On the valley that is not crossed
I just came back from a spiritual journey.
With that I mean I got an unexpected invitation to spend two days in a hunter's hut to go on small adventures through rocks, mountain pines, and (what I unfortunately realised too late) eatable blueberries towards almost invisible nets where we hoped to find tangled up birds. We would then spend 15 minutes untangling the birds and bring them back to the hut, where 15 further minutes would be spent placing very small tracking backpacks on the birds, and that would be the time to check the nets all over again.
My spiritual enlightenment did not come from the fact that a bird's foot apparently enters the fourth dimension when tangled in such fine nets, although I did have to find a place to write this information somewhere (the world has to know). It came through my working partner whp leads the project, has been on some wild-ass journeys in his youth, and has provided me with simply the best conversation to be had when one is 1500m above the nearest opportunity for a shower.
The region I live in is very traditional.
You have a valley surrouned by mountains, a cauldron if you will. You have early people settling in all around this valley, and with time a certain connection in form of prototypical roads begins. You have the strengthening of these roads within the valley and of absolutely nothing else beyond the valley, because there are tall-ass mountains and no one is going over that for a gallon of milk. You have said mountains taking your breath away every day, seizing this feeling of deep gratitude for your happenstace. You can go nowhere, but do you need to? The connections lead to communities and communities have their speech and dances and food and music and understanding of life that involves the mountains becoming as much an enclosure as their own sense of self.
"I have seen people proud of not taking a single step outside of the valley," my coworker says. I acknowledge with a judgemental "hmm", which seems to have been an acceptable reaction, since he responded with a nod. And I meant my "hmm", because I like travelling. In this day and age, why not? Why the fuck not fuck off two hours or maybe three? I can assure you that even one hour and some 50 km to the north or maybe east can reward one with amazing views, like the fluffy Oreo-cows.
LOOK AT THEM (© Russel Wills, unfortunately every time I see them I have to be an adult and control myself to avoid a car accident)
People who don't care about travelling are fucking weird until we start talking about being stared at on the streets. Or, rather, I did that. I talked about another experience of mine in another city, and how even if people here in the valley had this mountain Stockholm syndrome, at least they didn't stare. What do you mean by stare? I can't describe it. It's not like people stopped and looked at me while I went about my routine, but there were signals. A side-glance. A different way of speaking. An aura. I can't put my finger on it. When people smile at me here, I see it's genuine. Maybe because they think I'll go away quickly and am not here to join their little clique forever. In the other place it was fake. They had to put up with people like me, but it didn't mean they accepted their condition.
This isn't the post for that. Some other time maybe.
"You look like another ethnicity," said my coworker when I narrated that. And... YES. I don't look another one, I am another one. But, and that's when I had discourse problems. But...
I can't say I don't want to look like it. That's not it. I don't want to Michael Jackson my way into germanic acceptance. I don't want to not look the way I look. I just don't want this to be the first thing people use to decide whether I belong.
Fuck, this will be a long post. Trust me, it's still about crossing the valley.
The conversation experienced some bumps on the road when I voiced that opinion. I am not, nor have I ever been, from here. This can be seen as the definition of not belonging. There was palpable confusion as to why the gal who does not belong complain about not being seen as belonging.
For me, personally, I have never 100% felt like the place I came from. And then I came to this country, and every glance on the streets kept telling me that I still haven't quite hit the spot.
This post is still about crossing the valley.
Ravens experience two or three years in which they, in their juvenile state, just vagabond around flying wherever they want, maybe reaching some 300 km in a single day, and one day they successfully breed and then they stay in their breeding area forever.
We have talked about ravens during our descent from the hut. It's interesting how these birds settle down in a similar way humans do. When my coworker was doing his master's, he disappeared in Brazil for three months travelling with street vendors until he reached a vilage without internet or electricity. He got so close to these people to the point that he returned two times in the following years, bringing gifts and nurturing the serious thought that he could live there forever.
When one knows who they are, not much more than an isolated forest vilage or a valley encased in mountains is needed. Hell, even the cows are enough. Even if they don't have Oreo patterns.
They are very fucking cute tbh, I love them
When you find your purpose as the one crow who I guess found a mate in the middle of Yellowstone, you know who you are, and you are definitely not the crow who flies to Canada every breeding season.
When you find people in the middle of the Amazon who genuinely accept you regardless of the colour of your eyes or skin or speech capabilities, it is pretty fucking enticing to just stay with them, until you realise you need to finish your education on the other side of the ocean, end up finding a nice gal, having a kid, and researching nutcrackers with your quite literally wild youth becoming only a very fond memory you can sometimes talk about when civilisation and associated plumbing are far enough away.
When one is born in a valley where all history and culture is so deeply ingrained, belonging is born with you. There is no search. You know who you are. You know everything and everyone you need. Why do you need to cross the valley?
I know I will have to. I crossed an ocean, and now these mountains. And I will get out of their grasp again, because I am not theirs. When I find my place, perhaps I will be the one to be proud of the chains that tie me to it. Because I can bet a great deal of spiritual peace comes with it.
Meanwhile, I will enjoy my road and my cows and the other side of the mountain.