Experience and utopianism aren't always the best of friends.
When asked of my ideal place to live, I often conjure a land that combines the
best traits of my current Western Massachusetts home with the humor and
resiliency of Scotland, the civic ideals and beauty of New Zealand, the
kindness found in Canada, the economics of Scandinavia, and the food and
culture of Western Europe. And it would be warmer, but not tropical—maybe San
Francisco without the freezing fog and numbing cost of living. Experience,
though, tells me there's no such place.
Experience also tells me that the best place I've ever lived
is Vermont. It is said that comparisons are odious, but a Thanksgiving sojourn to
Burlington has put me in a Vermont state of mind, even though I'm not planning
a move. I always feel at home in Vermont, but I was also reminded of its
depressing 4 pm November darkness, the bone rattling winds blowing off Lake
Champlain, the rural poverty of Franklin County, and the region's overall isolation.
Still, there are ways in which Northern Vermont has much to teach Western
Massachusetts.
First and foremost is that, reputations for being taciturn
notwithstanding, Vermonters are way friendlier than folks in the Pioneer
Valley. Vermonters don't take themselves as seriously and that's a good thing. I've
threatened a local terrorist act that wouldn't rise to beige on the alert
scale; I'd love to string a banner across Main Street Northampton that reads,
"C'mon Folks—Lighten Up!" We are a grumpy, angry bunch 'round these
parts and I too often get caught up in stuff that brings me down: bad driving,
arrogant pedestrianism, cause fanaticism, and—above all—a stunning lack of
perspective. In Northern Vermont, snowflakes are real things that fall in mass
quantities, not people of privilege sniping at things that don't touch them
personally. Honestly, I wonder how some people manage to rise in the morning
bearing all their assumed burdens. You can hardly sneeze in Western
Massachusetts without being accused of a micro-aggression—a term that makes my
working-class soul sneer. I'd love to see how some of our local Snowflakes
would deal with the in-your-face-take-that-shit-elsewhere aggression of life
outside the Bubble.
Mind, I prefer Bubble values, but we ought to do a much
better job of distinguishing the real from the imagined. Sorry, but when I hear
folks tell me they've never experienced
[fill in your favorite oppression ending in ism here] like that on their
college campuses my first thought is, "You really need to get out
more." Vermonters are, on balance, more resilient. Maybe this is what
happens when being down-to-earth is literal rather than metaphorical. Vermont
winters are not for the faint of heart and Mud Season is no treat either. Though
it sounds odd to say it, one of the things I like about Western Massachusetts
is its milder climate—as in 6-8 weeks less winter. Remember the 2011 Halloween
snowstorm that knocked out power in the Pioneer Valley, or the 1997 April
Fools' Day wallop? These are legendary; in Northern Vermont they're filed
under, "Not Unusual."
All of this is to say that everyday concerns are more
prosaic because your life really does
depend on those details. I still recall the -20 degree (Fahrenheit) day when my
antifreeze froze and a roadside lift from a stranger was all that stood between
me and serious danger. Vermont town meetings discuss things such as dumping
gravel on washed out roads, getting road crews out early, buying snow fences,
and rounding up volunteers to help EMTs. Small town politics can be
cantankerous—especially school budgets, a shameful problem in the Green
Mountain State—but nobody goes home until the agenda is dispatched. Occasionally locals weigh in on
national issues, but mostly they don't waste time debating symbolic things of
little significance. Really, most Northeast Kingdom townies know that El
Salvadorans are not looking up their way for sanctuary cities.
Yet here's the really crazy thing: Vermont politics are often
more pragmatically progressive than those of Western Massachusetts. This is
especially true in Burlington, where power isn't a two-way contest between
Neanderthal Republicans and Brain-Dead Democrats. Both are to the right of the
Progressive Coalition, which doesn't always control city government outright,
but you can't rule without them. Springfield and Holyoke pols might want to
check out Burlington's Old North End sometime. Social problems remain there,
but there's also been a ton of progress, not decades of stasis. And I'll tell
you for free that in my lifetime there has been nothing that comes close to
being as exciting and transformative as Burlington during the Bernie Sanders
years. Save your clichés; that cranky socialist did more concrete things to
improve life than a manure spreader full of faux liberals.
Vermonters are fiercely independent—another trait I admire.
Politically, it's a state with a socialist U.S. Senator (Sanders) and another
who is a for-real liberal Democrat (Pat Leahy), but also elected a Republican
governor (Phil Scott) after two lackluster terms from its Democratic
placeholder (Peter Shumlin). That same pragmatic streak shows up in other ways.
Vermonters have been environmentally conscious since the 1970s, are suspicious
of big promises, don't care much for pretense or bling, and the slogan
"Use it up, wear it out, make it do, and do without" ought it be
stitched into the state flag.
Either that or "No Whining."
Like I said earlier, Vermont isn't utopia. The same arrayed
dark forces gather there as well: opioid addiction, a shortage of good jobs,
hucksterism, poor folks, unwise development, a declining retail sector…. I
sometimes also think Vermonters make do too much and demand too little. But I
do admire the realism of the place. Maybe Vermont is closer to utopia because
its citizens have their feet on the ground instead of their heads in the
clouds. After all, clouds are where snowflakes reside and they see too many of
those. Me too.
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