Showing posts with label the big picture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the big picture. Show all posts

Friday, May 23, 2008

"How can I help?"

Although the FAQ covers some of this, I thought I would take some time to review in greater detail the many ways in which you, Dear Reader, can help a poor bloke out during his trudge across America.

1. Donate. There are two principal ways to do this at present: (a) contribute via PayPal, or (b) mail me your check or money order contribution. If you choose to go the PayPal route (click the PayPal Donate button on my blog's sidebar), be aware that PayPal takes about 4% of your contribution for itself; this is how it makes money. For those who prefer snail mail, you can send your check or money order to:

Kevin Kim
PO Box 6
Mount Vernon, VA 22121-0006


Thank you for contributing! The goal is to collect about $6000 to defray anticipated costs.* Be aware that I do not plan to use your contributions until I'm out of my main source of funds. Contributions, then, are sitting in the PayPal account as a last resort. And yes, check and money order contributions will end up in the PayPal account, because I want to keep donations separate from the money I earn. Whatever money remains in the PayPal account after the Walk is finished will be given to charity; I won't be keeping it. The money isn't there for my financial gain; it's there only to help me get by.

2. Buy my book or CafePress products. You can purchase my book Water from a Skull here; you can read about it here. You can shop for CafePress products here. I'd actually prefer your business to your contributions, as I feel less guilty about doing business with you than I do about simply accepting money.

3. Host me for a night or two. Are you interested in talking about religious diversity? Why not host me for a night or two? Be advised that I'll need the following things from you:

a. a place to shower, poop, and do laundry (and I'd rather not do all those activities in the same basin, please)
b. permission to audio- or video-record our exchange(s)
c. directions showing me a legal walking route to my next destination (i.e., you'll have to have planned that out in advance)
d. a place to sleep

Food is optional! I won't mind going without food. NB: I'll be passing through a lot of unfamiliar country, so I'd also appreciate your travel wisdom re: what to wear, how to deal with different kinds of local weather, etc.

4. Arrange for a local religious community to host me for a night or two. This would be the standard approach. If you see that I'm going to be in your area, and if you're roughly at the midpoint between two of my known destinations, why not get your church, temple, etc. involved? I'd be happy to meet and greet all of you, though as with (3) above, I'll need wash facilities, directions to the next place I'm visiting, and a place to sleep.

5. Respond to blegging. Every now and then, I'm likely to blog that "I'm getting low on X!" For example, I might observe that I'm low on Q-tips-- an absolute must for my nasty ears. Without a daily Q-tip treatment, my ears rapidly become as fetid as Gollum's soul. I might also bleg** that I need a thicker coat, so if you have a used one that might come in handy, think about sending it my way (assuming I have the presence of mind to blog the address of my next arrival point).

By the way, unless you know for sure that I'm traveling in frigid temperatures, never mail me candy. The results are always disastrous.

6. Walk part of the way with me! I haven't thought this one through all the way, but I figure I'll be wanting a travel companion every now and again. Perhaps a member of Church B could accompany me to Synagogue C, and we could all sit down for an interfaith meal? Among the problems with having a travel companion (or companions) is that the people at the next destination might be expecting to host only one person. This is something to think about.

7. Become a "Kevin's Walk Central" member. Want to help me coordinate the route? It's likely that several people or organizations will contact me from out of the blue, all asking that I visit their site. If that's the case, I'll need help picking and choosing if these good folks all live in roughly the same region. I haven't firmed up what the organizational structure of Kevin's Walk Central would look like, and I sure as hell know that I can't pay anyone for this work... but I guarantee the job won't be thankless.

If you're willing to join Kevin's Walk Central or would like to offer KWC some route-planning advice, please write KWC at:

kevinswalkcentral [at] gmail [dot] com

For very specific information about what you can do as part of Kevin's Walk Central, please, please read this very important post.

8. Provide me with a computer to work on. My basic computer needs, when I arrive at any given place, will be focused on email, but I will also need to upload photos and videos from my camera or Blackberry, not to mention sound files from my voice recorder, to my blog. The ideal setup would be (a) email capability, (b) Photoshop Elements (I'm not familiar with Corel & would need tutoring), (c) USB2 connectivity, and (d) Google Earth, to allow me to see where I'm going next. If you're a household with dial-up, well... I don't know what to say.

9. Volunteer to document the Walk! Are you a film student looking for a potentially interesting topic? Well, I can't provide you any pay (you'll have to use your head and figure out funding on your own), but I can provide you with my own life, for the next year or two, as grist for a filmic narrative.

10. Tell everyone you know about the Walk! Spread the word, get people interested and involved, and let's see what happens. The more people who know what's happening, the more likely I am to meet interesting people as I make my way south and east. On the practical side, I'm also more likely to get funding, and there's less financial "burden" on each reader if there are plenty of readers! Imagine telling 50 readers that I need them to pass the hat and raise $10,000. Now imagine telling the same thing to 10,000 readers.

11. Anything else...?





*We'll probably have to revise this upward to some ungodly number. At the moment, I'm thinking $20,000, but am not quite ready to make an official announcement to that effect. (This note was written on July 10, 2008, while at the law library of Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon.) The reason for this is mainly my use of hotels and motels along the way. I have tried to avoid camping illegally, and my manager Alan Cook has been assiduous in his pursuit of CouchSurfing leads for me, but I still bleed a lot of cash thanks to the paid lodging, which so far has varied from 40 dollars a night (paper-thin walls) to 200 dollars a night (that was in Bellingham, and was a mistake-- but that hotel was also the only one in the area that had room for a person for two nights).

**For those who don't know the lingo, the word "bleg" is a combination of "blog" and "beg," i.e., to beg via blogging.


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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

say again?

IMPORTANT: Those of you who have emailed or left comments with kind offers to lodge me during my walk are hereby asked to email me with your names and addresses so I can plot your locations on a map and see whether a coherent path can be made out of all this information. Quite a few of you will very likely be excluded (no matter what path I walk through the Lower Forty-eight, I'm going to miss 99.9999% of the country!), and I apologize for that in advance.

After much thought, I've decided that opening the Walk up to individuals as well as to religious communities is only appropriate. One reason is that individuals in a private setting might feel more comfortable saying what they really feel one-on-one, away from the possible pressure of a group setting. Another, more selfish, reason is that it's far easier for me to make room-and-board arrangements with an individual than with a church, temple, etc. Because I'm allowing this option, the dots in my "connect the dots" tour can be closer together than they might be otherwise.

So send me your address if you're a reader and are willing to have me shack up at your place for a night or two (keep in mind that I might be there longer if we have nasty weather!). Also: if you know people along the probable path of my walk, people who would also be interested in talking religion with me, let them know about this blog and see if you can't persuade them either to get personally involved or to get their local church, mosque, temple, synagogue, etc., involved.

By the way, it would help if your house were equipped not only with a computer, but with one that has Google Earth. I've come to rely heavily on this amazing tool, and see no reason to tough things out old-school when something this handy is available. Being able to see the terrain I'll be walking through is incalculably beneficial to me. Thanks!

In other news...

Tomorrow I attempt my first thirty-mile walk, unencumbered. I view this walk with a bit of trepidation, but I'm confident I can do it, if for no other reason than that the terrain will be even smoother once I'm in Old Town Alexandria. The halfway point for a 30-mile walk that starts from my house is right around National Airport; I saw this today when driving Dad home from Walter Reed Medical Center (no worries; Dad simply got an injection to help with a persistent back problem). Having biked beyond the airport before, I know the bike path remains fairly smooth even after Old Town.

The only real question is whether my armpits will be able to withstand the chafing involved in a 30-mile walk; having solved the crotch problem with decent Spandex pants, I know I'll need something similar for my upper body. Come to think of it, I also need new shoes: my current pair, already a couple years old, have started to wear out thanks to the pounding they've received over the past three weeks.

Anyway, write to kevinswalk [at] gmail [dot] com, and put "ADDRESS" in the subject line so I know what your mail's about and can sort it accordingly. Feel free to leave other remarks as well.


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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

some possible paths for the walk

Here's an animated look at what I hope the walk will be like, as well as what I fear the walk might be like:





You saw, in the above animation, a route labelled "possible, but circuitous." Taking that route during the winter might not be a bad thing, and traveling along the West Coast would allow me to hit more than a few Buddhist temples along with all the other houses of worship, but what worries me about a U-shaped path is that it promises to take a long time.

I'd rather not spend more than two years on this walk; in fact, I'd like to have it done before I turn 40, which will be on August 31, 2009. That gives me fifteen months to cross the US. As discussed long ago (see FAQ, Question 8), it's theoretically possible to cross the country in 150-200 days if I average 20 miles a day, travel every single day, and follow a route that's about 3000-4000 miles in length. But realistically speaking, I can expect the walk to last longer than a year. Is fifteen months also too short? When we include the possibility of injury, fatigue, discussions that last more than a single day, etc., the timetable for the walk begins to stretch like Einsteinian taffy. I hope that I can, in fact, make it back home before my 40th birthday, but life doesn't come with guarantees, now, does it?

Perhaps it's enough just to come home in one piece, eh?


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Tuesday, May 6, 2008

one of those strange observations

When I was at church this past Sunday, two people wondered why I was starting in Canada. They seemed unable to process the notion that a walk across America (as in the United States of America, not the more generic North America) might start outside the country. I'm guessing they didn't check their church newsletter from a month or so back, wherein this blog's address was advertised. Had they visited the blog and viewed the FAQ, they'd have seen that this walk is indeed a walk across the United States: I start just across the border in Canada because a Canadian friend of mine invited me there, but once I cross the US/Canada border, I'm heading to the Pacific, touching the water, then striking generally east and south until I hit the Atlantic-- all while within the borders of the mainland United States.

I hope this clears things up. This is in good sooth a walk across America in the sense most people understand it. Consider the short Canadian leg a prelude, if you will; that's how my Canuck buddy views it.


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Saturday, May 3, 2008

the die is cast

I bought my plane ticket for Vancouver today. I arrive there the evening of the 26th and begin Kevin's Walk the following morning.

I also completed a training chart for the rest of my time here in Virginia. It gets me from where I am now-- walking 3.1mph for 10 miles, unencumbered-- to where I need to be: able to walk 30 miles with a 70-pound load on my back.

If any of my readers have schedules that permit them to meet up with me during my training (and I'll be training seven days a week), they should feel free to meet me at the Mile 0 marker of the George Washington Parkway bike path. On weekdays, I'll make an effort to leave the house around 7AM (possibly earlier); this means I'll be at the Mile 0 marker around 7:35AM or 7:40AM. I hit Mile 3 on the walk a little after 9:30AM. If you've been following the blog, you can roughly calculate my speed, and if you use Google Earth, you can figure out approximately where I'll be on the bike path as long as I consistently begin at 7AM.

Remember, when calculating where I am, that the walk from my house (whose location I won't disclose, for the sake of my family's privacy) to the Mile 0 marker is exactly two miles. Because I do about an 18-minute mile (i.e., slightly over 3mph), this means I'll have walked about 36 minutes by the time I hit Mile 0. Keep that in mind when trying to figure out where to meet me. Remember, too, that a three-hour walk means 90 minutes out, then about 90 minutes back home. If you position yourself too far along the path, you might not catch the fact that I've doubled back. One last thing: I expect my speed to go down as my encumbrance goes up. By the time I'm carrying 70 pounds on my back, I expect to be gallumphing along at a mere 2.5mph. Factor that into your calculations as well.

My training schedule:

May 4: (easy day) 2-hour walk (Mom's birthday, too!)
May 5: 4-hr walk, 10 pounds' encumbrance
May 6: 4-hr walk, 15 pounds
May 7: 4.5-hr walk, 20 pounds
May 8: 4.5-hr walk, 20 pounds
May 9: 5-hr walk, 30 pounds
May 10: 5-hr walk, 30 pounds
May 11: (easy day) 4-hr walk, 10 pounds
May 12: 5-hr walk,35 pounds (halfway point for time/distance and weight!)
May 13: 5.5-hr walk, 35 pounds
May 14: 6-hr walk, 35 pounds
May 15: 6-hr walk, 40 pounds
May 16: 6.5-hr walk, 40 pounds
May 17: 7-hr walk, 45 pounds (at least 20 miles walked)
May 18: (easy day) 6-hr walk, 30 pounds
May 19: 7-hr walk, 45 pounds
May 20: 8-hr walk, 50 pounds
May 21: 8.5-hr walk, 60 pounds
May 22: 9-hr walk, 65 pounds
May 23: 9.5-hr walk, 65 pounds
May 24: 10-hr walk, 70 pounds (at least 27 miles)
May 25: 10-hr walk, 70 pounds (try for 30 miles)

I don't expect I'll actually make 30 miles in the allotted time on the 25th, but I hope to give it a try. On the 26th, I won't be walking at all, of course: I'll be in transit to Vancouver!

Hope to see you on the path.


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Wednesday, April 16, 2008

hey, what's the big idea?

My brother David recently wondered what this blog was about. Well, it's about a specific project called Kevin's Walk, but the walk doesn't actually begin until late May, so I have some time to muck around, give my tiny readership a chance to get to know me, and basically lay the groundwork for what's to come. Don't be surprised if you see posts about politics, religion, fart humor, and whatever else comes to mind. Once the walk begins, the blog will snap into focus, but in the meantime, just sit back, settle in, and enjoy the meanderings.

IMPORTANT UPDATE:

[NB: Please check out this What's the Big Idea? post before reading what follows.]

What would a typical Kevin's Walk day look like from your perspective? Well, let's suppose you're a member of a religious community-- say, a Presbyterian who knows I'm arriving. Let's further assume today's Monday, though I suppose the day of the week doesn't matter much if we've made arrangements beforehand. The schedule might look something like this:

4:30PM: Kevin arrives, bedraggled and sweaty, at the church or at the residence of a church member. (This will have been decided in advance.)

4:35PM: Kevin greets whoever's there to greet him; round of handshakes, photos taken, polite silence regarding the stink doubtless wafting off Kevin's body. Kevin broaches the uncomfortable subject by asking where he can shower and change his clothes. A volunteer says, "We've arranged for you to go to the Jones family's house; you can shower there now and come back here, to the church, and then you'll spend the night at the family's residence." Kevin offers his thanks.

4:35-5:30PM: Kevin walks over to the Jones's place (no vehicles for Kevin unless he's seriously injured!), sets down his backpack, showers, rinses out his clothes, puts on a clean set of clothing, and announces he's ready to walk back to the church (or to stay there and have the talk).

5:35-7:30PM: Dinner (optional; giving food to Kevin is ALWAYS optional) and religion-talk at or near the church (or at the Jones's place), which will be recorded (possibly transcribed later, or the sound/video file will simply be uploaded).

7:35PM: Kevin discusses his next destination with the people he's been talking to. This might involve the use of Google Earth or Google Maps or something more old-school. The end result is that Kevin will have a physical set of directions describing a PLAUSIBLE and LEGAL walking route to his next waypoint.

9PM: Kevin will be at the Jones's place, using their computer (if they have a decent one) for the next 1.5 to 2 hours to upload photos and blog some brief insights.

11:15PM: Kevin will sleep wherever he's been told to sleep.

6:15AM: Kevin wakes up, brushes his teeth and performs other morning necessaries, collects the clothes that will have dried, packs his gear, thanks the Joneses, and heads off to his next destination by 7:15AM.

Comments: This routine can vary, of course. If I arrive somewhere later than anticipated, for example, this might necessitate a rescheduling of activities. If it turns out I have to stay in a certain area for more than one night, I'm not against staying at different residences so as to distribute the burden of caring for me among several people/families. I might also say "yes" to hanging around in a certain area to earn some extra cash for my trip. Other factors that might vary include food, sleep location (someone might prefer that I camp in their yard rather than enter the house), places to hold the religion talk, etc. I might end up needing several days to walk to a given destination, which means I'll be camping. Nothing is written in stone.



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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

how many folks have traversed the country?

I was curious to know how many people have walked across the continental United States. This article claims that no solid figures are available, but guesses that the America-crossers might number in the hundreds.


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Monday, April 7, 2008

from the Maven

This link contains some great travel wisdom, not to mention wonderful quotes from Anaïs Nin and John Muir.

(Thanks, Maven!)


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Saturday, April 5, 2008

nostalgia: part 1

As my time in Korea draws to a close and I ready myself for the return home to Alexandria, Virginia (where I'll spend a month with my folks before beginning the Walk), I find myself in an increasingly pensive, nostalgic mood. You'll have to pardon me, in this case, because as I think about the potential health benefits of the upcoming Walk, I can't help remembering that, although I've never been skinny, there was a time when I was a lot less, uh, substantial than I am now.

Here's me in 1995, not looking skinny at all, but still thinner than I currently am:



Here's a 1994 shot that shows I was a bit thinner the previous year:



And finally, here's a shot from 1991 that has me pining for the old days:



In later posts, I'll be showing you pics from the life I've lived for the past three years-- the university I'll be leaving, and the students who've made an impression on me.


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Friday, March 14, 2008

places I'd like to visit during the Walk

I'd love to be able to hit any (or all!) of the following:

churches/cathedrals (of various denominations)
temples (Buddhist, Sikh, Hindu, etc.)
religious centers (Zen centers and the like)
mosques
ashrams (wherever they might be)
cloisters/hermitages
universities (I'd like to pepper the Walk with some academese)
synagogues

As mentioned before, I understand that I most likely won't be sleeping overnight in the actual houses of worship; that's fine with me. Spending a night at the home of a clergyperson or layperson is a delightful prospect.

You may have noticed that I mentioned universities above. That was deliberate: while I hope to spend most of my time meeting folks from all different backgrounds, I think it might be a good idea to mingle, periodically, with academics. Why? Because while academics might occasionally be off in their own little worlds, it's that very distance that often allows them to see the Big Picture, to put matters in perspective, to tease out grand themes and underlying concepts. And let's face it: while I'll never be a truly rigorous scholar, I do share certain geeky personality traits with hardcore academics. It'll be a pleasure to talk with them.

As the Walk approaches, I realize more and more how little I actually know about any of the religions I hope to encounter, including my own. This occurred to me the other day as I was mulling over the question of timing-- I'll be arriving at certain holy sites at special times of the year. What ceremonies will I be likely to see? Not knowing much about the liturgical calendars of the major religions (even with Buddhism, the religion with which I am most acquainted outside of Christianity, my studies tended to focus more on the metaphysical aspects and less on the concrete, practical questions of ritual, liturgy, and other "external" signs of praxis), I have no idea what I might be walking into, although I'm pretty sure I won't be encountering any human sacrifice.

Anyway, the thought of passing by (and through) the great diversity of the American religious landscape, of meeting all sorts of interesting people and talking with them about interreligious issues, has me very much looking forward to this journey.


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Friday, March 7, 2008

what's the big idea?

I'm going to be asking you folks for a lot. In this post, I want to explain what, exactly, I'm going to need from the people I meet as I make my way eastward across America.

One recurrent question has been, "What's your route?" I thought long and hard about whether I should be planning my route in great detail, or whether I should "put myself in God's hands," going where the wind blows me.

I've decided that, given the Walk's religious theme, I'd like to try putting my life into the hands of the people I meet. This is a concept I'd had long before I had heard about Mark Boyle, a plucky, mid-20s Irishman who had done well in the business world, but then decided to rely on the compassion of his fellow human beings as he made his way-- with almost no possessions-- from his native land to Gandhi's birthplace in Porbandar, India.*

My concept, though, isn't nearly as radical as Mr. Boyle's. I plan on having a backpack. I'm hoping to be prepared for whatever weather I might encounter, based on geography and season. And I'm going to be a bit more forward than Mr. Boyle about my expectations, because I want my route to plan itself for me.

I'll be starting my Walk in Coquitlam, British Columbia, a city not far from Vancouver and not far from the US border. I'm starting there because I'm lucky enough to have a good friend out yonder who is not only excited about this Walk, but who has very kindly offered to help me get through the Walk's first baby steps.

Say hello once again to the inimitable Nathan Bauman.

As I wrote in my FAQ post, the Walk is to be a kind of "connect the dots" between various religious communities and centers-- churches, temples, synagogues, mosques, ashrams, and whatever else I might encounter along the way. I'm hoping that the space between the "dots" will be no more than 20 to, at maximum, 30 miles.

But in order to connect the dots, I need some dots to connect! I want this to be a path not of my planning: once the first house of worship takes me, they'll be the ones to point me on to the next house of worship.

So what I need is simply a house of worship within a 30-mile radius of the previous house of worship (or religious center, or whatever label is appropriate). Well before I arrive, the previous "dot" will pass along to the next "dot" the fact that

(1) I plan to stay just for a night (two maximum, depending on how late in the day I arrive, though this might change if inclement weather becomes a problem), that

(2) I want to talk with the laity and/or clergy for a few hours (say, 2-4 hours, if they want), that

(3) I'll need a place to sleep, shower, shave, etc., and that

(4) giving me food is purely optional. I can sleep on their building's grounds if they want, or if there's a nearby residence (owned by a member of the laity or clergy), I'll gladly spend the night there.

ALSO: people need to be willing to be audio- and/or video-recorded during the discussion, and I need their permission to be (a) written about and (b) displayed on the walk blog. I have zero intention of badmouthing or otherwise acting ungrateful toward any of the people I meet, so they shouldn't worry about negative publicity from me. Recorded conversations will be posted in their entirety on the site so I can't be accused of editing unfairly.

Another thing I need from that community will be guidance as to where I'm going next. This can take one of two forms: someone can walk with me to the next spot, or they can draw me a map that guides me to the next spot, including as much detail as will be necessary to get me there safely.

Finally, I want a promise from each religious community that they'll keep in touch with the next (and previous) place(s) I visit. Example: after I leave Spot B, I want the B people to remain in touch with spots A and C. Hopefully, A and C will represent different religious traditions from B, and that will be the groundwork for some sort of interreligious praxis.** If not interreligious, then interdenominational.


Another question I have gotten from several sources is, "What about travel companions?" --or I've gotten its variant, usually delivered as an incredulous, "Are you doing this alone?"

This may be a good time to wax a bit religious:

You're never alone.

Various traditions deal with this question in different ways. If you see the world as the meeting-place of big and small powers, of sprites and fairies and djinni and elementals, of ghosts and demons and deity-pantheons and fantastic beasts, then how can you ever feel alone? Or: if you believe in one personal god who created all things, who breathes life and love into the very flesh and bone of reality, then how can you ever feel alone? If you see the world-- yourself included-- as a roiling, flowing network of process and interconnection, with each place and moment like the strand of a spiderweb, vibrating the whole whenever a single part is plucked, then how can you ever feel alone? Even if you believe in none of these things but hold that human beings, animals, plants, and the entire good earth form a biotic and abiotic whole, how can you ever feel alone? By rights, aloneness shouldn't be part of anyone's worldview.*** It's unfortunate that it is.

So, no: I'm not doing this alone. I'm doing this with you.

But having given that rather abstract answer, let me now turn to the more practical dimension of the question: what about travel companions?

Because I'm a rather pronounced introvert, you might say I'm predisposed to not wanting all that many travel companions, but this isn't to say that I'm a damn hermit, either. For introverts, the right travel companion can make a long walk a true pleasure, but the wrong travel companion can rapidly turn one's heaven into a hell. While having the wrong company along might be considered, by some, a good opportunity to practice virtues like patience and humility, my inner pragmatist tells me that this Walk, a once-in-a-lifetime thing, needn't become a theater of self-abuse. So let's just say that I'm open to the possibility of travel companions, but that I might be a bit... selective.

Then again, who knows? I'm generally of affable demeanor, and I try to see the good in those I meet, so having a companion or two might actually be quite a good thing, something I might thoroughly enjoy. Can people grow to despise each other in the space of thirty miles? ...Nah.

The ideal, I think, would be to have, at most, one or two travel companions who accompany me from their starting Point A to the next religious community at Point B. The people at Point B would welcome all of us with open arms, we'd eat and talk and spend the night together, and then, in the morning, I'd continue on to Point C with new companions (members of the Point B community), while the Point A people would head on back to Point A, perhaps accompanied by another delegation from Point B. The result of these little interactions would be, I hope, the blossoming of a new relationship between and among the connected communities, a chain of interreligious flourishing. That is, after all, the small promise I want kept by every community with which I come in contact.

Does this concept seem sound to you? Feel free to leave comments. And if you want to help Nathan out, please offer him suggestions as to where my very first "dot" should be.

I'll be writing more later on this Walk of mine, but I hope you can see the basic idea behind it now.







*Mark's been having some major difficulties, as one might imagine, but I wish him well.

**The boldface section of this post is a reedited version of an email I sent to Nathan a while back.

***I realize there's a distinction between "aloneness" and "loneliness," where the first term might or might not have a negative valence whereas the second term is always negative (who wants to feel lonely?). I admit I've conflated the two concepts a bit here, but not by much: when we say "I feel alone," we're usually saying the same thing as, "I feel lonely." So I crave your understanding.


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Saturday, January 19, 2008

intro and FAQ

[UPDATE, June 9, 2009: Ever since my mother was diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme, an incurable type of brain tumor (the most famous GBM victim is Ted Kennedy), the walk has been cancelled. Feel free to browse the blog and read about the walk, my convalescence in Walla Walla and northern Virginia, my random thoughts on movies, TV, life, the universe, and everything, etc. But skip to the April 16, 2009 post titled "Mom in hospital" to learn more about our family's current struggle, or if you want a super-quick summary, read this post. My apologies if you had been hoping to read about a 3000-mile adventure. I did, however, cross 600 miles. Alas, 600 miles doesn't look all that big when plotted out on Google Maps.]


Welcome to Kevin's Walk! If you're peeping at this blog before May of 2008, you'll likely be disappointed, as the walk won't have started yet. Most of the pre-walk blogging will be devoted to general planning and self-improvement.

Of course, if this is your first visit, you'll be wanting to know what the heck this is all about, and that's the function of this "intro/FAQ" post. Without further ado, then, let's plunge right into it.


1. WHO IS THIS "KEVIN"?

[UPDATE, 9/12/08: If you've got a short attention span and don't want the details of my recent years, here's the 25-word summary of who I am: A dude interested in religious questions who has left a cushy job in Seoul and is walking across the US to see the religious landscape. Now skip everything that follows and move on to Question 2, realize you didn't learn very much from the above, and go back and read the lengthier write-up!]

Kevin is Your Humble Narrator, Kevin Kim. I'm 38 years old as of this writing, and have been living in Seoul, South Korea, for a total of about seven years. I'm very interested in questions of interreligious dialogue, philosophy of religion, philosophy of mind, and so on, and have even put together a book of scattered thoughts on the subject titled Water from a Skull, an image that comes from Korean Buddhism. You can find the book here if you're interested.

I graduated from Georgetown University in 1991 with a BSLA in French and a minor in what was termed "theology," but was actually religious studies. I tend to think that people who study or "do" theology have a vested personal interest in the subject; it's hard to imagine an atheist approaching the field with any gusto. Religious studies, on the other hand, is a field of inquiry open to anyone of any metaphysical conviction, be that person atheist or agnostic or "spiritual, not religious" or a member of a specific tradition.

From 1991 to 1992, I was a substitute teacher in the Fairfax County Public Schools system, a job that rapidly wore on me as I realized just how little respect young teachers get from their students, and how little patience I had for said students. From 1992 to 1994, I taught French and English at Bishop O'Connell High School in Arlington, Virginia, and while I enjoyed certain aspects of teaching-- my colleagues, plus the better students-- I found that teaching teens simply didn't agree with me. So instead of torturing myself and my students any further, I took the cosmic hint and left the profession after two years in the game.

But teaching was something I liked doing, a fact I realized when I went to South Korea in the summer of 1994. I had simply been teaching the wrong age group; college students and adults, people who paid for their lessons and generally wanted to be there, turned out to be a much better crowd to teach to. I taught English conversation in Korea for two years (1994-1996) before returning to the States. While my time teaching Korean students had been more than pleasant (I also made some good friends while in Seoul), I did experience the ass-end of expat life in Korea. My first boss tried to stiff me for a month's pay, plus the so-called "retirement allowance" given to all foreign teachers at the end of their contract. I sued my boss; he counter-sued me; I ended up winning both suits. The experience, while bitter, was nevertheless instructive: I learned a lot about myself, and I learned a lot about human nature, almost as much as I had been learning from my daily teaching routine.

I came back to the States in 1996 and remained there until 2002. During that time, I worked at a pleasant job in Washington, DC (hello, APIC!), and attended grad school at Catholic University (DC) from 1999 to 2002. I began as a part-time student, which proved prohibitively expensive; I had been told that full scholarships were available only to those enrolling full-time, so that's what I did after one semester of financial torture. I had to compete for the scholarship, but I got it, which was a good thing. Unfortunately, I also accepted a mess of Sallie Mae student loans along with the scholarship, and used those loans to pay my rent while I was studying so as to give myself more time to study. The end result was an "A" average for my graduate career, but also a mountain of debt that I have been, ever so slowly, paying off (along with the remains of my Georgetown student loan debt). I mention this because it figures into the Walk, as you'll see later.

My Master's coursework at Catholic U (hereinafter "CUA") was under the rubric of "Religion and Culture," but my specific interests were in Asian philosophy and religion, interreligious dialogue, and philosophy of religion (my interest in philosophy of mind is a recent development). I took the required courses in Catholic theology and "method" as per the requirements of my program; they and all the other courses were taught by cheerful, competent profs, and I learned a lot from them and from my classmates.

I graduated with my MA in 2002, and had thought to continue on to a Ph.D, perhaps with Buddhist studies as my primary focus, along with secondary and tertiary concentrations in philosophy of religion and so on. With that in mind, I went back to Korea in September of 2002 for the purpose of learning more Korean, and perhaps picking up classical Chinese along the way.

This was not to be. Although I did do a semester of Korean at Korea University's excellent Hanguk-eo Gyoyuk Saen-t'eo (Korean Language Education Center), I found myself dealing with my crushing scholastic debt, so I once again fell into teaching English. From 2002 to 2004, this meant private tutoring, which is illegal. In 2004, I found a job teaching at a language institute in Kangnam, i.e., the south part of Seoul, and stayed at the job while hunting for university work. From 2005 to the present, I've been teaching at my mother's old college, Sookmyung Women's University. By the beginning of 2007, I had saved enough money to pay off both my credit card debt (I remain debt-free on that front) and a personal debt to a Korean relative. All that remains now is my enormous scholastic debt, which tips the scales at over $70,000. For anyone who thinks I'm looking to get rich quick, rest assured that prosperity isn't coming my way anytime soon.

My time at Sookmyung has been fantastic. What an amazing change from teaching at those hagwons (language institutes)! While life at Sookmyung is occasionally hagwonish in nature, it's a far cry from the oppressive ambience I experienced in the '90s. This has been, without a doubt, the best job I've ever had, and it's something of a shame to let it go. I do plan to return to Korea after the Walk, however, so I won't be saying goodbye forever. I might even return to Sookmyung itself, if they'll have me.


2. WHAT'S "KEVIN'S WALK"?

Kevin's Walk is an idea I've had, in some form or other, for a few years, but now seems like the best time to embark on it. I'm nearing 40, and some egomanical part of me would like to be able to tell people that, yeah, I did Something Big before I was 40: I walked across America.

The basic plan is to do a walk across the continental United States, from sea to shining sea, "connecting the dots" between and among various churches, mosques, cathedrals, synagogues, temples, ashrams, cloisters, hermitages, college campuses, and whatever else I can find along the way. I'm doing this in part to satisfy my curiosity regarding a number of pressing interreligious questions, partly to do Something Big before I become too old to do so, and partly to get back into the same shape I was in back in 1990, which was when I finished a year-long stay in Switzerland, a truly fantastic country to walk through. I had spent my year there as part of my French major, living with a very nice Swiss family (the Thalmanns, not the Robinsons), and had developed a habit of hiking around whenever and wherever I could. I came back from the experience a lot thinner than when I started, and as I now near the scary threshold of 300 pounds (that's 21.4 stone to you Brits), nearly 100 pounds above my 1990 weight, I feel myself wanting to pull back from the edge-- far, far back.


3. ARE YOU SERIOUSLY THINKING OF SLEEPING IN THESE HOUSES OF WORSHIP? YOU KNOW THAT'S NOT GONNA WORK, RIGHT?

Yes, I realize I probably won't be able to sleep on the grounds of these holy places; I'm more likely to end up sleeping at the residence of someone associated with the place-- a member of the laity, perhaps. Much depends on the welcome I receive from each place I visit.


4. WHAT DO YOU PLAN ON DOING AT EACH STOPOVER?

I'm doing this walk primarily to ask questions and to listen to answers. As will be obvious if/when you buy a copy of Water from a Skull, I have my own metaphysical convictions, but by no means am I embarking on this walk with the purpose of beating people over the head with my point of view.

My hope is to arrive at each appointed place sometime in the afternoon, to have a chance at a shower and a change of clothes, then to sit down with people from that religious community who might be willing to speak on interreligious issues. I'll have a list of questions with me to prompt discussion, but if the conversation unrolls naturally, I have no problem with setting those questions aside and simply going with the flow.

It seems silly to go through all this effort and not record the insights I receive, so I'm hoping to document each stage of the trip somehow. I haven't settled on a documentary method, though I suspect the ideal would be to have a small team go along with me, setting up A/V equipment at each stopover and/or recording part or all of the walk itself. Much of this would end up on this blog; it's also possible that an actual documentary film might be the end result. In any event, I do plan on writing a book about the experience, à la Peter Jenkins and his classic, A Walk Across America.

Finding a documentary team might not happen until the walk has picked up some momentum, though; the Rolling Stones might have been able to secure the likes of Martin Scorsese to film them, but I'm a nobody, which means that finding an eager film crew, one willing to endure months and months of hardship and poverty, might be a bit of a problem.

So: at each stopover, I hope to shower, change my clothes, talk for a few hours (with the talk being recorded somehow), eat some small dinner, sleep, get a wee breakfast, then continue on to the next site. If there's no dinner and no breakfast, that's perfectly OK; one major aspect of this Walk will be mendicancy--, i.e., begging. I plan to rely on the good graces of those who will have me. If Nothing is what's on offer, then Nothing it shall be.

NOTE: I also hope to alternate sites (church, followed by synagogue, followed by mosque, followed by temple, etc.), though I know this might not be possible, especially if I find myself in a heavily Christian area.

NOTE2: I also hereby express my willingness to do chores and/or manual labor if that's what it takes to earn a night's stay somewhere.


5. WHAT SORTS OF PEOPLE ARE YOU HOPING TO MEET?

I'm hoping to meet regular folks who are willing to talk about interreligious issues (some of which may be potentially uncomfortable, such as whether one would be willing to allow one's child to marry someone of a completely different religion). I want to get a feel for what "pluralism" might mean in American society, which is both huge and diverse. I want to know what people of a given tradition think of people of other traditions... and if they don't think about those other traditions, I'd like to know why they don't. Is it a taboo subject? Is it somehow dangerous to the larger community? Is it simply a matter of not caring? Above all, I'd like to see how all the information I hear can be put together into some sort of strategy for the peaceful coexistence of people of all traditions. Do Americans, who generally live peacefully together, often in religiously heterogeneous communities, have something to offer a world wracked by interreligious conflict?


6. WHEN IS THIS WALK HAPPENING?

I'm hoping to begin the walk in mid- to late May of this year, 2008. I don't know how long the walk might last because I don't know its exact route yet. In fact, that's something I want to talk about in subsequent posts: how, exactly, I should be plotting my route. Ideas and comments are welcome.

UPDATE: The date has been set for May 27, 2008.

UPDATE 2, 9/13/08: The walk started on 5/27/08, from White Rock, British Columbia, just across the border from Blaine, Washington.


7. WHAT CAN I DO TO HELP?

There are at least three ways you can help me out on this walk, and I will be humbly grateful for whatever assistance you choose to provide.

a. Financial help

Despite the mendicancy theme, I don't like to beg. Who does, really? If you shell out money for me, then I hope to give you something in return for your contribution. Seems only fair, right? To this end, I will be creating products related to Kevin's Walk for purchase on my CafePress.com site-- mugs, tee shirts, and other items (all designed by me) whose purchase will help defray the expected and unexpected costs of the walk.

However, humility demands that I also put up a PayPal donation button on this blog; I have a PayPal account, and will be accepting donations from kind-hearted folks who think the Walk is for a worthy cause. There will be no minimum donation, so there's no pressure to donate more than a dollar if that's what you feel like contributing. I'm not the type to give people guilt trips; donate as much or as little as you like, or nothing at all.

I would also be willing to accept some sort of corporate sponsorship, though I'm aware that most corporations would rather avoid sponsoring something overtly religious in nature. I understand and accept this, but I also suspect that certain entities might be a bit more willing to look into supporting a religious project. If you know of any such organizations, please let me know.

b. Material help.

I will doubtless need things like food, changes of batteries for various pieces of equipment, replacement hiking/camping supplies, and so on. If you're willing to provide anything like this for free, I will gladly accept whatever you have to offer. As needs arise, I will likely blog about them.

I suppose the phrase "material help" might also include the notion of "shelter." I'm not planning on camping my way across the country, though I do need to be prepared to do some camping if the distance between destinations is too far for me to traverse in a single day.

UPDATE, 9/13/08: A chase car would also be helpful. I obviously can't expect a single person to serve as the chase car driver for the entire trek, but having a series of drivers, who would each drive for a short distance (maybe 1-3 days' hike) would be a real boon. WOuld you be interested in being a chase car driver? Catch up with my blog, see where I currently am, and contact me.

c. Spiritual help.

Constructive remarks, kind words, encouragement, advice, serious discussion of the issues-- these things all matter to me. Feel free to leave comments on this blog (comments here are moderated in order to weed out the uncivil) or to visit my Facebook page (you'll have to "friend" me to see it, of course) and engage in some discussion in the two "groups" I've created there, one devoted to religious diversity, and the other devoted explicitly to this walk of mine.


8. ABOUT HOW LONG DO YOU THINK THE WALK WILL TAKE?

I'm not sure. If the country is roughly 3,000-4,000 miles across, and if I walk 20-30 miles per day, what does that come out to? Assuming I hike an average of 20 miles per day without zigzagging, I might be done with the Walk in 150-200 days; this also assumes that I stay at each spot only for one night. It also assumes I walk seven days a week for every week of the Walk. No lingering.

This pace is conceivable, but is it realistic?

No. What I see happening is more like this: I may stay more than a single night in some places, and my route will almost certainly not be a relentlessly straight march from west to east. I suspect the Walk will take me substantially more than a year's time.

I would love to encounter a religious establishment at absolutely regular intervals-- say, once every 20 miles. But I doubt this will happen, especially as I leave the densely populated coast and head into the country's central regions. Reality is, by nature, clumped and uneven, so there's little reason to expect churches, temples, and so on to be evenly distributed throughout the land.

UPDATE, 9/13/08: After about 500 miles of walking, from White Rock, BC down through Seattle, over to Portland, then eastward along the Columbia RIver to Umatilla and back up into Walla Walla, Washington, I can say that (1) I don't walk every single day, (2) my walks have varied greatly in length from 2 to 35 miles, and (3) I do camp a lot, though I probably end up in hotels or residences more often. Because I currently have a bad knee (medial collateral ligament strain), walking is excruciating without painkillers; I'm resting in Walla Walla and wintering in Boise in order to give my poor knee a chance to heal.

I still believe, however, that I can make the 2-year maximum limit. I've given up on finishing the walk before I'm 40; my pace is simply too slow. Then again, upon leaving Walla Walla, I'll have a chase car (my father's the driver) until I reach Boise, and I hope to arrange chase cars for the walk out of Boise to Parts Unknown. Ideally, I'll use my wintering time in Boise (about four months) to plot the rest of the route and arrange chase cars. I might-- just might-- be able to hit the east coast before my 40th birthday on August 31, 2009. If not... oh, well.


9. WHERE IS YOUR WALK STARTING? WHERE IS IT ENDING?

With many thanks to my good friend Nathan Bauman, the Walk will actually begin near Vancouver, Canada, in what Nathan has cleverly styled a "prelude" to the US portion of Kevin's Walk. The official beginning of the Walk will be somewhere on the US west coast, right at the Pacific Ocean, probably in the state of Washington. The official end of the Walk will occur when I arrive at the Atlantic Ocean, probably that portion of the east coast occupied by Maryland or Virginia (my hometown is Alexandria, Virginia). The Walk's "epilogue" will likely include a stop by a particular Zen temple I'm fond of, as well as my own church.

And then I'll just walk on over to my folks' place, and it'll be time to chew over the experience with my family, then think about heading back to Korea to continue my life as a university English and French instructor.

[UPDATE, 9/13/08: I started the walk at White Rock, British Columbia, from the Pacific Inn. Nathan drove me there on May 26, 2008, after picking me up at Vancouver International Airport. After leaving the hotel the following morning, I passed by the Peace Arch while walking on Canadian Route 99; at the border, I stepped through the pedestrian gate of Passport Control and found myself in Blaine, Washington. It wasn't until I had walked down to Bellingham Bay, however, that I "officially" touched the Big Water. See my sidebar for the link to the YouTube video of the moment I touched the water!]


10. WHAT MATTERS ARE YOU DEALING WITH NOW?

I have quite a few unsettled questions:

a. obtaining sponsorship (corporate, religious, personal, etc.)
b. deciding on the proper method to plan out the route-- I'm currently leaning toward a "self-planning" route at the moment; further explanation of this will occur in subsequent blog posts
c. obtaining proper equipment for the walk
d. getting my financial house in order-- because of my scholastic debt, I need to be able to pay about $600 per month to stay afloat in the eyes of Sallie Mae
e. finding a possible documentary team for the walk and/or buying the appropriate A/V equipment for myself (digital video camera? Wi-Fi laptop or some other device that'll allow me to remote-blog the trip?)
f. finalizing certain rules of the road for the Walk-- e.g., whether I want travel companions (other than the hypothetical documentary team, and I might not want them, either)
g. training a bit so as to be in not-quite-sad shape when I do finally begin the walk
h. settling the matter of insurance: how will I be dealing with possible sickness and injury?
i. what else? there's always something else...





That's it for the FAQ so far. Congratulations if you've made it through the whole thing. I'll likely to be adding to and adjusting the FAQ as time goes on, and I'll almost certainly be tinkering with this blog's look over the next few months. If things get too busy for me, I might even hand these duties off to some trusted souls, like friends or family members.

Feel free to add your comments, but please keep in mind that I do expect all comments to be civil and constructive. People who can't help being assholes will not have their comments published (all comments are moderated). I've heard some folks cry "censorship!" when confronted with this attitude, but my take is that my blog is my cyber-house: it's open to guests, but just as I expect my real house guests to conduct themselves civilly, so I expect my virtual house guests to do likewise. Those who fail to demonstrate basic manners will be shown the door-- no questions, no arguments. Cleaning house is, ultimately, my responsibility. If you want to argue that this blog is a public forum and that I have no right to "censor" people, then you need to explain why I own this blog. A castle might house hundreds of guests, but this doesn't make it a public place. Besides, public places are usually policed. Do you want me to hire someone to police the comments here? Just keep things simple: civility brings with it no problems.

Come back soon and see what's new with Kevin's Walk!


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