I almost ran over my friend Caroline today.
“Hey!” she shouted from outside the back passenger window.
Precisely as I turned to apologize, I realized she wasn’t shouting to alert me that I was about to run her over; she was simply trying to get my attention.
So I swallowed my apology and pretended it was totally acceptable that I almost ran her over accidentally on purpose.
“Are you going back toward your house right now?” she asked.
I wasn’t planning on it, but after she told me the following story, I changed my mind.
“So there’s this guy,” she began, “and he’s running out there on the road.”
Caroline is from England, and I know it rains a lot there, but surely she’s seen someone running on the road before. Right?
She continued, “He’s running or walking or something from California to Washington DC to support deployed soldiers.”
Apparently the expression on my face made her feel the need to be more convincing.
“I swear it!” she exclaimed. “This is his business card!”
“Um, how did you acquire his business card?” I inquired. “I thought he was running!”
“Well, right. I saw him running, and he had on a backpack and a huge sign, and I just stopped and got out and said, ‘What on earth are you doing?’”
At this, I had to laugh. Because Caroline would pull over and inquire as to why on earth someone was running down the street wearing a huge backpack and a large sign. And I love her for that. Because, given that I would also do that sort of thing, it confirms that I’m not that weird. Or, at least that I’m not that weird all by myself.
Right?
I drove down the road and back. And down and back. And down and back. And could not for the life of me find Thomas Trujillo (the crazy Walk Across America guy). Which is par for the course because I seem to routinely be 3 minutes late or 4 dollars short (or both) lately.
Curiosity intact, however, I arrived home and immediately looked up Petty Officer Thomas Trujillo. And I’ve been thinking about him. Because should-we-shouldn’t-we, war-themed political opinions aside, I bow at the feet of anyone who does something this completely absurd for a cause he believes in.
Thomas Trujillo is out there doing this whether or not anyone’s watching. Or honking. Or caring. The only person who knows for sure that he’s doing it at any given moment is him. And it’s about the most inspiring thing I’ve heard of in…well…a while.
He’s not sitting outside of a building protesting or picketing or complaining (or all three). He’s just putting his beliefs and his commitment where his mouth is (or, in this case, where his legs are) and making his statement, for whatever it’s worth.
Like the age-old philosophical question, “If a tree falls in the forest and no one’s around to hear it, does it make a sound?”
That fallen tree makes a difference in the forest as a whole; whether or not it does so silently isn’t really the point.






