Good question… I made a website so I can continuously answer such a question. I’ll copy and paste updates here but you’ll have to go to my website to see pictures.
BrettDanger.com
Ketchmeifyoucan, Alaska
I really appreciate you joining me here at the Ketchikan Library in this part of my Journey; we have so much to catch up on! I am grateful for the determining factors that brought me to this comfy bucket seat where I can share stories as if we were side by side. This seat sits in this modern A-frame library that raises beholding eyes to rocky peaks resting on a lush evergreen forest. This seat leans me back to look out of windows thrice my height, framed in maple, as a storm blizzards at the tips of the mountains I rest at the feet of. For those of us below we are blessed with a gentle finesse of snowflakes that melt once they land on damp landscape. It’s been mostly rainy since I arrived several days ago in Ketchikan, Alaska; not unlike the Pacific Northwest that prompted my escape to Texas. But things are different now, of course, and the gray doesn’t effect me so much anymore.
Sneaking away from the entertainment industry in Southern California I am currently residing on a sea cucumber scuba diving boat with a good pal from the past in addition to his swashbuckling posse.
I chuckle at the juxtaposition of my position two weeks ago in the plastic city to where I am now. I traded barefoot walks in Venice Beach sweater weather for stumbling around the stern of a ship in frigid Alaskan rain. Yesterday I was shucking scallops and slicing sea cucumbers barehanded for hours while equipped with sandals, double buckled denim, and a Guy Cotton coat as the captain attempted to escape the stormy weather following a profitable day on the water. Why wasn’t I dressed appropriately? Two reasons: firstly because everything I own is wet all the time, and secondly because the answers to a beautiful life are found in visiting suffering. Was it euphoric putting on dry clothes, simply sitting down, or walking into your cozy house today? Likely not, and that’s okay. However, if you’ve been soggy and frosty for the entirety of your waking hours you would smile wide, close your eyes, and lift your hands to the heavens with gratitude and humility.
I have experienced the glory of the sea, and I wouldn’t mind if she rocked me to sleep each night. I haven’t seen her at her very worst, but the sea is a beautiful and chaotic force that inspires me.
When I came back to land I was reminded of the stability, dependability, and serenity of standing on a solid surface that I have been taking for granted the entirety of my existence. That is how I discovered this library. There is no beach near me; these docks latch onto seemingly short mountains with most of their mass hidden beneath the surface of the sea. After docking and knotting The Dauntless I felt an urge to run up this empty forested road that is a stone’s throw from the boat which is closed to thru traffic for the winter. Cold, dense, oxygen rich air brought be promptly to the top where I glanced back and down from whence I came. Another 180 reset my bearing to this library. What a pleasant surprise to find such a place after a salubrious sprint up a steep, slippery slope!
I sleep easy knowing my dogs are on holiday with my father while I simultaneously exercise my identity outside of dog ownership. I’m not certain as to how long I’ll be in Alaska, where I’m going next, what I’ll be doing, but I know it is going to be good.
BrettDanger.com
Ketchmeifyoucan, Alaska
I really appreciate you joining me here at the Ketchikan Library in this part of my Journey; we have so much to catch up on! I am grateful for the determining factors that brought me to this comfy bucket seat where I can share stories as if we were side by side. This seat sits in this modern A-frame library that raises beholding eyes to rocky peaks resting on a lush evergreen forest. This seat leans me back to look out of windows thrice my height, framed in maple, as a storm blizzards at the tips of the mountains I rest at the feet of. For those of us below we are blessed with a gentle finesse of snowflakes that melt once they land on damp landscape. It’s been mostly rainy since I arrived several days ago in Ketchikan, Alaska; not unlike the Pacific Northwest that prompted my escape to Texas. But things are different now, of course, and the gray doesn’t effect me so much anymore.
Sneaking away from the entertainment industry in Southern California I am currently residing on a sea cucumber scuba diving boat with a good pal from the past in addition to his swashbuckling posse.
I chuckle at the juxtaposition of my position two weeks ago in the plastic city to where I am now. I traded barefoot walks in Venice Beach sweater weather for stumbling around the stern of a ship in frigid Alaskan rain. Yesterday I was shucking scallops and slicing sea cucumbers barehanded for hours while equipped with sandals, double buckled denim, and a Guy Cotton coat as the captain attempted to escape the stormy weather following a profitable day on the water. Why wasn’t I dressed appropriately? Two reasons: firstly because everything I own is wet all the time, and secondly because the answers to a beautiful life are found in visiting suffering. Was it euphoric putting on dry clothes, simply sitting down, or walking into your cozy house today? Likely not, and that’s okay. However, if you’ve been soggy and frosty for the entirety of your waking hours you would smile wide, close your eyes, and lift your hands to the heavens with gratitude and humility.
I have experienced the glory of the sea, and I wouldn’t mind if she rocked me to sleep each night. I haven’t seen her at her very worst, but the sea is a beautiful and chaotic force that inspires me.
When I came back to land I was reminded of the stability, dependability, and serenity of standing on a solid surface that I have been taking for granted the entirety of my existence. That is how I discovered this library. There is no beach near me; these docks latch onto seemingly short mountains with most of their mass hidden beneath the surface of the sea. After docking and knotting The Dauntless I felt an urge to run up this empty forested road that is a stone’s throw from the boat which is closed to thru traffic for the winter. Cold, dense, oxygen rich air brought be promptly to the top where I glanced back and down from whence I came. Another 180 reset my bearing to this library. What a pleasant surprise to find such a place after a salubrious sprint up a steep, slippery slope!
I sleep easy knowing my dogs are on holiday with my father while I simultaneously exercise my identity outside of dog ownership. I’m not certain as to how long I’ll be in Alaska, where I’m going next, what I’ll be doing, but I know it is going to be good.
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