From Montana, With Love
As I write this, I’m sitting at the Billings Logan
International Airport. Calling it international is kind of a joke because all
of their flights to Canada are cancelled currently until further notice due to
runway renovation. My summer adventures in Montana are over. It’s a very
bittersweet feeling. This has been one of the greatest experiences in my life,
and I am somewhat loath to let that go. At the same time, school is starting
again, and I need to get back to my friends and my real job of finishing my
damn degree.
Right now, I’m looking like a native Montanan. Traditionally,
when flying, I wear whatever I can’t fit in my suitcase. This time around, this
includes both a Stetson hat and a pair of Ariat boots that I love but take up
too much space. I also have on my lovely 406 necklace that’s in the shape of
Montana. I’m going to miss this place. It helps that they people here at the
airport are pretty slack when it comes to checking-in. They didn’t even weigh
my bag, and even the TSA agents are super friendly. Well, super friendly is
relative. They aren’t more dickish than they have to be, which I’m willing to
accept.
I lived in Montana for much of my childhood, and while I
have very fond memories of being here, they’re the memories of a kid. I can
think about running outside through what seemed like endless prairie, and
scrabbling across rocks that touched the sky, but I think that we all tend to
romanticize our childhoods. That in mind, I worried that when I got here, it
wouldn’t be the place that I remembered and that I had missed for so long. I
was so wrong. This place is unlike any other.
At the gate, my mom, told me to “remember to come home”
which sounded like it should have been in a cheap romcom. It’s the kind of
thing you’re supposed to say, but don’t. I like to think that she was referring
to this place, where my heart really is, and not just seeing my family. The
past few months I have felt more alive than I have in years. Something about
this place just agrees with me. It could be the open air, the rugged nature
around every corner, the people...it’s hard to put my finger on it. But this is
the place for me.
Going back to Halifax, although necessary, has become a
temporary thing for me. I’m making plans right now to come back to this place.
I usually cry at the airport. It’s become kind of a thing for me. Today I’m not
feeling sad. In the movie A River Runs
Through It, delightfully written and set in Montana, one brother says to
another, “Montana will always be here.” And that’s true. It’s the Last Best Place, and I can’t imagine a
world without it.
I know that I am destined for further travel. It’s part of
who I am. I want to wander. I want to explore. But I’ll always find my way
home.
From Montana, for the last time,
Cait
Well hey bloggy people. I’m not in
the airport anymore! I got home last night incredibly late after more than 16
hours of airporting and driving and carting luggage around (without a cart).
After sleeping until noon, I realized ALL the things I have to do to get back
into the swing of things. That said, I’ve got a couple more Montana adventures
that I am trying to get up ASAP, and then I’ve got a pile of mail from all summer that I have to go through. I’ve
gotten a ton of new products to test and try so it should be a fun couple
weeks.
Then it’s back to school...for the last time. Gasp. But that’s another post. Anyway. I’ll talk to y’all soon.