Island-folk need to stick together. There is something to be said for the unifying experience of being born and at least partially raised near the ocean. You get spoiled by the sea and salty air. You get used to boats and fishing, shorelines and beaches, blue skies and even bluer water below. You get used to the myth and legends surrounding the ocean and ocean life, and that includes the tall tales of fisherman and the inexplicably-odd phenomena that take place in and around the even darker waters of nighttime. You don’t really recognize it as a child, and it might escape your notice as an adult if you don’t wander away and meet folk who grew up far from Mother Ocean’s loving, comforting embrace.
I was born on the Island of Long, New York, more commonly referred to as “Long Island.” The word “isle” is integrated into the name of the hospital in which I was born, and the name of the town itself is composed of words used to describe inlets and coastline. We later moved to another state, but my father kept us close to shore. The Long Island Sound remained within easy driving distance, and the house he bought for us was on the shores of a beautiful lake. His fishing boat came with us. The community in which we lived was nestled within a snug harbor.
My father himself was born and grew up within view of the Hudson River and New York Harbor, in the shadow of the great Island of Manhattan. His parents hailed from another island, tropical and far to the south: Puerto Rico. It was there he met my mother, herself born and raised on that island, la Isla del Encanto, the Island of Enchantment. Their courtship and eventual marriage took place on the island, and they returned countless times over the years and decades that have made up their life together. My aunts, uncles, and cousins live by the sea…almost FOR the sea…never straying very far for very long from her embrace and alluring siren’s call. The ocean is a part of all of us, and it is never far from heart and mind. Even though I live in the Midwest, I find my way back to the shores of Lake Michigan, that great American inland sea, and I longingly look out at her horizon, no opposite shoreline in sight, smelling the brine of a far-away ocean in my mind. I am an islander, through and through.
William is from another island, many hundreds of miles away. He was born, raised, and now raises his own children on the Emerald Isle. More accurately, he is from the northern lands of the Emerald Isle, more commonly referred to as Northern Ireland. His family tree goes back far and with deep roots in that island. Like me, he, is an islander. It was on his isle that I met my friend William. In and around Belfast, the sea is never far from view. Even where he lives today, out in a village on the edge of farmland, Belfast Lough is but a few minutes away. Like the tropical island of my ancestors, Ireland is green and lush with vegetation, constantly watered and fed by ocean currents and Jetstream winds. Although the rains that shower Ireland are a tad cooler than the near-daily rains from my little Puerto Rico, they come from the same place. The sea is just as salty. The fish as abundant. The depths are as dark and mysterious, the surface as calm or violent with the winds. The endless ocean is as terrifying as it is comforting, relentlessly brutal and relentlessly calming. William’s sea and shore are no different than mine when the heart and mind of a nostalgic poet are at work.
Together, William and I are just a pair of islanders with aspirations of embarking on an epic voyage, not on the sea, but on land. This trip along the asphalt river that is Interstate 90 is, by all accounts, an Islanders’ Epic.