Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

Foreword

06.26.2009 by David Murray // 23 Comments

When riding a motorcycle at night, what you mustn't do is "outrun your headlight." Meaning, ride so fast that you can't stop for obstacles that appear at the end of the beam.

When living, unfortunately, you inevitably outrun your headlight. That is, you live long beyond the last year of age you pictured when you were young, and still making pictures of your life.

At 30, I was still able to judge my life and to some extent even live it based on what I'd imagined it might be, what I'd wanted it to be.

But at 40—with a child but no parents, with a 15-year marriage and a 30-year mortgage, with a head full of dueling truisms and a heart where love and worry jostle senselessly for chamber space—I have outrun my headlight.

So along with my old college roommate who also turned 40 this year, I'm channeling all my uncertainty into a single line—a motorcycle track, from Chicago to Cleveland to Buffalo to Montreal to Quebec City to Fredericton, New Brunswick to Halifax, Nova Scotia.

I'm sure other people have traveled from here to Nova Scotia before, but finding a single road map has proven impossible. To see the whole journey on a single map, I have had to awkwardly tape together six sheets from two North American atlases. They make an ungainly diagonal, bottom to top, left to right. The scale of each differs a bit, so that once you get to Nova Scotia, the getting-back maps—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York—don't fit.

I’m hoping it’s a two-way trip. But it’s a one-way map.

Motomap In the beginning of Jupiter's Travels, the 30-year-old book about riding a motorcycle around the world, Ted Simon writes that after weeks of planning the trip as an enthralling obsession, on the eve of his departure "I looked at the absurdly overloaded Triumph … and had my first cruel glimpse of the reality of what I was embarking on. My vision had been dazzled by the purple drama of warfare and banditry. Now I saw, with awful clarity, that a large part of my life henceforth would be devoted to the daily grind of packing and unpacking this poor, dumb beast.

"'It's impossible,' I whispered."

I'm beginning to know how he feels.

Back here in late July ….

***

PROGRESS UPDATES

6/27 Chicago to Cleveland

6/28 Cleveland to Lakeville, N.Y.

6/29 Lakeville (over top of Finger Lakes and up through Adirondacks) to Prattsburgh, NY.

6/30 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec

7/1 Kamouraska, Quebec

7/2 Sheeiac, New Brunswick

7/3 Hawksbury, Nova Scotia

7/4 Ingonish, Nova Scotia

7/5 St. Peters, Nova Scotia

7/6 Louisbourg, Nova Scotia

7/7 Liscombe, Nova Scotia

7/8 Digby, Nova Scotia

7/9 Portland, Maine

7/10 Woodstock, New Hampshire

7/11 Nevermind, Vermont

7/12 Lake George, New York

7/15 Binghamton, New York

7/16 Warren, Pennsylvania

7/17 Cleveland, Ohio

7/18 Chicago

Categories // Murray Cycle Diaries

Comments

  1. Kristen says

    June 26, 2009 at 6:40 am

    Enjoy the adventure David! Safe travels.

    Reply
  2. Sean Fleming says

    June 26, 2009 at 7:46 am

    Sounds like a real journey of a lifetime. I think it’s a very cool thing to do.
    Enjoy, stay safe etc.
    Sean
    @flemingsean

    Reply
  3. Ron Shewchuk says

    June 26, 2009 at 11:56 am

    As always, good luck and Godspeed.

    Reply
  4. Steve C. says

    June 26, 2009 at 12:57 pm

    If you die, can I have all your books?
    Steve C.

    Reply
  5. Steve C. says

    June 26, 2009 at 12:57 pm

    If you die, can I have all your books?
    Steve C.

    Reply
  6. David Murray says

    June 26, 2009 at 1:46 pm

    Thanks for the good wishes, all.
    Steve: You already have all my books.

    Reply
  7. Suzanne Ecklund says

    June 26, 2009 at 7:46 pm

    Happy trails.

    Reply
  8. Kasia says

    June 26, 2009 at 8:49 pm

    Have fun! When you get back, look up Ewan McGregor’s Motorcycle Diaries. He and a buddy travel from Scotland to South Africa on their bikes. Maybe after you’re done with Chicago-to-Nova Scotia, you can check out his itinerary. 🙂

    Reply
  9. David Murray says

    June 26, 2009 at 9:04 pm

    Thanks, Suki. But I’ll settle for interesting trails. Happy would be a bonus.
    Kasia, that McGregor thing–the first one, actually, where they go from London around the world to the east–was the inspiration for this trip, actually.

    Reply
  10. Ron Shewchuk says

    June 27, 2009 at 9:37 am

    Steve, if you die, can I have all of David’s books?

    Reply
  11. Steve C. says

    June 27, 2009 at 10:32 am

    Ron:
    Yes. But I don’t have ALL of them yet. So David will have to die, then I’ll have to die, for you to inherit.
    If I die first, then you can have all my books, and MANY of David’s books, which he has given me over the years.
    But you’re better off if we both croak. David first, so his books come to me. Then me.
    Steve C.

    Reply
  12. Steve C. says

    June 27, 2009 at 10:32 am

    Ron:
    Yes. But I don’t have ALL of them yet. So David will have to die, then I’ll have to die, for you to inherit.
    If I die first, then you can have all my books, and MANY of David’s books, which he has given me over the years.
    But you’re better off if we both croak. David first, so his books come to me. Then me.
    Steve C.

    Reply
  13. dissertations to buy says

    July 6, 2009 at 9:53 am

    Blogs are so interactive where we get lots of informative on any topics nice job keep it up !!

    Reply
  14. Yossi Mandel says

    July 7, 2009 at 8:02 am

    Motorbiking, Mortality and Mendacity. What a great combination.

    Reply
  15. Lisa Kenner says

    July 10, 2009 at 10:58 am

    Invigorated my magic and got my groove back in Barcelona. Eager for visionquest post-analysis. Savor it all~ Lsis

    Reply
  16. Bruce Bever says

    July 15, 2009 at 8:10 am

    I hope your trip is going well. I just did a two day ride on a borrowed bike. It was an absolute blast, but after 8 1/2 hours in the saddle my lower back and butt hurt so bad, I wanted nothing more than to get off the bike and stand upright. I hope your taking enough breaks and perhaps only riding 4 or 5 hours a day. I expect to see some photos!

    Reply
  17. David Murray says

    July 16, 2009 at 8:02 am

    Hey Bruce–
    My haunches were damned sore after the 360-mile first-day ride from Chicago to Cle., but they somehow got used to the rigors, and did fine as long as I occasionally stood on the pegs as I glided through a town. We’ve been riding seven hours a day on average, and it’s begun to feel like the most natural thing in the world.
    “It’s going to be so weird not doing this every day,” Tom said last night.
    As anxious as I am to get home this weekend, I do think I’ll break up that Cle-Chi return ride into two halves–to save my haunches, and to savor the last ride.

    Reply
  18. Sean Williams says

    July 17, 2009 at 1:23 pm

    Hey David – are you in Cleveland tomorrow? Let’s have lunch, or breakfast, or a beer. Sean@communicationammo.com

    Reply
  19. Sean Williams says

    July 17, 2009 at 1:24 pm

    Oops, I can’t read a calendar. You’re arriving here today. Ack! How about breakfast Saturday the 18th before you go?

    Reply
  20. Eileen B. says

    July 17, 2009 at 5:30 pm

    Go David and go Tribe!!!!!

    Reply
  21. David Murray says

    July 18, 2009 at 8:31 am

    Sorry, Sean, would have loved to meet, but I blew in and out. Made it home (sweet home) last night. Next time I’m in town, though, I’d love to meet. Maybe for breakfast AND beer?

    Reply
  22. AngloStore.com, Quebec City says

    April 13, 2010 at 2:42 pm

    How did you find the road users in Quebec?
    Hope you steered clear of Montreal in that respect.

    Reply
  23. David Murray says

    April 13, 2010 at 5:43 pm

    Not particularly bad, AngeloStore, but then I’m from Chicago. Cities in general are a pain to ride motorcycles in, and though I wanted to stay longer in both Quebec City AND Montreal, we were quickly frustrated by traffic in both cities and moved on.

    Reply

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