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Traveling the Country You Built

I imagine those who don’t live close to a stop along the famous Route 66 hear less about the topic than I do. I’m still impressed by those who actually do hear about it. Not so much the people who live in America, but the people who come from other countries every summer just to make the drive. Some join up with antique car tours and others simply rent a car to make the journey. Stretches of it seem to have “rallies” every year. Not races, just groups of people deciding to travel together.

This particular post was actually inspired by an article in the Paper which I read today. Yes it was an yet another article about someone taking a trip down old Route 66 but this one had an undiscovered story. It ended with a tiny blurb about how the couple took a small detour from one of the destinations to visit a military base where the husband had gotten his first military hair cut in 1959.

Most probably thought that ending a quaint little tidbit. When you are a writer you think about it a bit differently, especially with Veterans Day approaching on November 11. There is a select group of people which really should travel down old Route 66. Most people made life choices which in my view would exclude them from selection. Not putting them down, just that traveling Route 66 probably wouldn’t mean as much to them. Military people, migrant construction workers and perhaps truck drivers (though a driving vacation probably isn’t a vacation for them) would be the ones I would place in such a group.

You may have built something wonderful and passed it on to the next generation without leaving your home town, but to me, the ones who really should make the drive during their “sliver” years are the ones who moved around. Mentally they can travel back in time to see what they’ve built and what it has become. For those who are/were in the military you can see what others defended in the past and you are defending now.

It didn’t really hit me when I read the article about the UK soldiers who flew here during leave and rented a car to make the drive, but it did today. They don’t have a historic road with songs and great stories associated with it. No other country has a road called “The Mother Road”.

Now I understand. This is the thing which has been binding the country together since 1926. To some degree traveling it creates a bond with the past and the people which seems to be somewhat akin to the bond one sees among veterans. Next summer, find a higher purpose. Take the trip and see if you find the bond.

To those of you who have served, thank you for my freedom.

Roland Hughes started his IT career in the early 1980s. He quickly became a consultant and president of Logikal Solutions, a software consulting firm specializing in OpenVMS application and C++/Qt touchscreen/embedded Linux development. Early in his career he became involved in what is now called cross platform development. Given the dearth of useful books on the subject he ventured into the world of professional author in 1995 writing the first of the "Zinc It!" book series for John Gordon Burke Publisher, Inc.

A decade later he released a massive (nearly 800 pages) tome "The Minimum You Need to Know to Be an OpenVMS Application Developer" which tried to encapsulate the essential skills gained over what was nearly a 20 year career at that point. From there "The Minimum You Need to Know" book series was born.

Three years later he wrote his first novel "Infinite Exposure" which got much notice from people involved in the banking and financial security worlds. Some of the attacks predicted in that book have since come to pass. While it was not originally intended to be a trilogy, it became the first book of "The Earth That Was" trilogy:
Infinite Exposure
Lesedi - The Greatest Lie Ever Told
John Smith - Last Known Survivor of the Microsoft Wars

When he is not consulting Roland Hughes posts about technology and sometimes politics on his blog. He also has regularly scheduled Sunday posts appearing on the Interesting Authors blog.