Friday, May 11, 2012

Rocky Mountain High: Reflections on Yellowstone


“Now he walks in quiet solitude, the forests and the streams
Singing praise with every step he takes,
His sight has turned inside himself, to try and understand
The serenity of a clear blue mountain lake”

I love the wilderness. There is really nothing more amazing than just being in the great outdoors, looking at what nature has to offer. I am convinced that no artist’s canvas is able to best the beauty which nature has endowed.

The best parts about Yellowstone are not the main attractions. Magnificent as they are, Old Faithful and The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone are separated from their viewers by walls and fences and rightfully so, as they do need to be protected from the cold hands of humanity, which would otherwise fling rocks and trash into them as a silly game or try to “tame” them with dams of cold steel and cement.

No, the best experiences in this park come when you park your motor-vehicle by the side of the road and run into an open field, with the wind singing in your ears and the heavens opening up in front of you. You feel limitless, unbounded and, most importantly, free.

I can now say that I have wandered into a mountain valley, and that I have dipped my hand into the cold fresh water of a mountain creek. I love the feeling of being alone in an open field or a pine grove, where I feel there are no restrains on me and I can do whatever I want. The troubles of the world melt away, and I feel that my problems are small compared to the vastness of the lakes or the eternity of the mountains.

I realize that I feel most at ease when I walk alone in a great plain, or sit alone by a river bank, or wandering alone in a forest. While trekking through the plains in Yellowstone, I sometimes felt the uncanny urge to just leave my fellow travelers behind in the car and run for the hills, just run until I could run no longer, and then collapse and leave myself to the mercy of the elements and the spirits who almost definitely roam the mountains at night. Or while walking through a path through the pine trees, I felt the urge to forge on and on and on until I had lost everyone and everything, and give myself up to the ghosts who live among the trees.

Ultimately, I suppose that I’m a loner at heart.

Yellowstone was only the second place where I truly felt the feeling of the sublime.  I had felt that beautiful feeling once before; in Japan, when I opened a screen door overlooking a snowy pine grove. The total quiet, punctuated only by the drip-drip-drop of melting snow falling from the pine needles to the ground below, took me to a place which I had not been to since, until I arrived at Yellowstone. There were times in the park that I wanted to sing, run and cry at the sheer beauty of the landscape.

Night in Yellowstone is magical. The setting sun bathes the rivers and the mountains in a rainbow of colors. Then the moon rises and imparts a silvery-blue sheen on everything it touches.

There was one time during the darkest night when our car was in the middle of nowhere, and we stopped by the side of the road. We got out to look at the stars. The night sky was a deep-blue dome covering the earth, studded with stars which were placed there by the Gods to allow us earthly creatures to walk around by night. Even with one’s modern scientific knowledge of stars, planets and galaxies, while in the woods at night it makes more logical sense to cast all that aside and believe that there is indeed a dome which surrounds a flat earth, and give a prayer of thanks to the gods who were so kind as to place lights in the heavens for us mere mortals to make use of. I certainly did.

And perhaps if you wished on one of these magical creations, your wish would indeed come true. I certainly did. Childlike, perhaps. But isn’t it good to let the inner child out sometimes? While embedded in the social constraints of our offices and classrooms, the inner self is repressed, but when there is no one around to watch you, who cares what the neighbors think? Especially when the neighbors are bison and grizzly bears.

Another time, we were at the lower falls of the Yellowstone Grand Canyon. I took the time to observe the water and listen to its roar as it plunged into the cavern below. The purity and clarity of the river water has yet to be equaled by any human artist, Eastern or Western, from antiquity till now. The miniature pine trees which studded the rock-face of the mountains were more Zen than any Japanese garden designer could dream of attaining, not after a thousand years of tradition and a hundred years of training. No, no artistic creation which man has come up with has yet to equal the beauty of nature. I would suggest that all the artists of Paris and New York, with all their fancy dress and theories of life, love, existentialism and painting, should case their brushes aside for a week and camp out in the wilderness. The ones who the bears didn’t eat up should hopefully become enlightened, and finally learn some humility.

From the point of view of the Yellowstone River, you are nothing. The individual, with his career, education, unrequited loves and checkbook of ten million dollars, is not important. He could be cast screaming headfirst into a raging waterfall and perhaps it would cause a disturbance among his friends and family, but in the grand scheme of things, he only takes up a space of about 5 cubic feet, which is nothing compared with the magnificence of what surrounds him. Most of us work in offices and live in cramped apartments where we are constantly in interaction with other people, which makes us believe that we are the center of the universe. It takes a sudden shock, where man is flung out of his social networks, even for a day, for the individual to suddenly understand that he is not the be-all and end-all of existence.

Perhaps I am a romantic at heart; to my mind the New World remains untamed and relatively untouched by the hands of man, as compared to the Old World of Europe and Asia which, as the Chinese say, can be described as 沧海桑田. Despite the fact that Asia is “rising” and “reclaiming” it position in the world system, and despite the fact that China and India are building skyscrapers and parking lots and other architectural monstrosities at a rate unprecedented in world history, the Old World still feels tired, as if it has been weighed down by social conventions and outmoded traditions, and as if its soils have been ploughed through so many times that they do not have the wherewithall to produce so much as a peanut without a generous injection of chemical fertilizers. America is simple and straightforward; some laugh at the New World as being unrefined and crude, but is simplicity of civilization necessarily a bad thing?

The hustle-and-bustle and human artifice of New York and San Francisco is one side of America, where tech wizards and financial engineers create the economic architecture which keeps human society ticking. The quiet of the wilderness is another side of America; fresh, open and untouched, and which will be here long after we are all gone. I ought to visit it more.