Adventures are, by nature, unpredictable. This one was no exception, ultimately deemed "not a good fit," though it seemed like a good idea at the time. Perhaps I will one day tell the story of the 40 days at the Moultrie News. That can wait. For now, a look back my return from the woods.
From the Forest to the Newsroom
The temperature
dropped to 35 degrees my last night on the Appalachian Trail, but I left my
tent early to watch the sun rise over a New Jersey mountain and burn away the
fog that covered the Delaware River.
My fourth season as
a trail ridge runner ended on the second Monday
of this October, and while I was sad to be leaving the forest I was also
looking ahead 10 days to far warmer weather and to my wonderful new job back
home in South Carolina.
I am delighted to
join the staff of the Moultrie News and am excited to be back in the
Lowcountry. I have put away my backpack,
tent and hiking gear and am thrilled to be back in the newspaper business as a
reporter, writer and editor.
Thank you, readers,
for giving me the opportunity to share your stories and help you get to know
your neighbors and our community. Let
me share my story so you’ll know who wants to share yours.
I grew up in Greenville,
studied political science at Furman and journalism at USC and then fell in love
with being a newspaper reporter and landing my first job covering cops and city
government for the Daily Item in Sumter.
The News and
Courier hired me in 1978 to write about city government and politics. That was
during Joe Riley’s second term as mayor and the rise of the Republican Party
and fledgling politicians like Glenn McConnell and Arthur Ravenel. I chased the fire trucks and sirens on a
Sunday night in 1981 when the old Charleston museum at Calhoun and Rutledge
burned; our breaking news coverage of that fire earned a reporting award.
The State newspaper
hired me in 1982 to cover the legislature and politics and I spent a quarter
century in Columbia, raising a family, thriving in — and then leaving —the
newspaper business and doing TV news for three years as a reporter and
twice-weekly commentator. I “switched teams” in 1992, working as communications
director for state agencies, answering tough questions instead of asking them.
Charleston friends
questioned my sanity in 2005 when I told them I wanted to be public affairs
director for Charleston County schools. Maria Goodloe-Johnson, the county’s first black female school
superintendent, desperately needed spokesman and public affairs director.
Having spent a decade handling media relations for the state Department of
Social Services, I believed could handle most anything.
I got the job and
loved it. Maria moved to Seattle to run their schools in 2007 and I left the
District a few months later, happy with what I had been able to accomplish but
not a good fit for the new administration. I wept when I heard that Maria had
died; she was a wonderful person and a great boss.
The economy tanked
in 2008. I was working for the math and science charter school when a budget
crisis killed that job. Fortune smiled
and two weeks later I met Charleston attorney Larry Kobrovsky at a deposition.
He remembered my work at the State newspaper from a quarter century earlier and
later hired me to manage his 2010 Congressional campaign. We finished fourth in
the nine-man race that Tim Scott won.
Hoping for better
job prospects and thinking I might have decent
political connections, I moved to Washington DC only to end up back in
SC making the finals for a great job with the University of South
Carolina. The high-stress interviews
with the search committee and then a one-on-one with the prospective boss hit a
wall. I called later for an update only to be told they decided they weren’t
going to fill the job.
Looking back across
the years, I sometimes wonder how I have come to be here now writing this
story.
The short answer is
Mepkin Abbey. I sought peace in nature there during difficult times and then
built a relationship with the brothers during week-long retreats. The woods have always been my spiritual base,
but the mountains were out of reach and I thought the monastery might be the
answer.
Hard work, solitude
and soul-searching brought me answers and peace as I worked through anger and
disappointment and anxiety and loss.
Not knowing what
might come next, I vowed to be prepared and to get myself in the best possible
shape physically, mentally, emotionally and, especially, spiritually. Suddenly
my path seemed clear — now is the time to hike the Appalachian Trail.
I left Springer
Mountain in Georgia on April 2 for the 2,180 mile walk to Maine. (Friends and
other hikers always ask whether I saw the governor out there (haha) but I never
did, though a man in Franklin, NC told me he had once shuttled him one.)
I hiked from
Georgia to Massachusetts when Hurricane Irene blew through and took Vermont off
the hiking map. A young friend and I took a bus to New Hampshire, hiked Mt.
Washington and the White Mountains. We caught a ride to Millinocket, celebrated
our hike atop Mt. Katahdin, and then hiked south until we just decided it was
time to stop hiking.
Adventurers still,
we hitch-hiked home from the middle or nowhere in Maine — first to Virginia
Beach to my young friend’s home and then hitching alone to Mount Pleasant,
arriving here the last week in October four years ago.
I returned to the
monastery for a few days to give thanks for my journey and amazing adventures
and returned to Columbia, still seeking my path. I interviewed for a job as a
ridge runner on the Appalachian Trail but had heard nothing more. I looked to
Mepkin. Again.
The Brothers accepted
me into the monastic guest program and I spent the 40 days of Lent there in
2012, living and working and praying, living the life of a monk. Those 40 days
were, in their own way, more difficult than my six months on the AT.
The trail folks
told me I was on the waiting list for a job in New Jersey, and me while I was
at Mepkin to tell me I did not get the ridge runner job, but they asked if they
could put me on the waiting list and I said OK.
They called again in early May, offering me a job because another hiker
had gotten hurt and had to withdraw. I headed to New Jersey two weeks later and
returned each year since.
The 75 miles of
trail in New Jersey are quite beautiful and my years working there have been a
joy. Being paid to camp and hike five
days a week is “Living the Dream.” A
thru-hike is an incredible journey and I have been honored to give back the
kind of help and support that countless others gave me during my long walk
north and my hitch-hike home.
So many memories;
so many stories.
A 400-pound black bear wandered through my campsite one night
last summer. He never threatened me, but closed to within 10 yards as he
patrolled his neighborhood, but I was the only human within several miles and,
frankly, it rattled me and I moved my tent into a wilderness shelter. Another bear had attacked my tent the year
before and run off with my backpack, a crisis that ended well as I found my
pack — including my wallet, ID, debit card and car keys — a hundred yards into
the trees.
And others sometime
needed help.
Park police called
me late one Sunday night and sent me out to find three hikers who were lost and
sitting in the dark a few miles away. I found them and led them to the rangers
who transported them off the mountain.
One Sunday morning,
I came across a body laying in the road deep in the forest. I summoned help as
the man regained consciousness from a nasty bicycle accident and struggled to
remember who he was and what had happened.
I was pondering
what might come next when the job opening at the Moultrie News appeared out of
nowhere. I jumped at the opportunity.
I told Editor Sully
Witte in my interview, “I have ink in my blood” and will always be a
newspaperman at heart. Working for a
community newspaper, I added, would be “living the dream, but just without the
hiking and the tent.”
I come now to the
Moultrie News, once again a newspaperman, returning to a career and working to
share news and features in a community I love, one that shaped me personally
and professionally. The journey that has sometimes mystified me has now brought
me home.
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