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Changes, people and places from around the United States
Tuesday, 05 September 2006 17:50

Janese Johnson
If I felt deprived from being able to take business trips or travel for fun over the past years due to raising kids or being back in school, I certainly have made up for it this past summer.

Over the course of two months I traveled to Arizona, Washington, Oregon, Virginia and finally Chicago, either with my work or for my kids.

I am feeling a bit like Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz," when she clicks her heels three times and says, "There is no place like home," and she is there in her home never to have really left at all ÇƒÓ or did she?
My summer was missing the wicked witch and munchkins but definitely had a variety of cultural experiences all its own.

Arizona was a bit of a shock for me because I used to live there for 11 years and now it has changed quite a bit.

The highway between Sedona and Cottonwood is now four lanes instead of two, and there are about 10 stoplights instead of two through the small town. It has only been eight years since I left. One of the things that I really wanted to do while I was there is get a good hike in. By the time my friends and I were able to get out and do this hike, it was already midday and over 105 degrees.


I figured I did this often when I lived there before, I could do it still, right?


Wrong, I almost fainted while my two friends who are quite a bit older than me waited with lots of patience while I was trying to make this hike. Ugh. I guess I am no longer as acclimated to the heat as I use to be. Sedona is still a beautiful place to visit even with the hot temperatures and population growth.


A couple days before going to the Northwest, I was told that the area was having a heat wave. So I repacked my suitcase for very hot weather, and by the time I arrived there, the heatwave was over and the chilly weather was setting in, but it was still a great experience. The flowers and mountains are quite a sight to see. I went to see family, give a talk, and do lots of sessions. I also froze, but what do I expect when I donët follow my intuition in the first place.


The Virginia trip was only for business and was my first time there. I was scheduled in two different locations.  In the airport on the way there after my two-hour wait to get into the gates, I saw a police officer with a working dog. I love animals so I thought I would ask him if I could pet his puppy.... Wrong question. I may as well have asked him if I could put my hand in his lionës mouth. I guess that I should not have even asked.


One of those places that I visited was Staunton. Apparently Staunton was known for its three mental institutions and when the Bush administration cut mental health funding, the institutions released quite a few of their patients out on the street.


I found this out because one night at three in the morning I heard a man calling out for Bootsie with a "kitty, kitty, kitty" after his call. When I brought this up in the morning with my sponsor, she told me that this man was in one of the institutions until the cuts. He is quite docile but is very low functioning. He thinks his name is Bootsie and he walks the streets calling out to all the cats using his name. I soon found out after hearing him three nights in a row that he does this every night.


How sad that he cannot have the services that he needs to be a more functioning adult.


Richmond was a wonderful place to visit. Everyone was really nice; the talk and sessions went well; and the beauty was really sweet.


The biggest cultural shock that I experienced was that of Chicago. I went there because my son joined the Navy (didnët listen to me at all), and he was graduating boot camp. I felt that I had entered another reality when I went on base to see him.


The propaganda that a video was spewing out on the large screen on the wall was quite a surprise. But what I found was the most interesting was how wrong I was to so harshly judge the families. I met many families who were as shocked and upset that their sons and daughters joined as I was. I also met a variety of different ideologies and political beliefs that didnët match the current administrationës.

I was naively expecting to see the typical military families and their children, but the people that I did meet seemed even more varied than any other group I have ever experienced.

I was quite humbled by my judgments of them, and felt quite sad for the young naval officers with their innocence, naivete and the way that they were seeing their role in the U.S. Navy. I hope that they are safe in our crazy and changing time.


Over all I feel that I saw the world through a different lens, and even though I prefer my lens, I hope that I may continue to remain compassionate for the differences that we all have.

ï

Janese Johnson has been doing intuitive counseling nationally for more than 20 years. She may be contacted at janesej-at-buncombe.main.nc.us.
 



 


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