I never forget those shoes. Every time I step off a plane in some foreign land, leap from a canoe into a steaming tropical swamp forest, or wander through a marketplace wafting with words and smells unknown, those shoes are with me.
Yesterday I read a Guardian interview of David Attenborough by David Monbiot:
"While other people’s worlds tend to shrink with age, his seems to expand. His curiosity ranges as widely as ever. His ability to understand and assimilate new information seems unabated. “Oh, I forget things,” he claims. When I press him for examples, he tells me, “Well, where I put my glasses – I had them about three minutes ago and they have simply evaporated, they’ve dematerialised. Oh yeah, and I forget engagements...But these, surely, are afflictions suffered by anyone immersed in the world of ideas. He has no difficulty remembering the things that fascinate him.”
I realized a few years ago what I wanted all along was that life in those shoes. I have been chasing that life my whole life. Knowing Sir Attenborough celebrates 90 years soon, and continues with such zeal, I'm certain can be attributed to those shoes. I think I get it now — it takes courage to wear your youth a whole life, for all the world to see.