Ashland, VA – Jewish Adventurer Leaves NY Career To Walk Across America

    40

    In this May 19, 2010 photo, a semi drives past Matt Green as he walks along Highway C, near Darien, Wis. Green began his walk across the country in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The goal: make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)Ashland, VA – In these uncertain times, most of us cling to the things that make us feel secure. Those who have jobs give thanks. We hug our children a little tighter. We wait — and hope — for better times.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    So when someone like Matt Green comes along, we shake our heads a little and wonder. Who is this young man, bearded and weather-worn, pushing a cart down a country road, mile after mile? And why would he abandon a solid career as a civil engineer — a roadway designer, ironically — to walk all the way across America?

    “Good question,” he concedes to those who frequently ask about his motives.

    Unlike others who’ve made cross-country treks, Green is not looking to break a record of any kind. Nor does he want to draw attention to a particular cause. He has no agenda, other than the handwritten list of directions he regularly compiles from Google Maps, in the event his cell phone can’t access them from remote areas.

    No, for Green, there’s just something about the act of walking that makes him really happy, much more content than he ever would have been in his office cubicle in Manhattan, where he used to daydream about doing something epic like this.
    In this May 19, 2010 photo, Matt Green looks at his cell phone as he takes a break on the side of the road along Highway C, near Darien, Wis. Green began his walk across the country in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The goal: make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
    On the road, there’s a simple purpose to each day, he says. There is camaraderie with the people he meets along the way. There is excitement in discovering what’s around the next bend.

    “Playing it safe isn’t really that safe,” he has concluded. “If you do that, you miss out on a lot of the great things life has to offer.”

    For him, making this journey is freedom.

    ___

    Green, a 30-year-old Virginia native, began his walk in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York’s Kennedy Airport. The goal: Make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west.
    In this May 19, 2010 photo, Matt Green walks along Highway 14, near Darien, Wis. Green began his walk across the country in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The goal: make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
    By air, the trip takes a little more than six hours. Green figures it will take him about six months. He started planning more than a year ago, saving money by living frugally and designing a rolling cart to carry his tent, sleeping bag and the fewest supplies possible.

    On days off, he also prepared by leading groups on long walking tours in New York City, where he lived for five years. The routes he chose enabled people to see the city in new ways. He started them off at 6 miles, or 8, and worked them up to even longer distances. The groups steadily grew. People begged him to plan more neighborhood treks. And his own love of walking, and the connections that could be made at a slow, almost meditative pace, deepened.

    So when Green told his walking buddies he planned to do a cross-country trip, they were among the few who “thought it was the coolest thing they’d ever heard.”

    Others, including his parents, weren’t as convinced.
    In this May 19, 2010 photo, Matt Green walks along Highway 14, near Darien, Wis. Green began his walk across the country in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The goal: make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
    They worried about his safety, that he’d get hit by a car or attacked. They also wondered whether their eldest should be more settled in his life.

    “For my generation, stability meant something different,” says his dad, Barry Green, [Mr Green is an Observant Jew who retired in Feb 20010 as Director, Department of Juvenile Justice for the Commonwealth of Virginia] who lives in Ashland, Va., with Green’s mom, Miriam.

    In his day, there was more of a premium placed on sticking with a job and moving around less.

    Not that he didn’t have his own wanderlust, at least for a time. The elder Green remembers how, as a young man — even younger than his son — he saved up money, bought a car and did his own traveling. His own mother would wait by the telephone for him to call.

    Now he and Miriam find themselves watching each night for an e-mail that comes when their son pushes the “I’m OK” button on an emergency beacon that transmits his exact location by satellite. Green also carries pepper spray and a stick to fend off attacking dogs. So far, he hasn’t needed them.

    He understands his parents’ trepidation and does what he can to allay their fears, without giving up this adventure.

    But for now, he’s less concerned about stability, or preparing for something far off like retirement, especially in a time when so many people are having to put off that retirement, anyway.

    “What’s the point of living the majority of your life preparing for that last little bit?” he asks.

    ___

    And so, he walks, up to a personal record of 28 miles each day, reloading on food — his main expense — when he passes through small towns.

    In the West, he figures there will be five-day stretches with few signs of civilization. But even now, in the Midwest, his directions sometimes take him on hidden roads that most people would miss.
    In this May 19, 2010 photo, Matt Green walks along Highway C, near Darien, Wis. Green began his walk across the country in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The goal: make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
    On one secluded stretch near Avalon, Wis., he happened upon a dairy farm with a large garden across the road. A handmade sign above it read: “Welcome Visitors — Gloria’s Garden Tours Anytime.”

    Green knocked on the door. The owner was 84-year-old Gloria Ransom, who was more than happy to show him the garden she’d planted and tended for years.

    “My kids would tell me not to talk to strangers, but I don’t care. I like to think that everybody is good,” she told Green, as she pointed out bright red poppies and other plants and flowers.

    “Heaven sakes,” she said, “nobody who wants to go through your garden is going to rob you.”

    She invited him into her grand old farmhouse. She showed him her quilts and paintings and photos of her many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

    She even pulled out an old photo from a trip she made out West with her family in 1937, when she was 11. The mode of transport was a Ford “Model A” that pulled a camping trailer — a rig the adults in the group sometimes had to push up the steeper terrain.

    Whether it was that trip or something else, Gloria understood the allure of a trip like Green’s. And when he left, she seemed genuinely sad to see him go.

    It’s the type of connection Green has found repeatedly on this trip — another lesson, says the self-proclaimed introvert, in taking chances and stepping outside his comfort zone.

    “The people I’ve met who’ve had no fear of me, they generally seem to be really happy people,” he says. “I just hope I can return that kindness to others.”
    In this May 19, 2010 photo, Matt Green looks at horses as he walks along Highway C, near Darien, Wis. Green began his walk across the country in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The goal: make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
    Jason Eppink, a 28-year-old assistant museum curator who met Green through the walks he led in New York, says Green’s journey is “obviously a personal project, but I don’t think it’s a one-way street.”

    Green, says Eppink, is “able to touch people.”

    ___

    Each night before the sun sets, Green counts on that ability, knocking on farmhouse doors to find a place to pitch his small tent.

    He doesn’t always get a “yes.” But night after night, there is always someone who takes an interest in this young stranger and his quest, including Liz and Ron Struzynski, a bank worker and laborer who live outside Milton, Wis.
    In this May 19, 2010 photo, Matt Green walks past a newly planted field along Highway C, near Darien, Wis. Green began his walk across the country in late March at Rockaway Beach, a seaside neighborhood just south of New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The goal: make it to Rockaway Beach, Ore., just over 3,000 miles to the west. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
    “I don’t suppose you’ve watched ‘Forrest Gump,'” Ron Struzynski said, chuckling as he compared Green — as many people have — to the movie character known for his penchant for running.

    Green grinned and nodded, as he went to set up his tent near the couple’s newly planted vegetable gardens.

    The Struzynskis let him charge his cell phone and fill up his water bottles. He washed up in their barn, and they invited him in for a meal.

    “He’s more than welcome, heck,” Liz Struzynski said. “It takes a lot of courage to do what he’s doing.”

    Back in Virginia, his parents look at the photos Green regularly sends from his cell phone to his website, which is used by family, friends and people he’s met along the way to keep up with the trip.

    Green is circumspect when considering whether the journey will help him figure out what he wants to do next.

    “I didn’t want to be too ambitious about what I would figure out on this walk,” Green says. “I didn’t want to tell myself that when I was done, I knew what I wanted to do with my life. But maybe in the back of my head somewhere, I’m kind of hoping that.”

    His parents are hoping that, too, though they’re also learning about letting go.

    “You just have to have faith in somebody sometimes,” Green’s dad says. “So we have faith in him.”

    Online: Matt’s website: http://www.imjustwalkin.com


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    40 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    What does he do for shabbos??

    Tina18
    Tina18
    13 years ago

    Is this guy jewish? frum? looking for a shiduch? that would be a great way to get a exposure

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    B’hotzlocha, Matt!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    thats not your business!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    he has a lot of time to think, wow.

    scoot
    scoot
    13 years ago

    why doesnt he go by a scooter or some other slow vehicle. he could catch all the scenery and not have to walk so much.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    If anyone wants to give him chizuk, or shabbos invitations, his e-mail address is on his website.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    There was a guy who did it in reverse a few years ago to lose weight. I think it’s stupid.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I wish I could join him. This must be so amazing. Keep on trucking Matt. Hatslacha

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    This type usually ends up at Aish Ha Torah sooner or later. He should walk the length of Israel next iy”H!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Daven for his safety and safe return!

    jack
    jack
    13 years ago

    Matt have safe Trip!

    tzaddikim praven golus
    tzaddikim praven golus
    13 years ago

    There is a Jewish tradition of tzaddikim going on such treks, called ‘praven golus’.

    May HKB”H watch him.

    BubbaGump
    BubbaGump
    13 years ago

    Interesting, but didn’t Forrest Gump do this?

    Matys
    Matys
    13 years ago

    Great way to find yourself and meet The Highest.
    However unorthodox (not religiously) it is.
    My admiration Mat, Be Hatzluche.
    HaSzem should be with you on all of your paths.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    there are observant Jews in Ashland? There is no shul for miles – not even a reform or conservative temple –

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I just don’t get it.

    This guy is not sure what he wants to do with his life; he spends his day walking down empty roads looking at trees and cows; and in essence, is simply trying to dodge the reality that we call “life” and all the responsibility that comes with it. Why is he worthy of all the media attention and accolades?

    Hey, I don’t enjoy going to work every day either…but I bite the bullet and do it. So should he!

    jealousee
    jealousee
    13 years ago

    i would love to do it to.
    here in the us, israel and everywhere
    now all i have to do is convince my wife.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Ahh, what yiddesheh nachas. What an upside down world when a complete narishkeit is looked at as a wonderful thing!

    Max
    Max
    13 years ago

    to #8 why bother buying a scooter when he can go on maps.google.com and watch the photos from NY to OR. best of all he can complete the trip in one day and be home for Shabbos. ! Have you heard the expressions a Wondering Jew. You never know he might come back riding a donkey.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Police across America are getting frantic phone calls about a moron walking on the highway

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    There are pleny of folks who would love to do what Matt has the gutts to do. It’s very possible to do physically-though more of a challenge bruchnius- but many people who dream of such a trip would never have the courage to pick themselves up and do this.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I think it would be a lot more adventerous to just go – with some old-fashioned maps – and not post the whole thing on a web site! I think it would much more meaningful if it was a private endeavor.

    The Shul without a Frock
    The Shul without a Frock
    13 years ago

    Since when is a Shul a requirement to be an observant Jew?
    For thousands of years, Jews lived on farms and in farvurfeneh villages without minyanim, and did fine.
    Do you miss some opportuinities, like Mon-Thurs Krias Hatorah? Yes
    But check out how into it we are, checking our phones, not following inside…better to live in Ashland.
    Besides, as any yeshivish guy can tell you, there’s a machlokes R’ Chaim and R’ Boruch Ber if there’s a chiyuv on the Yochid to hear, or only if there’s a tzibbur already gathered it ‘shaffs’ a chiyuv.

    Seriously, don’t use you shul ‘attendance’ as a substitute for real Yiddishkeit…it’s not!

    Joe T
    Joe T
    13 years ago

    He should join the JRunners and show them what it mean long distance.

    Eli B
    Eli B
    13 years ago

    Matt is a nice kid. He slept in my Chabad House on his last walk. He’s not unstable, nor is he particularly observant, so what.
    He has a quality hard to come by in a large number of ‘observant’ people: faith and basic trust in the humanity of people.On his last walk He contacted random people and asked for their hospitality, he didn’t offer or expect anything in return; he was/is genuinely interested in other people’s life stories and savors the ability of seeing the world and the many beautiful people that live in it, up close.
    A very ‘Baal shemske’ approach if you think about. Would love to join him ,at least in theory, I think my attitude toward life would be better.