










ROLL
Morgan Strub (1973-2010)
“The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn, like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes “Awww!”
–Jack Kerouac, On The Road
Tall and lanky, wearing blue jeans loose from wear, a white t-shirt, close-cropped hair and wire-rim glasses, Morgan looked like a cross between Jack Kerouac and a holy wayfaring monk. At least to me. He wasn’t religious, but he had that wildman energy that comes from the open West, the wisdom that comes from hard traveling, and the poetry that comes from beat coffeehouses, all mixed together. A romantic, gazing at stars above the Arizona desert; a realist, driven by details, staying up all night hunched over a computer, coding. He taught himself HTML, then PHP. “Ahh, PHP,” he said to me, a couple weeks before his death, “that’s possibility.” He had a deep voice—not a booming one, like most men with deep voices, but soft and soothing, like a campfire, when it turns inward to glowing coals.
At 16, Morgan took off from home. He hitchhiked from Phoenix and headed to New Mexico. It started from being a rebellious teen, Morgan explained, but eventually “The Road,” both the romantic idea of it and the brutal reality of it, had taken hold. The Road would call him back again, and again.
In the Summer of 2001, Morgan set out to make “a big, crazy circle” around the US, stopping to find work, visit friends and hang with homeless and other pedestrians. He arrived in New York City two days after 9-11. The next summer, age 29, Morgan hitched 2,500 miles from Austin to Portland. It was in the drizzly Portland winter that we met. I was also 29 and told him I’d been recently working at the local PBS station, but wanted to start a non-profit devoted to making documentaries and teaching others to tell their story. He listened to my excited ramblings, nodding, and punctuating the ideas with, “yeah,” and “exactly.” And then he told me his dream, to make a website that connected the rag-tag sub-culture of hitchhikers.
He said that any hitcher could go to a public library and get online, but that there was no central spot for them to connect. A place to leave a message, or get some advice, maybe post a story or some photos taken during a trip. He told me that he’d recently discovered a programming system called a “portal” which might allow him to accomplish this vision and that he’d launched a site the year before called “Digihitch.” [http://digihitch.com]
He said, since he was paying for server space already, he’d share a small corner of it, like a friend offers up a couch to crash. Over that spring, with the help of Morgan and a small group of volunteers, we launched a website for NW Documentary, filed for 501c3 status, and moved into the sixth-floor of the New Market Theater building. The loft office had once held a Dot-Com start-up. The place was torn up, gutted, wires ripped from walls. We spent weeks cleaning, vacuuming, and painting. Morgan, the tallest, perched on precarious wooden ladders. Sometimes, when I’m sitting at my desk, I look up at the giant heating ducts, and remember Morgan, meticulously dabbing the paint, cutting a clean line around the trim.
As easily as Morgan had come into our lives, he left. “I gotta roll,” he said. Portland’s summer had been lovely, but the desert native just wasn’t up for another rainy winter. It would be two years later, in 2005, when I saw him again. I’d flown down to Tucson to the Center for Creative Photography for a new film I was making called, “Eloquent Nude.” Morgan had settled down in his hometown of Phoenix and met the love of his life, Kasha. He said he’d come join us in Tucson. Of course, he hitched.
He was up for doing anything to help, and I asked him to do some photocopying. He spent two entire days standing beside a Xerox machine, diligently copying, page by page, Charis Wilson’s Guggenheim Journal. In the evenings, we drove out to the edge of the city, to the desert, where I shot the orange Sonoran sunset and we drank luke-warm beers and talked about life. After my week in Arizona was done, I dropped Morgan off at a truckstop at the edge of town. “This is good,” he said, and climbed out of the rental car with his backpack. I watched him wander off along the wayside. Goodbyes are hard.
I’d started my next film project last summer when Morgan called. He’d been diagnosed with Stage IV Neuroblastoma, a cancer, he explained, that was more common in children, but rare in adults. Cancer is an unkind battle, but all the way to the end, Morgan lived with grace, dignity, and humor. He’d gotten a guinea pig that he named “Sweet pea” and he nicknamed his tumor “Buster.” I was able to spend a week with Morgan, at his bedside, recording some of his stories.
At the end of life, one looks for summation. All told, he’d logged over 30,000 miles hitchhiking throughout the United States and Canada. Digihitch had 18,000 members, who had posted some 2,400 stories, and engaged in more than 10,000 discussion threads. But there is no counter for the number of conversations, or campfires, and friendships struck along the road.
“Hitchhiking is a way to change things up in life, to meet new people, see amazing places and get creative in resolving issues that may arise,” he’d written on Digihitch.
“Morgan was all about gathering people together to share life,” said his sister, Melissa. “He welcomed all with their differences and facilitated a safe place to find some commonality.”
“Hitchhiking,” said Morgan, “teaches you that time is relative, and that where you go next often depends on where you’re coming from. Roll with things. Be open to the people, places and new experiences along the way. Don’t worry. Laugh, smile, sing. It will all work out, once you stop fighting yourself. Let the road roll in your soul.”
He loved that word. Roll. Roll with things. Roll.
Those are the last words on his online bio he wrote for himself on Digihitch. A fitting epitaph, my friend.
Ian McCluskey
NW Documentary
115 SW Ash St, 620
Portland, OR 97204
nwdocumentary.org
eloquentnude.org
The 867 miles from Austin to Phoenix never felt so heavy as they have these past 2 days. I really didn’t expect it. I miss you, Morgan. I have a huge lump in my throat tonight as I read through past entries and their respective comments. It’s a lump and not a stream of tears only because I’ve kept Jack up WAY past his bedtime to soak him up extra heavy in hopes of knocking the edge of this void I feel.
I read back on all of this and can’t believe how much has CHANGED in half a year. I’ve accepted that life IS change. Although, I haven’t gotten used to it. I admire that you seem to have embraced it. It’s awe-inspiring how resilient and adaptable and strong you are. And that’s not new. You’ve always been all of those things. I didn’t always realize it, but I see it now in hindsight. You are encouraging us, your friends and family (admirers) to dig deeper and find the strength that we also possess to deal with our own changes and challenges.
Before Jack came home today, I had some {more} time to myself. I loaded his new bike into my trunk to go put some air in the tires. The journey was rich with remembrance of our Christmas Day adventures we had as kids when we would go out to roam the streets and parking lots of our neighborhood when no one else was around. The streets today were quiet as they were then. The storefronts were also closed and dark. For that moment, it made me feel a little closer to you- despite the cursed distance I mentioned earlier.
I tell this little story to illustrate a bigger idea. You live in the hearts and minds of THOUSANDS of people. For every vocal cheerleader who leaves a note in cyberspace, there are a thousand quiet supporters who have benefited from knowing you, reading your words, enjoying your many web creations, etc. I am proud to realize your legacy. It’s quite a lot to have accomplished considering your relatively young age plus obstacles.
2009 has been a really tough year in so many ways- for so many people. Thank you, on behalf of all of us that know you, for the reminder and inspiration to look forward to the future and “never give up.”
I can’t wait to see you next month.
Love,
Mark
Morgan is doing well. In fact, he had a visit from Dr. Isaac’s this morning who said Morgan looked great. The word is he will go home tomorrow.
Last night, we celebrated Mom’s 60th birthday and ended the party at the hospital with Morgan. The special surprise of the night~ Mark came into town with his friend and shocked us all. We are planning to do a ”Strub Tour” tomorrow. Strub Tour? Yes, we gather the Strub’s and take a tour of our past. We drive out west and visit our old homes, stores, the parks, O’Neil pool, schools, Grandpa’s house and anything that was important to us…we laugh and reminisce.
I love it! It makes me happy just thinking about spending the time with my brothers and plans for tomorrow.
Thanks for your thoughts and prayers this week~ we’ve had miracles!
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Happy day!
Ps. I’ll attach pictures soon!
I’ve been using Facebook quite a bit lately to keep in touch with friends and share more about myself. There you can find tons of info about me, including photos, hobbies, personality quirks, travel notes, etc. I’ve added my reading list, music recommendations and lists of the places I’ve traveled. Check it out. Go to:
(If you don’t yet have a Facebook profile you’ll need to first create one and then add me as a friend in order to see most of my info.)
Thursday afternoon I got a call from my good friend Frank. Turns out he was at a truck stop along I-10 in Quartzsite, Arizona, heading for Phoenix on a cross-country hitchhiking trip to Maryland.
It had been a while since I saw Frank- not since last spring in Southern California when we were working on a hitchhiking documentary called Along the Way. Frank was diagnosed with cancer this last fall. He’s been going through chemotherapy and radiation since that time, while living in California. The doctors told him he’s got at least a month until his next treatment so he decided to hit the road, hitchhiking from one coast to the next as he has many times these past few years.
I was excited to hear that Frank had time to stick around for a day. I told him to plan to stay with me overnight and I’d get him a little further down the road the next morning.
“You lose your hair yet?” he asked me.
“It’s begun to fall out, yep,” I told him. “I took some photos of me pulling out clumps.”
“Well, mine’s growing back in. I get to tease you now that you’re the baldie.”
The next day, early Friday afternoon, Frank called to say he was down the street from my place. He had ridden local buses in from the Flying J truck stop he was dropped off earlier on the southwest side of town. Kasha went to pick him up and from the moment he walked through the door we were catching up on travels and our recent struggles and realizations with cancer.
Plans were made to meet up with the family for dinner. We chose Fajita’s, an old family favorite not too far away. All the sibs and spouses were there except Michael. Frank kept us entertained with stories of traveling through Mexico. I was glad to have everyone get to hear. You see, Frank is a hero of mine. The way he travels, the experiences he creates through sharing– I consider them vital and inspirational. He is a mentor and strong voice on digihitch.com, but here’s the reason I wanted my family to hear: to meet an important friend of mine as well as get a sense of what is important to me through his experiences.
Frank called me several hours after Kasha and I dropped him off at Carefree Highway this morning on the edge of Phoenix. He said he was already in Flagstaff and would be staying the night at the hostel. Sounds like the perfect place to be for such a sweltering weekend (115 degrees in Phoenix!!). I feel energized after our visit and am looking forward to hearing how his trip progresses as Frank blogs to digihitch.
![morgan_kasha-160x120[1]](http://cancercaw.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/morgan_kasha-160x1201.jpg)
This picture brings a smile to my face. : )