If you’ve read the title that means you’re already familiar with my favorite word in the English language: ADVENTURE. Yes, it’s a word that’s often overused and seen by many as a cliché, but for me it’ll always have an underlying electricity to it; I’m drawn to it; it pops out at me whenever I see it. Many of my favorite stories in film and literature involve characters shaking off the banality of life and embracing adventure, whether it be Indiana Jones hopping on a Pan Am flight for Nepal to begin his search for the Lost Ark, Sherlock Holmes and John Watson speeding through the streets of London towards a crime scene in a single horse brougham carriage, or Dumas’s musketeers galloping on horseback all over France to save the kingdom. The anticipation of adventure, of unknown and potentially limitless possibilities is something that has never failed to excite me in narrative, but there was a time when I doubted that I would ever actually experience it in my life. Then came my thirties.
"It's not the years...It's the mileage." |
Though I’m not getting into a brougham or a biplane, I still experience that palpable excitement of the “and off we go'' stage every time I shift my vehicle into gear at 3:15am to head out into nature and explore a wild trout stream. The long drive in the dark on nearly empty highways only serves to build on the sense of an unknown outcome, which is at the heart of every adventure. There’s no way to know for sure what’s waiting out there on the water and while the worst part of the day may be losing a decent fish or not netting anything at all, it could also be a wildlife encounter or other mishap that I won’t walk away from; on the other hand the best part of the day could be landing a handful or solid trout or it could be fighting and landing the one I’ll vividly remember forever. The absence of guarantees in fly fishing might be off-putting for some, but it’s inextricable from the basic idea of an adventure; surety of success would destroy the experience.
"That belongs in a (stream)!" |
No comments:
Post a Comment