EVERY TIME I’ve been to sea in my
own boat, the same thought has occurred to me: I’m the only human being who has
been present in this space since the world began. The farther I am from land, the greater the
truth of that statement, of course.
I don’t know why it seems so
significant to me but it is certainly a fact. On land, we humans follow each
other’s tracks. When the first person beats down a path through the wilderness,
there’s no reason to battle a new way through on your own. But at sea every
vessel on every voyage finds its own path over the wild waters, a new path, a
path where no boat has ever been before. Sometimes it’s not far from the paths
others have made, but it is always separate in places. No two wakes ever trace
the exact same path.
Perhaps it seems more significant to
people like me who have grown up in crowded cities, where following other
people’s tracks is the normal everyday procedure. Nobody gives it a thought,
because there can hardly be any place in a city where someone hasn’t stood or
walked before you.
So when I’m at sea, even on a
coastal trip, I have often thought “I am the first person in the world to
occupy this particular spot on our planet.”
The chances are millions to one that I will never occupy it again, of
course, and it’s highly probable that no one one else will, even if human beings
are able to inhabit the earth for another 4 1/2 billion years, which seems
doubtful.
So next time you need something to
think about on a night watch, bend your mind toward the fact that you are
experiencing something unique that no other person in the world will experience.
You are visiting a portion of the planet that no one has floated over before. It
isn’t going to bring you fame or wealth or happiness, but if you have a simple mind
like mine it is a fascinating thing to ponder.
Today’s
Thought
The
Sea
That
shuts still as it opes, and leaves no tracts
Nor
prints of precedent for poor men’s facts.
— George Chapman, Bussy d’Ambois
Tailpiece
“I’m
looking for a guard dog going cheap.”
“Sorry,
sir, all our guard dogs go ‘Woof!’”
Thanks for this John, will be thinking about this next time I'm out!
ReplyDeleteNever fear, for as the waves move from coast to coast, the Earth spins on its axis, revolves around the Sun, which revolves around the galaxy, which moves through the universe. At every point in your life, you're at a set of coordinates in space which have never nor shall ever be occupied by another human.
ReplyDeleteTrent - Anacortes