Day: April 19, 2026

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The Mirror Tells A Story I Didn’t Authorize

The mirror has begun to tell a story I didn’t authorize. At forty-three, the gray hair isn’t just a change in pigment; it’s a physical clock, a silent metronome ticking away the seconds of my “freedom years.” As I look at the map, tracing the long ribbon of asphalt from Albany toward the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, I realize this isn’t just a road trip. It is a pilgrimage into the great northern forests, a search for something solid before the complexities of midlife claim my schedule entirely.

In my professional life as a Data Services Director, everything is abstractβ€”election cycles, spreadsheets, and the digital hum of a world that feels increasingly disconnected from the soil. The Midwest, by contrast, feels tactile. Popular culture paints it as reserved and conservative, but I see it as a place of manufacturing and forestry, where people still make things from the earth. I need to stand in those woods for a week, maybe longer, to remember what it feels like to be anchored to the land.

The drive alone is a meditation. Two long days behind the wheel of my F-350 SuperDuty, stopping to sleep in the state forests of Chautauqua or the Allegheny National Forest, crossing through the rolling miles of Ohio until the air turns crisp with Michigan’s lakeland chill. But as I plan the rig and check the gear, a shadow hangs over the excitement: the knowledge that this may be one of the last times I can simply go.

Time is tightening its grip. Every dinner with my parents includes a subtle, or not-so-subtle, reminder that they are aging. They speak of a future where I am the one holding the keys to the homestead, the one responsible for the goats, the hogs, and the dog. My mother measures time in political cycles, hoping to see the end of an era, but I measure it in the deepening lines on their faces. I see a future where “getting away” is no longer an option because animals need feeding and parents need care.

The homestead is a complicated inheritance. It’s five acres, grid-tied, and nestled among “good ol’ boy” neighborsβ€”not exactly the off-grid wilderness I dream of. In New York, even on agricultural land, you’re hemmed in by burn bans, gun restrictions, and a cultural bias against the very thingsβ€”hunting, trapping, fishingβ€”that make rural life meaningful. I think of my truck; it’s a beast in city traffic, but it would be perfectly at home towing cattle trailers on those five acres. Yet, even that future is uncertain. A nursing home could drain the estate, or family dynamics could shift the ground beneath my feet.

This trip to Michigan, then, is a reconnaissance mission for the soul. I want to see how they live in the North, to learn the layout of the land so that when retirement finally comes, I know where to plant my rootsβ€”somewhere the restrictions of the East Coast can’t reach.

Summer is coming, but I can feel it slipping away even as it arrives. I am building my rig not just to travel, but to outrun the clock for a little while. I need to see the Great Lakes and the deep timber of the UP while I still have the strength to wander, before the duties of the homestead and the weight of my own years turn me into a permanent fixture of the land I’m currently trying to escape. Time is ticking, and the road is calling.