The rocks have stood there virtually
unchanged for 20,000 years, giving visitors a present-day glimpse
of a long-ago past.
It’s known as Boulder Field,
and its nearly 17 acres of sandstone and rock is an awe-inspiring
site to anyone visiting Hickory Run State Park in the Pennsylvania
Poconos.
Coming upon Boulder Field, the
eye cannot help but be impressed by the grandeur of the landscape.
Rocks dot the horizon, some of the boulders stretching as long
as 26 feet. In the distance, park-goers gingerly dance across
the field, dwarfed to ant-like size in an odd Martian-perspective
sort of way.
Such are the time-stand-still
remnants of the last ice age. Shifting and melting glaciers acted
as a slow-moving bull-dozer some 20,000 years ago, heaving rock
and unearthing the surface in earth’s ever-patient style.
Not much has changed since.
Or so I thought.
Joining the pint-sized people
on Boulder Field, my wife and I began the rocky dance across the
surface, holding our toddler daughter close to chest. The landscape
was spectacular, but one quickly realizes that to successfully
traverse Boulder Field without suffering a broken ankle, one’s
eyes need to be fixed low – at one’s feet, and at
the next rock.
Looking down, I am loathe to
discover some not so long-ago evidence of recent geological shifting.
“Tim ’05.”
Apparently today’s visitors
to Boulder Field weren’t its first. Seems “Tim”
happened upon the rocky landscape, during a heroic Lewis and Clark
exploration of the great outdoors, I’m sure, way back in
2005 – with spray paint in tow.
Sadly, Tim was not alone.
Walking across Boulder Field,
one quickly discovers that Boulder Field has been visited by more
than its share of rock-artists.
Jason was there too. Along with
lovebirds John and Mary. Not to mention T.J. and other semi-anonymous
initialed trailblazers.
What strikes me most about this
is that all of these explorers had paint with them on their trek
to Boulder Field. They did not simply yield to an impulsive ego-driven
temptation to preserve themselves in bright blue or orange. Rather,
they knowingly went to Boulder Field with aerosol can in hand.
Even the entire Jones family
was there! Packing up for their summer vacation to the Poconos,
I can hear Mr. Jones going over the checklist with his kids:
“Okay, we’ve got
the tent and camping stove.”
“Check.”
“Lantern and binoculars.”
“Check.”
“Bug spray and Frisbee.”
“Check.”
“Spray paint.”
“Whoops! Almost forgot,
Dad! Let me run into the garage and get some. What color should
we use this year?”
“Red would be good. Holds
up well under the elements.”
Ah, Americana. The great outdoors
and the smell of aerosol!
Standing on the rock, I could
feel bitterness begin to well up within me. A disheartening sense
of discouragement at humankind. Are we really that arrogant? Or
is it insecurity with our lives’ meaningfulness? Perhaps
it simply can be chalked up to boredom.
I began to rationalize other
less-permanent acts of the artistic ego in action. The dilapidated
brick wall. The freshly painted storefront. The bridge overpass.
All tempting targets for the modern-day male and his empty search
for manhood. And much of it for bragging rights. This I could
understand. Though still discouraging, such youthful rebellion
is hardly ever permanent. Fresh can of paint; fresh canvas.
At what point does the ego yield
to the greater power of nature? For 20,000 years, earth has slowly
crept along since the last ice age, and the beauty and permanence
of Boulder Field humbly stands before us as a testament to time,
patience, and the beauty of creation.
Disheartened, I begin the trek
to the car. Once off the rocks, I turn and look back once more
at Boulder Field.
Suddenly, my heart is captured
again by its grandeur, its spirit of resiliency, its knowing sense
of hope. From afar, not a single spec of paint is visible.
In the community of rocks, only
beauty can be found.