I Hate the Good Life in Delmar

I have never really liked living in Delmar or working in Albany. While it sure it easy to roll out of bed, take a hot shower in my natural-gas heated apartment with electricity that lights a room with a flip of a switch, then take a bus downtown to my good-paying job, it really is a hell of a life that I dislike with a pleasure. I go to work most days in my ugly beige cubicle, write memos, mark up documents, and talk on the phone about business for hours a day, then go home, often holding my head in despair about the day’s events by the time I disembark the bus in front of my apartment.

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Its a good life. At least on paper. I got a really nice pickup truck and cap, that I camp in most of the summer, rambling around the various wild forests, state forests, and national forests in the 400 or 500 miles radius of where I live. I get to have many campfires, cook over a fire or on a camp-stove, and get to see many scenic vistas. Compared to many people who struggle to make ends meet, I guess I have a very good life. People who don’t own cars, and can’t afford the increasingly high price for gasoline, don’t get to see the beauty I see.

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But still it’s an urban life, that in many ways I dislike.

A special time in my life was going to college at Plattsburgh State. Not particularly because of the college, but because of the small town life. People are laid back in a small town, and vast agricultural landscapes and mountains are never far beyond. People understand what its like to be country. There is a deep connection to the land in a small town like Plattsburgh, something that is missing in a city like Albany, where urban concerns such as pollution, crime, drugs, and violence seem to dominate the headlines.

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I’ve resolved to spend at least until Summer 2015, in Albany, if all goes well. Then I tell myself, I am getting out of Albany and New York all together.

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