When you go camping, and the world lifts itself from your shoulders and the problems back home seem silly and irrelevant human life, and what you may have been trying to achieve in your leather black ergonomic chair and your dark polished wood desk seems silly and irrelevant The world is here, in the wood-pecker’s tap-tap-taping in the trees the checkered calculated lines of the water being pulled to shore by the wind, viewed from above like the birds that push themselves into the tide and float back to shore then push themselves out again. the world is here, forgotten by the city, and the construction worker’s crack-crack-crack of the hammer the calculated system of traffic guided by flashing lights, turning signs and abrasive horns from behind the wheel where the man sits in a satin black suit and smooth leather car seat sipping at his morning coffee, purchased for $2.25 and cradled by spring-loaded cupholders, until he reaches for the silver handle of his glass office door, and stops looking down at his brown-leather shoes that cut into the rounded bone on the side of his ankle and decides, time to go camping