Alaska has many reasons to be my favorite, the ultimate wilderness. But here's a pic from Alaska that reminds me of Supertramp. Remember his big game?
Into the wild.
I had read the book a while back, but watched the movie last week on Netflix, kind of got me thinking all over again. It's beautiful yet melancholy version of how he stripped himself away from the clutches of the society. The way he went from McCandless to Supertramp and during his last days with a quote of "call by it's true name" he goes from Supertramp back to McCandless, is quite an emotional journey.
It's one thing to destroy your world and breakaway, but another when you want to return back into that shattered destroyed world.
Not trying to justify the actions of his family, that moulded Chris into Alexander; but they had a painful and emotional journey too. The worst thing that can happen to anyone is not knowing what happened to their loved ones - are they Alive? Dead? Injured? Happy?. Not having closure in any relationship is painful by itself, but it becomes insufferable sorrow when it comes to a parent-child bond.
We can just speculate what Chris felt in his last days, from when he decided to return back to his family but couldn't, till his last breath. Did he carry anger, frustration, sadness, guilt; as seen in one of his quote say "happiness is real when shared"? Or just acceptance of life as it came; as his last words in the van read "I have had a happy life and thank the Lord. Goodbye and God bless all.".
But, despite all these emotional angles, his experience of being out there in the wild, is a dream come true for many backpackers even today. Or maybe it's because of all these emotional twists, 'Into the wild' still appeals to a lot of us. We connect to Chris, we all want to be Alexander in our own way.
Hope we all get to write our own version of "Into the Wild", a story of our journey from Chris to Alexander.
What's your life's version? or are you yet to write one?
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