Toronto Star

Zen priest leads with her feet

- MARY HUI THE WASHINGTON POST

Melissa McCarthy was frustrated. She was disgruntle­d about the state of her country’s politics and irked by what she saw as people’s disregard for the environmen­t.

So she decided to walk it out — across the entirety of the United States over the course of more than two years.

“My initial kind of frustratio­n was in the realm of, ‘I don’t know what to do. I just have to go out and walk,’ and to express my frustratio­n and devotion to the Earth,” said McCarthy, 68, who is from San Francisco and was ordained as a Zen Buddhist priest in 1998.

“It feels to me like a personal pilgrimage, as well as for the environmen­t,” she said. “It’s an opportunit­y to pay respect to the earth.”

It was also an opportunit­y to connect with her fellow Americans. Watching the news from a TV screen, she said, one gets a very skewed picture of the nation. “You begin to wonder, who the hell are we?” she said. With not much more than a two-wheeled walking trailer strapped to her waist and packed with a tent, some clothes, food, water, toiletries and a book (“Sometimes I allow myself to have two”), McCarthy set off in March 2015 from Avila Beach, Calif., to walk across the United States.

Flying from her trailer also is a climate flag, striped white, yellow, blue and green to represent the sun, ozone, water and Earth.

McCarthy was set to soon complete her journey by dipping her feet into the Atlantic at Rehoboth Beach, Del. The solo pilgrimage has not been without setbacks. About five months into her expedition, in Colorado, McCarthy was diagnosed with rhabdomyol­ysis, a rare but dangerous condition linked with extreme physical exertion, in which muscle breaks down and releases a protein into the bloodstrea­m. She took a train home to recover and the next spring resumed where she left off. She made it to Crown Point, Ind., when she tripped on a piece of wire and broke her jaw. Undeterred, she flew home, rested up and resumed her journey from Crown Point late in April.

On a recent afternoon, McCarthy scrolled through photos on her iPhone, telling stories of the people she has met on the road.

Most humbling, she said, has been the poverty she has encountere­d and people’s generosity despite it.

There was a couple in Ohio, outside whose trailer she pitched her tent one night. They didn’t have much, McCarthy said, but nonetheles­s were “happy enough to invite me to their yard and share their fish sandwiches with me for dinner.”

There was a family in West Virginia where no one except for the youngest boy had any teeth left.

There was a man in Utah who pulled up in his pickup as she sat on the side of the road, admiring the canyon. When she told him that she was walking in honour of the environmen­t, he said he didn’t much believe in climate change — but that he would follow news about it now that he had spoken with her.

“He thought I was walking my talk,” she said.

 ?? MELISSA MCCARTHY ?? Melissa McCarthy, 68, set off in March 2015 from Avila Beach, Calif., to walk across the United States.
MELISSA MCCARTHY Melissa McCarthy, 68, set off in March 2015 from Avila Beach, Calif., to walk across the United States.

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