Zombified

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We decided that after our delicious meal at Mama’s Fish House, we would go find a waterfall on The Road To Hana. Lest you think we actually went and drove the road to Hana, that would be a negative. We drove ten minutes to a waterfall.

We are not Road To Hana People.

You need to know this about yourself if you decide to drive it.

You either are.

Or you are not.

And if you are not, then you really, really are not.

They do not call it “Divorce Highway” for nothing.

Last year, when we first arrived at our hotel, we stepped into an elevator with a family of three. They were so downtrodden. Heads low. Sweating. If it were not for the sweating, I would have assumed they were the first unfortunate souls in a zombie apocalypse.

We stood next to them. Cheer bouncing from our skin. Our necks freshly leied from just checking in.

The zombie family recoiled at the sight of us.

I guess fresh leis are to zombies what garlic garlands are to vampires.

I couldn’t help myself. “What happened to you?” I rudely questioned.

The dad briefly looked up. He would not look me in my eyes. The lei’s power was too much.

“We just got back from The Road To Hana,” he mumbled.

The elevator stopped and they shuffled out.

My husband and I looked at each other as the doors closed. Our eyes made a silent pact.

“We will never become those creatures.” Our eyes told each other. We will never travel to Hana.

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Fast forward a year and a half. Our stomachs full from the best meal of our lives. Our feet all clad in a various assortment of flip flops and sandals.

“Let’s find a waterfall!” I proclaimed.

It had to be the two Relaxers I had drank an hour before.

I have never wanted to see a waterfall. I have been on “The Jungle Cruise” at Disneyland before. I have seen the front side… and the backside of a waterfall.

Many times.

I was good.

But somehow we found ourselves traveling on The Road To Hana, towards Twin Falls.

The waiter had said it would be seven minutes on the road. Then there would be a little fruit stand (the sweet saving grace of the trip. They sold coconut water and apple-bananas).

“It’s justa five minute walk from ther’,” his sweet Southern accent promised.

We must not have tipped enough.

Either that or five minutes in Maui is different than in other parts of the world.

Our watches must not have caught up.

Or maybe he assumed we had all ready been zombified from having taken the road to Hana to the restaurant.

Zombies can walk far. And are horrible at math.

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We took all of our belongings out of the car.

All of them.

The signs told us to.

We began the walk.

In our stupid, impractical open-toed shoes, we set out on a hike.

Our shoulders laden with a camera bag and purses.

We are nothing if not always unprepared.

I should have paid attention to the people walking from the other direction. Back towards their cars. Their t-shirts clinging to their wet bodies. Their heads set low.

But I didn’t. I was too busy oohing and aahing about the trees as we wandered down a rocky path.

I was imagining I was Joan in “Romancing The Stone.”

This lasted for about five minutes before the complaining began.

“How much farther?”

“My feet hurt.”

“Whose idea was this?”

“Ugh! It is so hot.”

And the complaints were all coming from me.

I was in character.

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We crossed a small river pond body of water .

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And we walked.

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A lot.

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We finally made it to the waterfall after forty five minutes. Sweat was pouring down our faces. Across the small lake, a cheering crowd of people clad in various forms of swimwear had formed around the water’s edge.

They were laughing.

Splashing.

Immune to a forty-five minute walk in the heat of a humid day.

Lovely.

It was a party and zombies were not allowed.

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We turned around and headed back to our car.

Down trodden.

Heads low.

Sweating.

Shuffling.

We had caught the dreaded virus.

Otherwise known as physical exertion.

There was no help for us.

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When we finally got back to the hotel, our eyes squinted at the pure gleaming whiteness of the buildings. We shuffled past newly arrived guests getting their fresh leis oblivious to the adventures that might await them.

I heard one of them ask the girl at the front desk,”How long will it take us to get to Hana?”

I shambled past them.

Sniffed in disdain the fresh lei upon her neck.

The newbie was asking the wrong question. The right question is, “How long will it take in Maui/Zombie time to get to Hana?”

I could have warned her. Told her to stay in the comforts of the hotel. But that would not have been fair.

You either are Road To Hana People. Or you are not. You need to know which one you are.

Because on The Road To Hana, it is survival of the fittest.

It is good to know which one you are.

Before that lei.

Goes around.

Your.

Neck.

The Hiking Club

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Once upon a time, a very long time ago, there was a young girl who decided to go on a hike. And she decided she would invite every girl she loved to come along. Spoiler: It was me. It was the very last time I went on a hike. It was eighteen years ago. I was eighteen. Wow! Look at those numbers. Maybe I should get out more.

I have a wonderful aunt, Auntie M. When I was a child she would take me on a hike every year. I had done it since I was little. How hard could it be?

Here are the things I did not take into consideration:

1. I never had to pack our food or water as a child. Doesn’t it just magically appear in your bag? Because that’s right… I conned talked eighteen girls into going on a six mile hike with me. And we only packed about ten water bottles. We did bring watermelon. Lots of watermelon. I have no idea why.

2. I am allergic to watermelon.

3. I planned this hike in the middle of July. In the dessert.

4. We told no one where we were going.

5. We had no cell phones. Because they did not exist. Kind of like my brain at the time.

6. We had four cars between us. We somehow crammed ourselves into two and left them at the end of the hike.

7. None of these girls were friends. They were my friends. But they were not friends with each other. Okay. Some of them were. But we had the goth girls, the stoners, a cheerleader or two, the soccer champion, the brainiacs, and me. It was like “The Breakfast Club” without breakfast or a club. Without the comforts of a bathroom or a cool janitor. If those guys in the Breakfast Club would have been dumped in the middle of nowhere without water for five hours in the heat of summer. Well, let’s just say Anthony Michael Hall wouldn’t have had an essay to write. ‘Cause they would have eaten him.

We started out on the hike cheerful and in good spirits. Half of us were leaving for college in a few weeks. It was our last hurrah.

I plan fun things.

It began to turn sour about halfway through the hike…When we realized we were out of water. It was not pretty. The goths were more quiet than usual. I knew it was just a matter of moments before they realized this was all my fault idea.

But then something miraculous happened. We came upon a stream and a little small, I do not want to call it a lake, because it was about the size of my living room, but beautiful body of water. It was shady. It was like a mirage. But it wasn’t. We stopped and we splashed. We chatted. We connected in a way that only those in the most dire of circumstances can.

Sometimes I dream about this “lake.” It can be a lovely dream or a bloody nightmare. In the dream, I build a little house here and it is a beautiful and tranquil experience. In my nightmares, the lake gets bigger and is filled with great white sharks that inevitably eat me (I think I am one of the few people who actually die in their dreams. My mind loves me like that).

We left the lake and trudged along. I barely remember us getting to the cars. We were all sweaty and dehydrated. We were all cranky and miserable. The lake had renewed our spirits for a moment, but human nature quickly took over as we crawled towards the finish line.

At the end, one girl turned to me and said, “Thanks Jenni. That was the worst experience of my life.”

I aim to please.

I never did see all of those girls together again. Over the years, we all drifted away. I did reconnect with some of them on Facebook when I had an account. But in my imagination, life had turned out differently for them. I liked my dream version better. I wanted that magical lake of life in the middle of nowhere to always be there. The weariness of life to not have drained it away.

I have mixed emotions and memories of that hike. I do not regret it, but I did learn…

“In the simplest terms and the most convenient definitions”…

We found out that each one of us is…

“A brain.
An athlete
A basket case (guess which one this was)
A princess
And a criminal.”

In need of water.