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	<title>Comments on: Late, For Nowhere in Particular</title>
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	<link>http://soloroadtrip.com/2010/05/18/personal-journal/late-for-nowhere-in-particular-2/</link>
	<description>Solo Road Trip is the award winning blog of travel writer Tammie Dooley. Hitch a ride for a grown-up version of running away from home.  Feel the wind.</description>
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		<title>By: mark</title>
		<link>http://soloroadtrip.com/2010/05/18/personal-journal/late-for-nowhere-in-particular-2/#comment-7469</link>
		<dc:creator>mark</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Sep 2010 17:42:17 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>i recently came back from a trip to nowhere, and everywhere.  6,000 miles.  me and my lovely new bride in a 1954 ford coupe.  i didn&#039;t have to sell my (yukon) saab to get it.  and i didn&#039;t have to run away to make it happen.  well, i did, a little bit.  but i planned the 3 week runaway for more than a year.  i can&#039;t imagine doing that trip in anything else.  there&#039;s a certain smack it gives to your lips to pilot a machine older than you across america.  there&#039;s a certain &#039;rightness&#039; about seeing a country so steeped in history and hard work and ingenuity in a car such as this.  the view out the windshield changes the feel of the movie enough to make it epic rather than simply long.  there&#039;s a certain satisfaction to knowing you can fix it if it breaks.  and a certain pleasantness to the afternoon that it does leave you by the side of the road with your trunk unpacked, tools out, forcing you to prove it.  and a certain peacefulness to changing the oil in the yard of a friend&#039;s small farm in kansas.   i&#039;ve been back just a little longer than i was gone, and i already feel late for that same destination.  everywhere, but nowhere in particular.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>i recently came back from a trip to nowhere, and everywhere.  6,000 miles.  me and my lovely new bride in a 1954 ford coupe.  i didn&#8217;t have to sell my (yukon) saab to get it.  and i didn&#8217;t have to run away to make it happen.  well, i did, a little bit.  but i planned the 3 week runaway for more than a year.  i can&#8217;t imagine doing that trip in anything else.  there&#8217;s a certain smack it gives to your lips to pilot a machine older than you across america.  there&#8217;s a certain &#8216;rightness&#8217; about seeing a country so steeped in history and hard work and ingenuity in a car such as this.  the view out the windshield changes the feel of the movie enough to make it epic rather than simply long.  there&#8217;s a certain satisfaction to knowing you can fix it if it breaks.  and a certain pleasantness to the afternoon that it does leave you by the side of the road with your trunk unpacked, tools out, forcing you to prove it.  and a certain peacefulness to changing the oil in the yard of a friend&#8217;s small farm in kansas.   i&#8217;ve been back just a little longer than i was gone, and i already feel late for that same destination.  everywhere, but nowhere in particular.</p>
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