For me, the closest I come to just thinking is my writing. I know that writing is not the same as purely thinking, but it does seem to focus my thought process in a way that I am unable to do when I try to just sit or walk, and think. Perhaps over the years, my ability to think without something facilitating the process has been lost or perhaps it never developed. In fact, I remember my solo trip around the western parts of the United States (with a 400 mile two day venture into western Canada) in 1975 (or was it 1974).
Although this has nothing to do with my story, I will not (for posterity) that I started in Omaha driving my blue 1966 Opel Cadet station wagon that I fondly named Sugar Magnolia. I drove to Colorado where I visited a friend in Boulder, headed north to Montana and Wyoming where the blue sky continues forever, through Idaho (to where I will return shortly - in this entry), to Spokane where I visited with my brother (who then was in law school at Gonzaga) and waited for new parts for my car that was not holding up well. Eventually, I spent time in Seattle, British Columbia, a small town in northern Canada (one night), and then drove down through Oregon, California and across the southwestern states ending with a 36 hour drive so that I could attend my grandmother's 80th birthday (back when 80 seemed so old - but it doesn't anymore). So many stories in this journey that will have to wait for another time.
So, back to the story (which really isn't that exciting). When in Idaho, I returned to a location (it can't be called a town or even a village) named "Burgdorf Junction". My brother and I had first visited Burgdorf Junction on our trip to visit Spokane. That was a very special trip that started with a car that wouldn't go and ended with a tighter bond than I had ever had with my brother - but that to will have to wait for another time. Burgdord consisted of a series of log cabins spread over the lush green hillside, a two story log cabin hotel, and a one story log cabin building with a store and who knows what else that was adjacent to a large hot springs. Just to see if I had imagined this beautiful place (where Teddy Roosevelt used to hunt, or so we were told), I just googled it and here is a picture - exactly as I remembered it.

In any case, I hope that this writing expands my thinking skills. I already have noticed that it seems to be expanding my ability to observe for I notice many things that I don't remember noticing before, and my ability to make connections and draw conclusions from what I see or experience (perhaps so that I will have something to write about, although I often write about nothing and then try to find a message in the writing. I think that I will head to bed now, turn off the lights and try to think - but I bet I just fall asleep and let the thoughts be caught up in dreams.
2 comments:
I think writing is a great way to focus thoughts. It also gives you a chance to edit them!
I'd like to hear more about your brother.
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