It's July, I handed my job back to my boss on the silver platter it was presented with and headed somewhere with a pair of hearty boots and devoid of mostly all humans, including the ones I loved. But I cannot muster the excitement to spill many words. My job, the people I had encountered, and their awful ways had left me speechless. There comes a point in life when you just walk away from all the drama and people who create it. It was a feeling that I had been buried deep within a hollow grave, drained of meaningful human interaction with a lack of laughter and luster. Not all, but too many annoying beings nagged like fruit flies at any opportunity for a sugar high. Their twisted language availed only for self indulgence. Pessimistic pulses wrenched through veins. And as time slipped by it became clear that no amount of prestige, and no amount of monetary gain was worth the kindness I sought within our own specie. It was time to quit, auddios, out. In less than a year, my energy had been rung out, sucked dry like a hard packed desert dirt that hadn't seen water in years. Energy suctioned out in a syringe in all the wrong places for all the wrong attitudes. Ralph, my dearest childhood companion, had become a lifeless stuff deer of past memories, comatose and shoved between wall and mattress, as if suddenly the responsibilities and expectations of world we inhabit silenced a written creativity. As if all the words had already been used. I left that building I referenced as my workplace for the last time with a gratefulness for meeting the people who spit my weaknesses right back in my face. And for the few friendly faces that always encouraged the best in me. And if those few friendly faces find their way to this page, I thank you for your kind words and smiles during the floods of toxic molasses.
This is a compilation of stories, days upon days of meeting strangers in the oddest of places, making friends with trees, barren roads, desert heat, and stuffed reindeer. About seeing the continent via a bicycle. And about falling in love, testing human limits, and restoring a faith in humanity.
Pages
- UTAH - Tent, Reindeer, Bicycle 2014
- Heading to Alaska on a Bicycle
- THE JOHN MUIR TRAIL: A Tale of a Reindeer and German Lover 2013
- JMT South to North: SOLO in the SIERRAS 2015
- Oregon: Willamette National Forest, Boy, and Mount...
- ONE COUNTRY VIA A BICYCLE 2012
- MAINE: Cycle Touring the Northern State of Blueberries 2015
Intro
Welcome to a story, or stories I should say. A compilation of adventure tales. An ongoing itch to see, smell, and touch the world, or at least the deserted roads and rarely trampled mountains of America. Characters within the descriptive paragraphs of these stories carve out the coming and going companions in life; vital life people and pieces that parallel a universe for moments, days, years. And then spear off, leaving granules of magnificent memories of magical places. They leave a lasting trace, a gained sense of courage to stand tall on oxygen deprived mountains and shout absurdities like: I love you Ralph! Ralph is a teenage reindeer stuffed of the finest synthetic polyester fiber poof; he says made in Indonesia but really tells me he is from the North Pole. Delivered through a chimney one December night 20 years ago, we instantly became cuddle buddies upon that morning's sunrise. He is the instigator. The inspiration. And the imagination. He breathes creativity. Laughter. His is a dear companion. And yes, at 4lbs he tags along atop a pack or strapped to a rack. In delirium of 107 degree heat, the small possession of material belongings gain a persona. Innate objects become friends of the road and trails. And as for the humans who accompany, their presence reads priceless. Without O'Reilly, a 29 year old New Hampshirian with superior taste buds, the mathematical six foot four inch tall German, or handful of organic peanut butter and 99 cent jam eating munchkins, there would be a lot less excitement. The encounters we make with our specie, encapsulating the world with their awkward ways and over consumerist love, somehow we have managed to become overly adored creatures. Their generous hearts restore a faith that goodness prevails in the upheaval of a sometimes lost humanity. As for myself, I'm just the navigator, paddling up the stream of life munching on Clif Bars, with an iPhone documenting the frailties and goodies underneath all the simplified complexities in the world we reside. So again, I welcome you to get lost and dream a little through this typed text and your imagination. My name is Kristen Gentilucci. I live in Berkeley California and I love dogs.
Saturday, July 4, 2015
Somewhere Solo in the Sierras
It's July, I handed my job back to my boss on the silver platter it was presented with and headed somewhere with a pair of hearty boots and devoid of mostly all humans, including the ones I loved. But I cannot muster the excitement to spill many words. My job, the people I had encountered, and their awful ways had left me speechless. There comes a point in life when you just walk away from all the drama and people who create it. It was a feeling that I had been buried deep within a hollow grave, drained of meaningful human interaction with a lack of laughter and luster. Not all, but too many annoying beings nagged like fruit flies at any opportunity for a sugar high. Their twisted language availed only for self indulgence. Pessimistic pulses wrenched through veins. And as time slipped by it became clear that no amount of prestige, and no amount of monetary gain was worth the kindness I sought within our own specie. It was time to quit, auddios, out. In less than a year, my energy had been rung out, sucked dry like a hard packed desert dirt that hadn't seen water in years. Energy suctioned out in a syringe in all the wrong places for all the wrong attitudes. Ralph, my dearest childhood companion, had become a lifeless stuff deer of past memories, comatose and shoved between wall and mattress, as if suddenly the responsibilities and expectations of world we inhabit silenced a written creativity. As if all the words had already been used. I left that building I referenced as my workplace for the last time with a gratefulness for meeting the people who spit my weaknesses right back in my face. And for the few friendly faces that always encouraged the best in me. And if those few friendly faces find their way to this page, I thank you for your kind words and smiles during the floods of toxic molasses.