However, we've taken this journey many, many times in the past three years and are actually considering adopting most of the relevant highway system between the two regions. Watch for our signs. This time, we made the uncharacteristic decision to get up early enough to start the trip at 4:00 am.
To keep me occupied and to transfer some of the boredom of the long trip to you guys, I decided to keep notes and post about it. Merry Christmas, everybody.
3:50 am: Pack Car. Badly.
3:55 am: Repack Car. Serviceably.
4:05 am: GPS wants to know what route to set. We tell it anywhere but via New York City. It calls us wusses.
4:10 am (Don't worry. I start keeping longer increments soon): Surprised at how many people leave their Christmas lights on all night. Thankful for the Christmas send-off, though, since soon enough our only lights will be lighted highway signs.
4:15 am: The ache in my bones makes me suddenly realize that Santa must be getting too old to work the night shift. Make mental note that, when my kid gets old enough to find out it's not Santa putting the gifts under the tree, I’ll use that as the excuse and avoid the whole “I’ve been lying to you all these years” conversation.
4:17 am: Cross border into Massachusetts. Not the milestone it sounds. We’re right on the border, so we cross by accident just about every day.
5:10 am: Put on the cardboard snowflake glasses that I got at the Hershey Sweet Lights Show that makes all points of light turn into glowing snowflakes. Tollbooths and truck tail lights mesmerize me for the next half hour.
5:30 am: Can't get stupid Tom Cochrane out of head. Turn on Christmas music.
5:40 am: Connecticut welcomes us.
6:00 am: Discover that a triple-decker toadstool sandwich with arsenic sauce is starting to sound pretty good.
6:10 am: Stop at McDonald's. Close enough.
6:30 am: Fall asleep. Instead of dreaming of a white Christmas, I dream I’m living in Florida on a boat in somebody’s driveway while Alex P. Keaton’s ex-girlfriend yells at me from the front yard. Decide to cut back on watching Cougar Town episodes.
6:40 am: Dawn breaks. We pull over and fix it.
7:40 am: I awake and we find a parking lot to switch driving shifts. A starling murmuration dances mere feet away from us. For the millionth time, wish I believed in good omens.
7:50 am: Cross border into New York. Start seeing signs of past snowfall that continues the rest of the trip. Looks like the remnants of some grand party that we missed.
8:00 am: Tire of Christmas music. Pop in Leonard Cohen.
8:10 am: Briefly wonder what a Leonard Cohen Christmas album would sound like. Figure it would be sad and regretful enough to make God want to revoke the holiday out of pity.
8:45 am: Cross border into Pennsylvania. Realize this blog post will be boring if something doesn't happen soon. Decide to exaggerate.
9:00 am: Saw an old woman get hit-and-run by some kind of flying caribou.
9:30 am: Saw a logging truck with a station wagon driving underneath it.
10:00 am: Stop at a rest stop. Hit the vending machines.
10:15 am: Learn that road boredom is the one thing that two sticks of Twix can't fix.
11:30 am: Middle of a boring stretch where I try to take pictures from a car doing illegal highway speeds.
1:00 pm: Make it to my parents’ house. Try to do the math in my head, taking into account stops, but it doesn't work out. Math says we should still be in Pennsylvania somewhere. Give up. Greet family.
In the end, leaving at one of the hours that God ignores his creation made the trip feel like time travel somehow. Unfortunately, instead of using all the daylight we saved to spend time with family, we crashed and slept through most of the day, nullifying the whole point of a 4:00 am departure.
1 comments:
too bad we cant blink ourselves places like I dream of Jennie or shoot ourselve through tubes like drive in banks or better yet step into space crafts and zoom away like the Jetsons but I for one are glad you made the effort to drive to see family at Christmas
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