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The
Truth About Camping By Todd Werkhoven ____________________ Although
I’m not what you would call an "avid outdoorsman," I do like being
outdoors. Weather permitting, I enjoy hiking, kayaking, skiing,
walking, swimming, and the occasional curling match. But there¹s one
thing I can’t tolerate: camping. My
wife loves camping. All of my friends love camping. I
can’t stand it. While everyone else thinks that it’s because I
don’t like "being one" with nature (a phrase which always sort of
creeps me out), it has a much simpler explanation: I don¹t like to pretend
I’m homeless. Nothing against the homeless, but millions of years
of evolution tells me that living indoors is preferable to living outdoors, what
with the roof and walls and whatnot. Again,
this has little to do with enjoying the outdoors. The Pacific
Northwest has a bevy of beautiful, varied terrain from the mountains to the
desert to caves to the ocean, and I’m not saying that just because I like the
word "bevy." There are thousands of inspiring natural features here,
and I’ve enjoyed many of them. But really – there’s no need to
live there. That’s why God made the Holiday Inn. Back
to the issue of coming back home. You¹ve "enjoyed" your
day of nature, now you have to spend several hours putting the things you¹ve
just unpacked back into your car. And let me tell you, it’s going
to fight going back in. Somehow you now have three carloads full of
crap instead of one, because the woods apparently multiply your possessions
while you sleep. (And when I say "sleep" in regards to camping, I mean
"when my body is 400 degrees in the sleeping bag, my head is 12 degrees
outside the sleeping bag, and the stump I’ve accidentally set the tent on is
getting a little too friendly.") And everything you cart back home
including you has that "camping smarm" on it: that campfire
smoke/dried sweat/sticky hands/forest floor/insect spray/dirt layer of filth
that’s coating you and everything you own. Once you¹re home you
have to take all your stuff back out of the car, put it away again (campers must
love mundane repetitiveness), and do the 12 loads of laundry it takes to get the
camping smarm off your sleeping bags and clothes. I feel relaxed and
rejuvenated already. The
way I see it, to camp is to do a phenomenal disservice to our ancestors. Can you
imagine going back a thousand or a couple thousand years and telling the people
frantically burrowing into the side of a hill for warmth, "I¹ve got a
house, bed, pillows, blankets, fridge-full of food, chairs, couches, and
showers. “But you know what? That’s not for me. I’m
‘outdoors-y.’" Good luck with that. After you
recover from the punch in the face (or mace to the skull or blow dart to the
neck or whatever they did back then), you will then be offered up to their gods
as a sacrifice to ward off extreme stupidity. The people that
came before us worked really hard for us to not live outside. We
should honor their spirit.
____________________ No animals were harmed in the making of Todd's vast mink coat collection. Except for the minks. |
(c) Defenestration Magazine, 2004