The shooting spree at
the gun range with my friend Dan was watershed inspirational. I began the day
without a useful bucket list. By the end of the day a new one was under
construction.
It would be a lie to
say there was an original list. But I've given some thought to what should'a
been there.
Top of the list was
travel in central Asia. The idea originated when I, when 12, read a book called
The Asiatics by Frederic Prokash. It chronicled the journey of a young man
across Asia in the 1920s. I said to myself "that sounds cool" and
memory filed it. Nine years later in late June 1971 I was in Seville
backpacking across Europe, I met a couple of French guys who were headed
overland to Nepal. So guess what, when I got to Istanbul and saw a flyer
promoting a four day bus ride to Tehran I jumped at the opportunity and
traveled across Asia on my own. I saw Kabul, Kathmandu and the Taj Mahal from
the bottom up. That is on a dollar a day.
Another flyer got me
a bucket list checkmark in 1973 when I was living in Ottawa and saw a flyer at
work advertising skydiving for beginners. Within a couple of weeks I had my
first and only two jumps under my belt.
One more flyer item.
In 1990 Margie and I were in Lyford Key in the Bahamas getting certified to
scuba dive. A checkmark on its own. A flyer on the wall of the dive shop
promoting a shark dive caught my eye. I got turned on and the next day another
bucket list checkmark in the bag.
So far because I
responded to flyer invites I see that I am more reactive than proactive. I
suppose my brain has a bucket list lobe, that stores my list out of sight, but
responds to opportunities put in front of me. I can say something appeared on
my list when it was easy to say "yes I'll do that". This likely is
related to issues I've had with impulse control.
So what else was
bucket list worthy in the first half of my life.
This one is really
post hoc, esoteric and opportunistic. During my first trip to Israel while
touring the Church of the Holy Sepulcher I found myself alone in the lowest
crypt of the church. Closest to ground zero where Jesus was crucified and
buried first. That's not bucket list for me but carving my initials in the
centuries old wooden beams next to the tortured letters others had dug into the
wood, some more than a thousand years old, well that's on the list. I'm glad I
had a pen knife with me.
I've been a guest on
TV discussion shows, invited as an expert. Check.
I've had articles
published in business publications. I was even paid once; my first article in
the Report on Business. Check.
I was a judge at the
CHIN Bikini contest for nine years. Check. Check. Check. Check. Check. Check.
Check. Check. Check.
My second trip
overseas in 1972 produced a checkmark. My intention was to spend the Christmas
holiday hitchhiking around Spain but when I was offered a ride to Morocco I
said "sure" and ended up in Goulimine a town at the western edge of the
Sahara desert.
I've been on eleven
father son golf trips with my son Stephen. That's special because I don't
remember even one time I was alone with my dad.
I've been studying
Torah, albeit haphazardly, for the last couple of years. Sounds cool. Hard
thinking. Check.
And I suppose the gun
range shooting spree was an original list item that didn't get done early
but spurred me to get back in the game.
So what's on the new
list.
Already accomplished
is a ride on the Yukon Stryker the newest dangerous roller coaster at Canada's
Wonderland. That entered my list after I read about it in the paper.
Check.
Still to be done:
Timbuktu, ride a motorcycle, jet ski, break 80, have dinner at the Peninsula
Hotel in Hong Kong, enjoy a class about the teachings of C. S. Lewis, learn to
play Heart 'n Soul on the piano.
And, oh yeah, get one
of these memoirs published.
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