Thank you all for following me so far along this incredible journey. Writing this blog and knowing that people were reading it was always a
great incentive for me to keep moving and seeking out new experiences. For those that read all of my posts from the beginning to the end, you have seen an intimate side of me that I was happy to share. I documented my time learning a new language, learning to surf, learning the world, and ultimately becoming the person that I am today. The last five years have undoubtedly been the most transformational period of my life, and now I have moved on to something new. I invite you all to continue following me at my new blog Finding The Balance.
Thank you,
Anthony William Persaud
March, 2012
Friday, March 16, 2012
Friday, January 6, 2012
The Road West...
Such was the discussion I was engaged in with Kyle Waddington as we made our early morning escape from the province of Ontario. I knew Kyle from one of my stints in Tofino, he was a mild mannered, free-floating, earth-loving musician that lived for the experience and the human connection. He had no bank account and very few possessions, and the sole worry that he had in life was food and water, everything else he told me, would work itself out. The simple circumstances that led us to be in that car together only reinforced such a positive ethos. I had put an ad on Craigslist offering a ride share to Vancouver and the one response that I got was from Kyle who I had lost touch with. Much like myself Kyle had returned to Ontario trying to figure out his life when he realized that back on the west coast was where he belonged. So there we were, two scruffily bearded travelers with a unified sense of purpose, flying down the road west in a small VW packed to the brim with everything we both owned.
We were making incredible time, just 24 hours earlier we were in Toronto and now we were in this alien land, excited about the adventures to come yet fully aware that we were already in the midst of one. By high noon the sun was shining brightly and the weather was warm, we pulled off onto a side road for a stretch. The road signs said "no services" as if warning us foreigners to stay away, but we pulled up to the wooden gates of a ranch and parked our car. We pulled out the guitar and harmonica and played some music, some soulful tunes of the road that were lifted away by the breeze of the open land.
It was late afternoon when we began our climb up the Rocky Mountains. It was a winding road through the various passes, wrapping around huge glacier lakes and green forests. Finally, just as the sun was once again setting we made it to Whitefish, Montana, a small ski town nestled in the mountains along the Canada-U.S. border. There it was that we stayed with friends of Kyle - musicians that he knew from adventures past. We celebrated our journey with them, drinking, smoking, playing music until our bodies and minds gave way and we fell into deep sleep. It was good to close our eyes outside of a car seat, and we cherished the moment, for although we had come so far, the journey was far from over.
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