A friend asked me this question last week. We were discussing the slow drift toward post-pandemic life, which most will agree has appeared on the horizon. Or, at least, we can see birds in the sky and know that land must be out there somewhere. I pondered my friend's question. What is my dream? Bike touring through Central Asia? Hmmm, maybe? Visit New Zealand? Well, yes, that's something I want to do, but does it count? Winter expedition on Baffin Island? Honestly, that's probably off the table if it was ever on the table. Finish writing another book? I mean, yeah, but do I even believe that matters? So ... what is there?
It occurred to me that, if I'm being honest, I am not harboring a dream — any aspirational or tangible goal that I'm working toward — and this could well be the root of my current state of disquiet. That, along with the deepening existential crisis that comes from living in a culture where toxic individualism crashes into global problems, along with out-of-control greed, xenophobic hate, and of course, climate change. Every day there's something new to be really, really sad about. What does it even matter, whether or not this one individual has a frivolous "dream?"
Yes, I am again battling nihilism. Still, I'm also paradoxically "happier" than I was a month ago. At least my more acute anxiety has abated. I'm now on week three of a new asthma medication, and I no longer wake up feeling like something ran me over in my sleep. It's difficult to describe the jittery darkness I've been waking up to, as it invariably comes across as a description of simple fatigue that well-meaning friends think can be resolved with advice to "rest more." But that isn't it. The best analogy I can come up with is that I feel like I spent the night scrubbing floors with bleach. That instead of sleeping, I was engaged in a mind-numbing task while marinating in a fog of mildly toxic fumes. When I wake up, it seems as though an unremembered yet terrible thing happened, and it was bad enough to drain the joy from the world. I can see beauty, but I can't feel it. Through this filter, all is beige.
It's something like that. But I haven't felt that depth of morning malaise in a couple of weeks now. Although I can't be sure, I believe it's because I'm simply breathing better at night. My blood is getting more oxygen because my airways aren't so inflamed. Oxygen improves every part of my body, but especially my mind. Who knows? But it could be just that simple. If there's one thing I've learned from endurance racing, it's that correcting physical imbalances can go a long way toward improving perspective. It's like when the world comes crashing down on you, to the point where you are certain you can't go on, but then you manage to stave off an epic meltdown by eating a granola bar.
Now that I'm not spending most of my energy just trying to stay afloat, it seems more pressing to figure out where I should steer this ship. I've been drifting, and it's an uncomfortable place to be. I'm lacking control, and because of this, I'm more likely to find myself fruitlessly swirling in turbulent water rather than navigating past it. But where to go? I don't know.
March 16 marked five years since I finished the thousand-mile ride across Alaska. Even before I remembered this anniversary, I had started having vivid dreams about Nome. In one dream I was riding my bike through empty streets well after dark. When I saw the Facebook memory reminder the following morning, I thought, "maybe my subconscious is trying to tell me I want to ride a bike to Nome again" ... even though I promised myself I would step off the Iditarod treadmill after 2020. I had a similar dream the following night, except for in this dream I arrived at the house of a friend in Nome, anticipating a big dinner party with a bunch of mushers. I was thrilled about my invite to this party, although I woke up before I stepped in the door. I mentioned this dream to my therapist, and she speculated, "You probably miss being around other people." This, admittedly, makes sense — even introverts need to get out of their own heads once in a while.
Still, is the company of other humans enough? Is my daily gratitude journal highlighting the more mundane if nice aspects of life enough? Is watching the sunset from the same vantages every night enough? Are my little runs and rides with no daunting goal attached enough? Is trying and mostly failing to write about non-adventure subjects enough? Can I find meaning in post-pandemic life? Can I find purpose in tending my garden even as the world burns around me?
I really believed that focusing on a huge goal of walking to Nome in 2020, whether I achieved it or not, would help me stave off a mid-life crisis. But it looks like I'm going to have one anyway.
Amid a week of unconscious dreaming about Alaska and the person I used to be, I did enjoy waking life amid the wild inconsistencies of early spring. Early in the week, it was 60-plus degrees and muddy. Springtime in Colorado is either mud season or slush season. There's nothing else, and not much an outdoorsy person can do with most trail conditions besides wallow. I admittedly sort of love it ... it's hard and ridiculous and never uninteresting. And when I don't feel like dealing with hard and ridiculous, there's always Zwift.Instead, I did my usual mundane Wednesday errands, as this seemed like the last best chance to stock up on essentials before the Snowmaggedon crowds cleared the shelves. I tacked on the usual run to Green Mountain, which was snowy and blasted with biting wind. I wasn't well dressed for this wind ... I can't say what I was expecting. I had no gloves or jacket, which was dumb .. but it did make for a more adventurous experience during a routine run.
Still, it was a beautiful day, and I'd drug the bike all the way out here. I was at least going to reach the lake. Yeah, that's 2.5 miles from the trailhead. It took me an hour for the climb and nearly as much for the descent. I tacked on another five miles of coasting and then climbing the plowed part of the road just because five miles for a destination ride seemed unconscionable.
Here comes that wind.
We reached the summit ridge, covered in a challenging morass of breakable wind crust.
We ran into a duo of snowboarders making their way down through the wind-crusted burn. I was glad it was them and not me. Yikes.