[amazon template=image&asin=B01K3O7QRC]I’m currently reading “A Hell of a Place to Lose a Cow,” by Tim Brookes. I picked up this Ocean Beach Library discard from the free pile at the 2016 Rubber Tramp Rendezvous (RTR). Three months later, I actually started reading it.
It ‘s the perfect book to read after a long day of mentally exhausting work. The writing is not overly challenging–no words I need to look for in a dictionary, no complicated sentence structure to contend with–but not simplistic either. The story is upbeat (no abused family members, nothing to send me down a spiral of depression) and interesting to me.
Here’s the plot: Author Tim Brookes grew up in Great Britain. In 1973, he bought a cheap ticket to NYC and hitchhiked clear across the United States and back again. After this tour of the U.S. he settled in New England. Twenty-five years later, he recreated his first trip and hitchhiked across the country and back a second time. (He had more resources the second time around and could buy a bus ticket or rent a car when he needed to, but he still relied extensively upon the kindness of strangers.)
I’m about halfway through the book now, but something I read last night rang so true that I wanted to share it here.
Brooks is telling a wealthy twenty-one year-old man about his adventures hitchhiking.
The young man says he doesn’t understand the appeal of hitchhiking. He tells Brooks that he prefers to ride in limos and stay in five-star hotels.
Brooks answers, The problem with that kind of travel…is that you’re never vulnerable.
The young man asks, Why should I want to be vulnerable?
Brooks says, Because otherwise you’ll never feel grateful for anything. You’ve got to make yourself vulnerable before you need something from someone else, and you’ve got to need something before you can feel gratitude. And unless you allow yourself to be vulnerable, you never have any chance encounters. All the most remarkable people I’ve met on this trip, I’ve met by chance.
I could say the same thing.
I took the above photo.
Love this quote!!
Applicable to so many areas of life.
I know, right, Louise? I was really touched by this quote, which is why I decided to share it. The book is really good, with a lot of old hippie insight.
Wow Blaize! That was really profound!
I’m glad you liked this post, Liselle. Thank you for reading and commenting.
I think it means you have to trust people enough to really connect. That can happen in chance meetings not just through hitchhiking. Like don’t build walls around yourself for protection. I met some cool people on my road trip last year by myself.
Yes, Carolyn, I think you are right that this idea of vulnerability and gratitude has everything to do with connection and is not limited to hitchhiking. I will try to keep this idea in mind in every aspect of my life.