Das Abenteuer Beginnt!

Unser Mietwagen für einen einwochlichen Road Trip

Mein Mann und ich haben für schon einigen Jahren uns faszinieren mit die #vanlife. Wir haben beiden wie Studenten gedacht dass vielleicht es ist besser einen Van zu kaufen um die Miete zu vermieden. Später als wir uns zuerst kennen gelernt hat, wir waren in einer Gemeinschaft von Outdoor-Leute, von denn viele in Vans lebten, wenn sie nicht in Zeiten entlang die große Wanderwegen lebten.

Im Moment lebe ich in meiner Wohnung mit fließendem Wasser zu bequem, um davonzulaufen und lebe Vollzeit in einen Mietwagen. Aber eine Woche für Urlaub immer noch hört auch gut!

Ich werde schnell aufgeregt, also habe ich natürlich viel zu viele Orte ausgewählt, um sie alle in einer Woche zu sehen.

Es gibt zu viel! Ich will alle diese Orte sehen, also ich muss später rückführen!

Unser erste Tag war nur ein Tag zu fahren. Wir könnte nicht vor 14:00 beginnen weil das war wann wir könnten die Mietwagen nehmen. Es war eine schöne Fahrt nach der Harz. Heute Abend schlafen wir in die Berge!

Drei Flüge Gebucht, Zwei Flüge Erwischt

Die erste war am 28. Juli 2019. Ich hatte zehn Monate lang eine Fernbeziehung geführt, aber endlich konnten wir zusammenleben. Oder das dachte ich zumindest. Leider ist das Visumverfahren sehr verwirrend.

Die zweite war für 28. März 2020, aber die Grenzen war schnell geschlossen in die Wochen und Tagen vor diese verdammt Flug. Die Corona-Pandemie hatte uns alle aufgehalten, und ich saß auf der Couch einer Cousine fest. Wäre ich mit einem deutschen Mann verheiratet, hätte ich auch während der strengen Korona-Sperre das Recht gehabt, nach Deutschland zu reisen. Aber mein Mann und ich war in März 2020 noch nicht mein Mann. In einer anderen Situation hätten wir vielleicht gar nicht geheiratet. Für uns das Ergebnis von Besitz wie passt mit die Institution sie heißt Heirat ist total gegen unser Philosophie.

Aber wenn man so etwas Merkwürdiges wie eine Pandemie erlebt, muss man praktischere Wege gehen, und so haben wir eine kleine Hochzeit geplant.

Aber wie kann man heiraten, wenn jedes Land die Einreise aus dem Land der anderen Person verboten hat? Die meiste Zeit des Jahres 2020 waren wir auf beiden Seiten des Atlantiks gestrandet, getrennt durch viele Kilometer, Gesetze und eine globale Krise.

Schließlich änderten sich die Regeln gerade so weit, dass ich nach Deutschland fliegen konnte.

Dieser dritte Flug startete am 8. Dezember 2020 von Seattle aus. Ich musste die meisten meiner Sachen verkaufen oder verschenken, und als alles andere in einem Koffer und einem Rucksack war, fuhr ich von dem kleinen Dorf weg, in dem ich 28 Jahre zuvor meine ersten Schritte gemacht hatte.

Es dauert mindestens sieben Stunden, um von Myrtle Point nach Seattle zu fahren, und ich bin ganz allein durch die dunkle Dezembernacht gefahren.

Ich war schon müde, als ich ins Flugzeug stieg, weil ich nach meiner Ankunft in Seattle so wenig auf dem Sofa von meine Freundin geschlafen hatte.

Sie fuhr mich zum Flughafen, und neun Stunden später war ich endlich wieder in Deutschland.

How To: Tenants Unions and Rent Strikes

I know a lot of my friends and colleagues are hard hit financially, and I want to help in any way I can. I started a letter writing campaign to ask nicely for what we need, but we might have to just take it. So I sat down and had a good (virtual) conversation with Anthony Bencivengo who has tenant organizing experience as a volunteer for Portland Tenants United.

First of all, this all applies best to an apartment building. If you know your neighbors and are friendly with them you’re off to a good start, but if not there’s still work you can do to build the trust necessary for a rent strike or for asking for what you need. We are all going through the same collective trauma, so it might be the best time to build this solidarity and sense of community with your fellow tenants.

Getting in Contact

In these times of social distancing, the best approach is probably to print out some flyers to leave on your neighbors’ doors. Knock and back up 6 feet, talk if you can, let them read the flyer later if they don’t answer the door (and I don’t blame them if they don’t – we don’t answer the door at my place now anymore).

What should your flyer say? Lets stick with something more neutral for now like tenants rights. I can help you design a flyer, and I can help you assemble a fact sheet to help educate yourself and your community members on your legal rights. Include your phone number or email and a call to action so you can move on to the next step.

The Meeting

It will have to be virtual obviously, but try to organize a conference call or similar with everybody who’s interested.

That meeting is where you start discussing what you all want to do together – hopefully start a tenant union in the building, and start discussing what changes the union wants to fight for. As well as planning for how to get more of the other tenants involved.

That could lead to a rent strike, or a more modest organizing campaign around specific demands. Wherever it goes should originate organically from the tenants.

 

 

Open Letter to Our Lawmakers

It is heartless and cruel to charge rent or mortgage during a pandemic when so many of us cannot work for the sake of public safety.

I wrote this with my own situation in mind, but please make changes to the following letter based on your personal circumstances, and get involved in your local tenant unions. We’re asking nicely first, but if we don’t get what we need, we will have to take it.

Dear [your senator, representative, mayor, governor, etc.]

I am now out of a job due to COVID-19, as are many servers, cooks, bartenders, hosts, runners, bussers, and many others who work in other service oriented jobs. Unemployment isn’t enough, especially for those of us who earn a large percentage of our income via tips. I’m asking for you to support a Universal Basic Income for all adults in this country.

Some small local measures have been taken to protect us from eviction right now, but we need more. Nobody should be evicted either during or immediately after this crisis, so I’m asking for a freeze on all rent and mortgage payments during the month of April, and for as long as this crisis is preventing so many of us from working.

Most of all, we need universal healthcare free at point of service. People have been doing the right and responsible thing and trying to get tested for this virus, then denied tests and billed thousands of dollars for their trouble. As long as a doctor’s office is synonymous with financial ruin for so many of us, this virus can and will run rampant.

I know there will be objections to these policies, but if we can afford to pump trillions into the stock market just for it to vanish in a puff of smoke, can’t we afford to take care of our people? I care about my community. I hope that you do too, because if not why did we vote for you?

Please help.

Sincerely,

[Your Name Here]

A Farewell to Douchebros

*content warning: I will be quoting words that were yelled at me, including the expletives*

“Fuck is that- it is! Oh fuck no! McGuyver, you little bitch! Spreading fucking lies dragging my name through the mud. I never did shit to you!”

All this was yelled at me by someone who I’m already completely terrified of, as he walked menacingly towards me. I had been on my way to my car, which was in between the two of us, but now he was too close, I couldn’t escape that way.

Fight or flight took over. I turned and sprinted back to the brewery across the street where my friends were hanging out. Once I got there I had the energy only to pant out that Rebel was here, and yes, he had seen me alright. I didn’t know if he was following, but I had a hunch he was. Luckily he had an armload of packages so he couldn’t run after me quite so quickly.

My friend Cricket agreed to walk with me back to my car, even as I took what seemed to be a completely irrational roundabout way to avoid the douchebro. Despite my obvious terror upon seeing this man, he insisted on detouring from his route to come shout at me. Would he have done more? I can’t say for certain, so I’m profoundly grateful to Cricket for standing on the other side of a tin shed and slowing him down just a little bit with her pleas for him to just leave me the heck alone.

He didn’t listen to her, but he was distracted just long enough for me to sprint away again and get back in my car. As I drove away I stopped briefly to thank Cricket. I saw douchebro off in the distance running towards me, but I have a car and he doesn’t, so I successfully escaped. No harm came to me aside from a small amount of terror as he chased me around Snoqualmie Pass.

My worst day on trail was because of the douchebro, and now I’m glad to be off trail because it means he can never reach me again. As I drove down I-90 back into Seattle I knew I’d never see him again, so despite the terror of this little incident, I felt calmer than I ever did before after seeing this guy on trail.

A Car Called Trail Magic

My good little Subaru Outback has now made the trip from Leavenworth to Skykomish and back four times, as I play the part of Trail Angel for my friends coming through Steven’s Pass right now.

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Trail Magic is the gift that just keeps on giving. 

I’m fairly certain I need to replace the spark plugs, and driving up the steeply graded road to Steven’s Pass leads to some misfires if I don’t keep my RPMs in the exact right place, but I think I’ve mastered the drive at this point: no misfires at all on the last run. 
“Shoutout to you for having a car McGuyver!”

So said my friend Trail Quail yesterday afternoon. She got super lucky because I’d just driven our friend LOL from Leavenworth back up to Steven’s Pass and happened to be at the trailhead right when she rolled off trail. She had a package to pickup down in Skykomish (as did I), so we drove down there, and after looking around the town briefly she realized that really she’d rather be in Leavenworth, so off we rolled on an impromptu road trip.

Above: Trail Quail and McGuyver (me) at some live music at the Yodelin in Leavenworth, Washington

I didn’t expect to sleep in Leavenworth last night, (or the night before) but I have to admit I’ve enjoyed sharing hotel rooms with my friends. Last night with Quail felt just like a good ole fashioned sleepover, complete with laying in bed talking far too late into the night.

Keep the Magic Flowing

Here’s where I give a shoutout to all my patrons! Right now my car Trail Magic is the roof over my head and my way of paying forward all the amazing acts of kindness that kept me on the trail as long as I was. I consider my $80/month insurance payment to be my rent for now, and it’s thanks to everyone supporting me at Patreon.com/Gracetopher that I know for sure that is paid.

Thank you so much to every single person who’s helped me make it this far.

On to Canada

I’m not getting to Manning Park, British Columbia in the same way that I pictured, but I’m getting there nonetheless. And that is only thanks to Trail Magic, the kindness and generosity of many, and a good deal of luck. I’m so grateful to everyone and everything that’s helped me make it here.

Root Canal Day

I write you from the chair at the endodontist’s office where I will shortly be on the receiving end of a drill to the face. My mouth is already half numb. Once upon a time I still thought I’d be getting back on trail quickly enough, I was distraught to find I had not only my ankle but also a tooth to wait on. Now I know the ankle isn’t going to be ready to hike this year, so I guess I’m glad I’m getting the dental procedure taken care of before my insurance runs out.

Once I’m recovered from this, I’m taking off in a car I acquired this morning and heading to Washington to do trail magic.

English Teaching: the Logistics

So how does one go about teaching English in a foreign country? Well, like any job one would do in a foreign country, I will have to fill out some paperwork, get a visa etc. My German is not, and likely will not be good enough to easily figure that out on my own, but luckily I’ll have Enterprise to help me out.

English Teaching Specifics

There’s a certification to get called TEFL – Teaching English as a Foreign Language. Not every position strictly requires a TEFL. The one job I’ve looked closest at so far does not require the certification for example, though I’m sure my application would be a bit stronger if I do go through the official motions. The downside? Well first of all, there’s no one official recognized accreditation for those who teach TEFL certification classes, so I have to make sure I pick the right one. Other downside? The cost. A quick google search shows me many courses I could take if I had a thousand dollars or more to spend, which I don’t right this second.

Honestly I’m kind of tempted to skip the TEFL for now. I did study language pedagogy in college after all, and if I can get a job teaching English online here and now then I can brush up my skills and strengthen my CV without spending a bunch of money upfront that I might not necessarily even have to be spending.

I’ve  sent an email to the professor I studied applied linguistics with back in college, and I hope to sit down and talk through these plans with him. He was my advisor for all my language teaching internships back in college, so I trust his advice, plus I’m hoping he’ll be a reference for me. Bonus: he’s a German professor in addition to applied linguistics, so if a German company does contact him, he’ll be the one and only one of my references who can communicate with them in the German language.

New Challenges

The most difficult thing I’ve had to do all summer was to turn around and hike south to Tuolomne Meadows. It was painful of course, but that’s not what made it hard. Knowing when to turn back, that’s the challenge.

Knowing when to stay off trail has also proved a challenge. Once my ankle stopped hurting in town I thought I could handle the trail and hitched out of South Lake Tahoe, but it didn’t take long to realize that continuing to hike would not have been a smart choice. And so here we are over a month later and I’m still off trail and finally certain that I will not in fact make it to Canada this year. Time to pick some new challenges for myself.

I will finish the PCT next year, and after that I will move to Germany (tell you more about that one later). To accomplish both will require some hustle, but I know I can do it. At the moment I’m at my mom’s house and have started picking up freelancing work again. I know my grand overarching plans obviously, but I’m not yet clear on every single step that needs to be taken.

While I work on breaking down PCT and Germany goals into smaller bite-sized pieces, here’s one final important bite-sized goal: I am challenging myself to write here every day. I’m not promising fine artistic work, nor am I promising something as long as this post every day, but I’m going to write something. Maybe that’ll even end up helping with the other goals, who knows. If nothing else, there’s a certain sense of accountability that comes from being honest about what I’ve done to work towards Germany and towards finishing the PCT.

Dental “Emergencies”

If it’s not one thing it’s the other. My ankle’s finally more or less hikable (not 100% still, but I like to think I’d be able to hike on it…. geeze how long does a stupid sprained ankle take to heal???), but now apparently I need a root canal, and I need it Now. So at this point, I’ve been off trail all of July, and between the still recovering ankle, the dental procedure itself, the recovery time, PCT Days, and my family reunion, I’m afraid I won’t be getting much hiking done in August either. Which leads me to worry… am I going to even have the slightest shot of finishing this trail this year?

And if I don’t finish the PCT this year… what then? Try again next year I suppose, but will I feel like a thru-hiker if I just start from where I tripped and hike north? Or will I feel the need to start completely over? And what does that mean for my post-trail moving-to-Germany plans. (PS, have I mentioned? No, I haven’t, not here at least, but I’m moving to Germany once I’m done with this trail. More on that later).

My life feels so up in the air right now. I know I want to walk to Canada, and I know I’m going to Germany after that. Don’t know much else though. I guess I’ll figure it out.