed practical comfortable clothes, shoes under the seat in front of me along with a little man-purse. Pocket stuff is in the seat pouch in front of me. Clearly I had decided to catch a nap.
I pull my seat into a more upright position. Put my cardcase/wallet and a set of keys in my front right hand pants pocket where they join some bills and loose change american currency. Pens, cell phone (at&t network pay as you go sony ericson, I hate sony ericsons how come I keep buying them?), comb, cheap bic lighter go in my front lefthand pants pocket. Cigarettes (hmm I wonder how much I smoke these days, I take a breath in and out, doesn’t feel like my lungs are in too bad of shape, I must be a light puffer of late) and gum go in my front lower jacket pockets, left and right respectively. Three by Five black moleskine notebook (looks in rough shape bookmark ribbon two thirds into the book) and pocket edition of O Sensei’s Art of Peace go into my left and right inside jacket pockets respectively. Shoes get slipped on. Open the man-purse, couple of sharpies, condoms, powercords, in one pocket, micro-laptop and The Portable Dante in another, passport and tickets in another, and in the last one is bare essential toiletries.
A proper mini bag with lots of pockets that can store a large amount in a relatively small space is essential. This bag was a sundog which had the added advantages of being durable and cheap. To some people your animals are your familiars, to others their technology are their familiars. For a nomad its their luggage. Your luggage is the most important factor in how much you can carry and how organized you can be about it. Acquire the absolutely best you can manage, name them and treat them well. You want them to be light weight, high durability, easy to carry a variety of different ways, carry a ridiculous amount of stuff in a very compact way and have lots of different compartments so that you can organize them. The sundog can be carried as a fanny pack, a shoulder bag or as a back pack (if you don’t mind some strange looks for wearing it diagonally).
Quick look through the passport and ticket information revealed that my name was Alexander Gunn (I’m going to go by Lex for now), that I’d been in Upstate New York and travelled across country amtrak coach (explains why I was so tired and fuzzy headed, forced polyphasic sleep will do that to you), My destination was SF, no hotel reservation so I was staying with someone, no information on where was handy, I was in SF for two weeks before I’d be flying to Amsterdam, where I’d be going from there I had no idea but usually I’d use amsterdam as a hub (although it was possible that I was ACTUALLY staying in amsterdam, I’m sure I’ll figure that out long before I need to). Zipped up my bag again. and prepared to get up.
Caught the other traveller’s eyes again, “Bout how long before we get to SF?”
He was happier to answer this question, this was more normal, “About an Hour.”
“Thanks,” I smiled.
Found my way to the water closet (that is actually what they call them on amtrak, I’m not being pretentious) for a little maintainance. Went to the bathroom. Rinced my hands. Got out my Dr. Bonner’s 18 in 1 miracle soap. Hung up my coat and shirt. Wet a papertowel and added a little bit and used it to wash my face, neck, chest and underarms, in that order. Wet another papertowel to rince and used a dry one to dry. Looked in the mirror and discovered that what I thought was stubble was actually… a fairly decent beard. I like the look so I just shaved my neck area. Brushed my teeth and then put everything away.
“So my name is Lex Gunn, I’m going to be in SF for two weeks before I go to Europe. I’m still not sure why I’m in town or where I’m staying,” I say to my reflection. Then I leave the WC.
Finding the Bistro car easily I get in the short line up and decide that I’m not that hungry. I order a coffee and a pack of peanuts and pour myself one of some free water. I set myself with a corner seat gives me a good view of the anyone in the bistro car and out one of the windows. Its a nice looking day. Sun poking through the grey clouds. It has rained rather than it’s going to rain. Pull out the moleskine first. Taking off the band I flip from the back until I find the most recent contact information. Sure enough there are two for SF. One has name, address, and phone number and the note, “Emperor Norton’s Heir.” The other is just a name and a number. Most likely I planned to stay with The first one. I program both numbers into my phone. Flip to the ribbon bookmark and the content section of the notebook. The notes are about the latest interation of a global artists network that I’m organizing and recruiting for. Its half notes on practicality half phrases for selling the concept. Now I know why I’m going to town. Or at least one of the reasons. It never does to have too few reasons.
I dialled. “Hi, Chela… It’s Lexx uh Lexx Gunn. Yeah, that guy. Yeah. Oh about an hour. So um dumb question maybe but am I staying with you? Yeah, okay, yeah. Two weeks. good. Alright, see you in about an hour then. Right. Ciao for Now.”
The serious business done, I leaned back and enjoyed the rest of the journey to SF.
December 1st, 2008 at 4:28 am
Nice post u have here
Added to my RSS reader