Beyond
Beyond
First, there is nothing. From all appearances, the fast ferry, whipping
through the water in the early morning sun, is headed out into the cold
wastes of the Atlantic. But then a shimmering line appears on the
horizon. As minutes and miles pass, it grows no taller but, eventually,
the black profile of a row of loblolly pines, tossed by the wind, comes
into focus.
There is land out here after all; flat, low land, its highest point only 28
feet above the waves. This fragment of coral shelf is the northernmost
of the British Virgin Islands, the last before the open ocean, and it has
a completely different character from its gaggle of southern sisters.
While they are steep green mountains rising from the sea, this place is
so low that its Spanish name, Anegada, means ‘covered in water’ or
‘shipwrecked’. The other islands tend to be home to thousands of
people and are serviced by commercial flights and ferries. Anegada
has a boat every two days or so, and a scant few hundred inhabitants,
most of them in the lone settlement called The Settlement.
Looking around at the other people on the ferry, it seems that some
might be headed to jobs on the island, in its scattering of restaurants
and businesses. A few are tourists come to stay in the handful of basic
guesthouses and eat the sweet lobster that is a local speciality. My
husband and I came out here because it was the edge of the map. He
suggested it after seeing it way out on the rim of things, and I, not
totally sure why we were going, made the plans.
But some people, from farther away, have slightly odder stories. At a
beach bar on the rugged northern shore, a fire-juggler’s wife tells me
about their trajectory. He is a skinny hippy with a trailing grey beard,
round dark glasses, and a faded patchwork cap, and he pushes a broom
quietly while she talks to me. Back in Michigan, she explains, she
worked as a costumer at Renaissance fairs. Here, they live in a tent in
the sea-grape bushes behind the bar’s gift shop. In return, they put on
a show for the bar’s patrons.
She raises her eyebrows. ‘We’re not crazy.’ From June to November,
they return to Michigan. Today, a chilly day in January, clouds mass
like a fleet of ships – frigates of vapour – off the northern shore. They
dwarf the low island, prompting a kind of vertigo.
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For my own part, I’ve spent most of the past two years aloft, with no
fixed address of my own, trying, perhaps, to get something out of my
system as well. The absurd moments have been many – being stranded
at the wrong hotel in a provincial Chinese city, laying siege to
consulates for visas, sleeping in airports, taking long trains, flights,
boats and buses out to the back of beyond, for unclear gain.
Peary’s era, like ours, was a time when Western societies glorified
leaving the pale. But clearly, not everyone goes so far. You can almost
picture a spectrum, with people who stay at home – even if home is a
remote island – at one end, and laid out along it to the other end the
itinerant fire-jugglers, chronic travellers, Arctic explorers and those
willing to die on Mars, all of them giving in to the urge to leave, in
proportion to some particular quality of the mind.
Human beings don’t need to do this, not in the same way that vervets
do. But a group that includes some people who will leave can reap real
benefits, explains Lynette Shaw, a sociologist at the University of
Washington, who studies how people assign value. Take the example
of an imaginary tribe of people, faced with choosing a spot in a varied
landscape to settle. There are likely to be some places where the group
will certainly die, some where they will thrive, and a large number of
places that are in-between. Having some people in the group who
want to explore is useful because, while most of them will not make it,
some will return with fresh information about the best places to live.
The key, though, is that there must also be people who don’t want to
ramble, who turn their talents and energies to exploiting, to the best of
their abilities, the place where they have settled. If there are too many
explorers, the group is likely to starve. ‘There’s a tension between
those two,’ Shaw says, between explore and exploit. The right mixture
of both will make the group more likely to find a better-than-average
place to settle and make the best use of it. The explore-exploit
dilemma is from management science, not anthropology. It doesn’t
describe what has necessarily happened: it’s just the most efficient
route to the best outcome for a group. But it is the kind of thing that
might have been generated under evolutionary pressure, and it helps to
put a frame around the urge for going.
‘It’s key to realise that the most functional systems are the ones that
have a variation,’ Shaw remarks. ‘A good society would be
better at letting people know that there is a variation.’
Many Anegadans leave for better lives elsewhere, Creque tells me.
But employment also brings some people here from other Caribbean
islands, one inhabitant confides. She herself is from Jamaica, and has
been working in a hotel on the southern shore for 12 years, eventually
bringing over five relatives. She likes the isolation, the quiet. There is
nothing to do here, she says, but be with family.
Going to Mars has never interested me. But like a pocket watch
resembles a grandfather clock, it’s kin to my sojourn on Anegada.
When I lived in Switzerland, where many people stay close to home, I
tried to explain what I was doing, moving across oceans for unclear
amounts of time, without the excuse of a job to make me go. ‘You
mean, like a vacation?’ they’d ask. No, I’d say, but then fall silent,
unable to explain why this seemed like a good idea. It doesn’t surprise
Zuckerman at all. ‘Writers tend to be high in experience-seeking,’ he
said.