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MAKING BELIEVE IN THE BADLANDS BY SARA
Here’s much to do with hate but more with love. —Romeo and Juliet Harper: In your experience of the world. How do people change? Mormon Mother: Well it has something to do with God so it’s not very nice. God splits the skin with a jagged thumbnail from throat to belly and then plunges a huge filthy hand in, he grabs hold of your bloody tubes and they slip to evade his grasp but he squeezes hard, he insists, he pulls and pulls till all your innards are yanked out and the pain! We can’t even talk about that. And then he stuffs them back, dirty, tangled and torn. It’s up to you to do the stitching. Harper: And then up you get. And walk around. Mormon Mother: Just mangled guts pretending.
HOLDREN
Harper: That’s how people change. —Angels in America
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On the 21st of August, in year one of our global pandemic, my partner and I dragged two fully loaded bicycles across the sand at Virginia Beach, down to the water, where my mother snapped pictures as we teetered around in the surf, barefoot, giddy, and, for a moment, mask-less and smiling. We were dipping our back wheels in the Atlantic—a tradition for cross-country cyclists. A few months before, we had finally called off our wedding celebration, slated for the fall, and in the same moment had decided, “Let’s bicycle across the country instead.” (We called it “the ultimate social distancing project,” but really, it had more to do with maintaining some sense of passion and purpose, some feeling of movement through the uncertain dark.) We did the research, we scraped together the gear, and on August 11 we went
Sara Holdren, somewhere north of Breckenridge, CO, while biking across the country; this photo was taken day 54 on the road. PHOTO c/o Sara Holdren
to the courthouse in Charlottesville, Virginia. Under a magnolia tree we put titanium rings on each other’s fingers; they seemed able to survive anything, and we could afford them. Ten days after that, we were riding westward, front wheels aimed vaguely at the Pacific. Eighty-three days, 3,865 miles, six Mount Everests worth of climbing, two absentee ballots, innumerable flats, one injured knee, one injured neck, and roughly 17 billion jars of peanut butter later, we reached the Oregon coast. There, we explored the sand dunes and the wet, windy cliffs, and gathered our first chanterelles with my uncle, a marine biologist and enthusiastic amateur mycologist. In the months that followed, hunting for mushrooms would get us through some very hard times indeed. But that’s another story.
WINTER/SPRING 2022 | SDC JOURNAL
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