Road Trips and the Mind
August 3, 2014
“Carried along on the hum of the motor and the countryside passing by, the journey itself flows through you and clears your head. Ideas one held on to without any reason depart; others, however, are readjusted and settle like pebbles at the bottom of a stream. There’s no need to interfere; the road does that work for you. One would like to think that it stretches out like this, dispensing its good offices, not just to the ends of India but even further, until death.”
— Nicolas Bouvier, The Way of the World
This has been a vacation-less summer for me, and I’ve been craving a getaway. This weekend my husband and I took a daytrip to a few ocean beaches on the Olympic Peninsula. We drove from sun up to sun down — a long day — but relaxing in the way Bouvier describes in the quote above, the miles stringing along with free-flowing thoughts and impressions. The day was a tonic.
We explored two beaches I had never been to before near La Push on the Pacific coast and Rialto Beach where I had taken my niece last year. Our summer weather has been hot and sunny lately, but interestingly, a fog bank had settled right where the water met the land, and it stayed cool and gray on the beaches. We could barely make out the silhouettes of sea stacks off shore. Still, being by the ocean was restorative — the fresh smells of salt and wet sand, the rhythmic crashing of the waves.