Tuesday, August 7, 2012

highway to heaven


We filled up with cheap gas, then pulled forward to park near the main entrance of the travel center, two-thirds of the way between Portland and our home in the northeast-corner of the state. The sun was setting, and the McDonalds and Subway restaurants inside had just finished the dinner rush. We ushered our children through the glass doors and made our way through isles of cell-phone accessories, car parts, salty-snacks, Confederate flag ball caps, audio-books, DVDs, stuffed animals, shot-glasses protruding from the mouths of rattlesnakes, and T-shirts that said “Mess with me and you mess with the whole trailer park.” My wife took the baby into the women’s room, and I took the other two, both of them shuffling under my outstretched arm as I held open the men’s room door.

Like the more traditional greasy-spoons with trailer-filled tarmacs, the ubiquitous travel-center still caters to truckers, but you’ll also find Greyhound buses and plenty of all-American SUVs and minivans. The public restrooms – which are the one spot in the travel center everyone is sure to visit – is therefore one of the last remaining places offering a true cross-section of American society at a glance. Upper-middle-class suburbanites mingle with blue-collar bus riders and rough-and-tumble long-haul truckers. And it’s all smiles and nods and taking turns. The interstate travel-center restroom is the last place in America where all people are truly equal.

As my children took turns on the potty, an automated message came over the PA system: “Shower customer number…one-hundred ten, your shower is ready. Please proceed to shower number…nine.” By the time my children were finished, the music overhead had been interrupted by two more calls for shower customers. We ushered out of the stall, washed everyone’s hands, and turned for the exit.

There, holding the door, was the ultimate stereotype of the long-haul trucker. Over six-feet tall. White handle-bar mustache. Tank-top with ragged seams. Bulging biceps. Thirty-year-old tattoos turned blue-green with age. He looked down at my children with a smile. I gave him a smile and a nod. Yes, they are cute, aren’t they.

But as we shuffled past him, back into the aisles of travel convenience and sorry-I-missed-your-birthday-again kitsch, I wondered if the trucker’s smile meant something different. After all, what does a tough guy like him care for the cuteness of small children? Maybe he admired their comparative innocence. Or perhaps (now the writer in me was coming out) seeing my children brought back memories of his own past, an earlier time when he was a family man, before the children grew old enough to resent him and the wife grew tired of never seeing him. Maybe that look in his eyes, that tightness in his smile, was a recognition of what he had lost, or what he had never had, or what he had knowingly given up.

We led our children outside, slid open the minivan door, and began the arduous process of strapping everyone into their child-seats. And I realized it was entirely possible the trucker in the bathroom had a loving wife waiting for him at home, only a few hours away, and seeing my children reminded him of his own grandchildren, whom he saw regularly, pockets filled with small gifts. Maybe he was even a faithful follower of Jesus, having turned from the life depicted on his tattoos, using his image to reach the unreachable for the Kingdom of God.

Or maybe I needed to embrace the inconceivable. Maybe he wasn’t a trucker at all. Maybe he was a man of more-than-moderate means on a family vacation, waiting for his wife of thirty years to emerge from the restroom, waiting to link up with the grandchildren in the parking lot. Maybe he was the very embodiment of the American cross-section, the incarnation of the essence of the modern travel center.

As we pulled away from the parking lot and peeled off toward the interstate, accelerating eastward, I realized it was entirely possible that the man was climbing into an SUV for the return trip to his house in suburban Portland. After all, the travel center had an entire aisle of Confederate flag and trailer-park themed merchandise even though most truckers today make too much money to be “trailer trash,” even though the culture of the Northwest is almost  the polar opposite of  that found in the Southland. Even in my town of 500, in my county of 7000, I can operate a smart phone on a  3G network, and teenagers look just the same as they do in the inner city, whether Seattle or Atlanta.

How often have I been judged to be a successful, connected, wired, got-it-together professional simply because of my haircut, glasses and polo shirts, when in fact I am hardly any of those things? Why assume I’m a follower of Jesus just because I shave regularly and don’t use swear words? Why did I assume the man in the bathroom was a pagan just because he was big, wore a tank-top, had tattoos, and happened to be at a truck-stop? If the world is full of clean-cut men and women worshipping Mammon, why can’t it also be filled with bikers, rednecks, and truckers pursuing Christ?

Imagine the glory of such a man being redeemed by Jesus despite his appearance. I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt, even though, odds are, he climbed into the cab of a semi and thundered off toward the state line.