A letter to my future self ✉️

The New York Times newsletter suggested this morning that you should consider writing a letter to your future self. It’s a way to see who you are now and then some day look back at who you were, what you once believed and where you want to go.

Halfway through my 42nd year, what seemed so clear about my future is often quite hazy. But when I look back at these words, some point in the future, I will have much more clarity. And I’ll be able to answer Edward Abbey’s most famous question, “Was it worth it?”

In some ways I would have thought by this point my life I would have settled down in a home and homestead. Had my own land, livestock, maybe a wife and family. But I like to travel, my freedom, my fires and my big jacked up truck. But looking back, probably many of those things will be gone.

I could have bought that house or many others I had looked at. But at least at this point in my life, I can’t imagine settling down permanently into some kind of typical plastic-and-asphalt cladded huse. I would love to live in the country and have livestock, but at this point I’m not ready to commute via automobile and be stuck feeding and watering livestock and shoveling piles of steaming manure and smashing ice-filled water through throughout the year. There are still so many places to see and travel to, I don’t want to have a permanent address.

Did I stay too long in Delmar, was I too wedded to my job, too unwilling to make changes that could better me? Was I too focused on saving and investing, focusing on developing my good paying career? Could have more opportunity been found elsewhere, even if it also meant passing up my good job? It won’t be clear back when I wrote this, but it probably will be today.

These are all questions that at some point in my life I’ll have answers to. And maybe some point I’ll read these words, and realize while I didn’t have perfect clarity now, maybe it was good to have freedom to do what I want at least some of the time and not adopt the suburbanite lifestyle that so many of my professional colleagues have done.

Map: Alma Pond
Map: Dobbins Memorial State Forest
Map: Little John Wildlife Management Area
Map: Otter Lake
Map: South Hill State Forest (Oneida 23)
Map: Summer Hill State Forest
Map: West Parishville State Forest
SVGZ Graphic: albany-snow-depth
SVGZ Graphic: college-rate
SVGZ Graphic: december-holidays
SVGZ Graphic: ht2025
SVGZ Graphic: lt2025
SVGZ Graphic: Places Named Bethlehem
SVGZ Graphic: Towns with Most Similiar Land Cover to the Town of Bethlehem
Terrain Map: Happy World Milk Day!
Photo: Drought has made grass look like mid winter
Photo: Entering The Lye Brook Wilderness
Photo: New Development
Photo: Edge of Tower
Photo: Kellog Mountain
Photo: Three Out Of Four
Photo: 2.5 Miles to Vanderwhacker Firetower
Photo: Harris Lake
Photo: Mock Rig and Pump at Entrance to Drake Well Historic Site
Photo: Farm Country

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