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Mary McKnight's avatar

It was the summer of '86 and I was living in my first apartment sans roommate. I had already put in my daily 2 mile jog, the sun was brilliant against the bright blue sky and my boyfriend was no where to be found. (This was a frequent occurrence and a story in itself) I couldn't waste the day indoors, so I gathered my courage, told my anxiety to wait here at the apt,-that I would be back later and headed to the TaKoma Park Metro station, on my way to downtown DC. I needed to "see stuff". It's the Army BRAT in me. Shortly after I arrived on The Mall (the area with various Smithsonian Buildings, National Gallery of Art, and at one end, the Capital Building), I had to pee. I was close to the Capital, saw a door on the side, and thought, "Hey, even Congress people need to pee...there's got to be a bathroom in here somewhere". On my little quest, I discovered this underground city! It was beautiful in its opulence. Turning to one side, I see a barbershop and who, but (then) Speaker of the House, Tip O'Neil, getting his haircut! Cool. Still, I need a bathroom, so I asked one of the security people, who didn't bat an eyelash at the super tanned, white shorts, best olive green tank top ever, toe ringed sandaled 20 something and pointed me in the direction of the women's toilette. Oh my stars!!!! Now THAT was a bathroom! It was gorgeous in its detail, gold everywhere (or so it seemed), no gross smell, and most importantly, an open stall. Ahhhhhhh....after I finished my quest, I went out the same door I had come in and thought, "Cool" and took myself for a Flying Fruit Fantasy at a place on Federal Triangle. The freedom of choosing to not wait...to not wait for my boyfriend (who disappointed me over and over again with his absence), not wait for a "better day" not wait for my anxiety to "go away" (it's still with me, I divorced the boyfriend who I STUPIDLY married a few years later thinking, "He'll change"...he won't), not waiting brought me that most memorable day.

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judi hoffman's avatar

What a sweet prompt and great image of Humpy's.

I grew up near Boston but always knew I wanted to be a farmer (or Dian Fossey). Every weekend as a teenager, I took the train to Cambridge and strolled around all day pretending to myself that I went to Harvard or MIT. One of my favorite places was a hole-in-the-wall organic produce store called Erewhon, and one lucky day I noticed a small hand-written notice on the bulletin board: "Summer help wanted on organic farm, free room and board. $25/week". A month later my parents dropped me off an hour from home at the farm of total strangers.

What did I expect, and how did that match with reality? I knew absolutely nothing about everything, and I expected just to be happy on a farm. But one of those ignorant moments formed the philosophy of my life. In the corn rows the farmer asked if knew how to drive a tractor. (I'm 17 years old...from Boston...uh....) "Hop on". I made my way down the row feeling like Lawrence of Arabia on a camel. Didn't run over too many stalks, got to the end of the row, and realized he never told me where the brake was. Took the tractor straight into the woods until it stopped. From that moment I learned this: Drive into the woods until you figure out where the brake is. Whatever you want to do, whatever pickle you find yourself in, figure it out. Those brakes are somewhere. And if you don't know what a radish looks like when it's underground, just scratch the dirt away a little.

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