The best learning comes from putting books aside and discovering the public world on the road.
A few years back, I put my textbooks on hold To take a trip to DC’s Native American museum.
My favorite scene of the museum was the wall commemorating the Navajo Code Talkers of World War II. As I walked around solo, I pretended that I was my dad walking around slowly and curiously.
The moment I entered the museum, I lost track of my campus group among bustling tourists and museum enthusiasts. But shouting for my mom hours away might have only made me stranger than a stranger.
Crossing several lanes of traffic in search of dinner felt like a level of Frogger (Seinfeld reference). I wasn’t expecting dinner and a show, but apparently the show came first when a man named Dan intercepted my path to a McDonald’s corner restaurant.
It was no surprise that a fellow loitering the streets would turn out asking me for money. I hypnotically scoured my pants pocket and unfurled an Alexander Hamilton bill for Dan to confiscate.
Surprisingly, Dan refused a quick grab-n-go. Coolly, and I kid you not, He wanted to perform a service Before compensation.
Dan apparently wanted to earn his money By singing a song. All I remember from Dan’s singing Was how he sounded pitch-perfect, Like a sincere American Idol audition.
The glitz, government, and grub of DC Will never beat the day Dan and I met on a backstreet sidewalk.
I selected to base prompt number three here on a trip I took away from family.