After two months on the road — two months of sharing cramped spaces, squinting at maps, making meal choices, pitching and breaking down camp, packing and repacking bags, cursing bad Internet connections, and waking up in the middle of the night to let sick dogs out of second-floor Motel 6 rooms — Jill and I decided to pick our first fight of the trip on the most beautiful highway in America.
It started over the windows of car. I wanted them down. She wanted them up.
I, of course, was in the right. We were driving along the Pacific Coast Highway, for goodness sake. The sun was out. The ocean sparkled. Iridescent, cottony clouds gave dimension to the impossibly blue sky. I switched on the radio and — no lie — the first chords of Tom Petty’s “Free Fallin’” rang through the speakers. I cranked the volume and fantasized about swerving down the PCH in a convertible Mustang — a 1968 California Special with cream-colored seats and an inlaid-wood steering wheel. Instead I was stuck in a top-heavy Honda CRV that smelled like wet dogs. The least I could do was roll down the windows.
Jill, however, is not crazy about rushing wind. It sets her on edge. It blows wisps of her hair that are too short to be piled atop her head. But, dang, the Pacific Coast Highway on a sunny day? Exceptions must be made.
Or not.
“Can you roll up the windows a little?” Jill yelled over the wind and music. I cast a perturbed glance at her that I’m sure the mirrored lenses of my cheap sunglasses did not conceal. But I complied. The rush of the wind fell to a hoarse whisper. I turned down the Petty. My freedom had been impinged.
“You don’t have to roll them up that much — just a little,” Jill offered. “It’s OK,” I said. But, really, it wasn’t.

At the next overlook I pulled off the road and killed the engine. I leashed the dogs while Jill dug into her camera bag. She shut her door, and I closed the hatch, careful not to let it slam. I started to walk toward our continent’s western edge when Jill stopped me.
“Did you lock it?”
“Yes.”
“The windows are still down. Can you roll them up?”
“We’re not going far.”
“My gear’s in there.”
“We can see the car from the overlook.”
“Don’t fight me.”
“I’m not fighting you. I’m trying to rationalize with you.”
My tone may have suggested otherwise. Exasperated, I tugged the dogs back to the car, unlocked it, and rolled up all four windows. I left the sunroof cracked. Maybe I did so out of logic, to let the car to breathe a little, expelling the odor of wet dogs and dirty laundry. Maybe spite played a small role. Either way, Jill wasn’t having it.
“Can you close the sun roof, too?”
“Seriously? Who’s going to get in? It’s barely open, and the roof rack hangs over it. A double-jointed Chinese gymnast couldn’t get through there.”
But, again, I acquiesced. Then we walked our separate ways, she north, me south. I stared into the deep blue forever of the Pacific and seethed. A hundred feet away Jill hid behind her camera and squeezed the shutter with disdain. When we reconvened at the car, we did so in silence. I started the ignition and cracked the windows. A sliver.
Jill can ride out angry silences forever. I cannot. I have to explain, justify, convince. I have to win. Only then can I have closure. It is, perhaps, a flaw.
So I broke the silence, stating my position in what I perceived to be measured tones. I don’t remember much of what I said, but I do recall telling Jill that her stress over unlocked doors and cracked windows and was unhealthier than my one-dimensional diet of red meat, and that eventually those worries would take years off her life. I suggested salvation lie only in learning from my relentlessly laissez fare world view.
Jill picked up the gauntlet with both hands. She explained how her laptop and portable hard drives contained every photo from our trip, and that her piece of mind was more important than a few inches of ventilation. She said driving with the wind in your hair does not make you carefree, and, after days upon days of eating PBJs, showering in dank bath houses, and camping without water or electricity, I had no right to paint her as a party-pooping nag.
Like any good fight, ours escalated and mutated, oozing through cracks in the walls of reason and rushing past safety barriers of truth and logic. Our disagreement over the windows eventually morphed into referendums on our respective personalities. Ironclad arguments rammed impotently into stubborn wills, and impassioned pleas slid from deaf ears to the floorboards. Sighs got heavy. Words got careless. Then, finally, the crescendo, falling from Jill’s lips as I knew it eventually must:
“Why did I ever decide to do this?”
My heart broke like a bar of motel soap. I didn’t say another word. I just rolled down my window — all the way — and drove. We’d only come a few thousand miles of a 30,000-mile journey, but already I’d gone too far.
I’m not real comfortable writing about personal stuff, and I relate this story only because every person we meet on the road (especially people who are married) eventually asks us one question: “Do you guys fight?” I usually deflect this one by joking that if our trip ends in divorce, it will make a great book. But my joke unfailingly elicits only awkward chuckles, if any chuckles at all.
Some folks we meet, especially the kindly retired couples who are most often our campground neighbors, take a liking to us and then get to worrying about our wellbeing. Others just want us to confirm that life on the road is no more of an emotional picnic than life tethered to work and kids and TiVo.
One day I might tether myself to children, and maybe even to work (never to TiVo), and then I can weigh the joys and pains of that life against those of this one. For now, all I can offer is cliché: Some days on the road are better than others. Jill and I certainly suffer from occasional pangs of homesickness. We miss our friends in Phoenix. We miss eating at Tuck Shop. We miss sitting in our backyard, watching the sprinklers and dreaming up adventures and future life scenarios. One thing that sucks about living the dream is that it makes it difficult to sit around and concoct something better — and that kind of dreaming is life fuel for Jill and me. But, hell, it’s a good problem to have, and we aim to solve it one of these nights around the campfire.

As for our squabbles, at home or abroad, they are infrequent and insubstantial. Which is why the duration and harshness of first big road-trip fight took me aback. But the show had to roll on. Jill and were stuck together, for better or worse, separated by two feet of molded plastic and gray upholstery. Besides, it was lunchtime. Past it, actually.
Off a tip from the proprietor of a small outdoors shop south of Big Sur, I turned off the highway onto a narrow road that descended to Pfeiffer Beach. I parked the car, and we silently went through the now-familiar motions of packing a picnic lunch. We hauled our food to the beach, unleashed the dogs, and sat on a log weathered to a smooth patina by surf and sand and wind.
I don’t remember who spoke first, but thereafter the apologies fell easy, as though pulled by tidal forces. The blessings of our journey were remembered and counted. The dogs ran, the surf rolled, and Jill and I shared a cold can of Coke. I guess old logs aren’t the only things smoothed by surf and sand and wind.
So cheers to the healing power of the Pacific Coast Highway, which taught me that it’s folly to argue about windows when the view beyond them is so distractingly beautiful. Jill and I will no doubt fight again, on another road in another state, but don’t expect to read about it here. I’m done airing dirty laundry. That kind of stuff belongs in the back seat — with the windows rolled up and doors locked.
— Scott
First, I am so excited to find y’all. My husband and I are perpetual travelers and left the US in September 2010. Being away from our dogs has been the hardest part of our trip so next year, we are going to take our dogs with us across the ocean to Europe to spend a year driving around the Continent. We’ve learned one truth on our travels: no fight is big enough or awful enough to break us apart. Being together all the time has changed our relationship, made it better, and stronger, and it sounds like traveling is doing the same for y’all.
Akila, your blog is wonderful, and we’re instantly jealous of your global trotting. I’m quite certain Jill would NEVER be in a fighting mood if she were “cooking and eating her way around the world.” Now that we know who you are, we’ll keep an eye The Road Forks for inspiration. (We’d love to continue our adventure in Europe, but I don’t think that refined continent is ready to be terrorized by our dogs.)
Your backyard misses you, too. No matter how much I run the sprinklers, I can’t convince the patches of brown grass to turn green. I’m hoping once the temps are back down to a manageable 90˚ this fall it will spring back to life. Love to you & the pooches!
Thank you for sharing this story! These are the kind of stories that make others feel normal because we all enter these moments. It is the way we handle them after which is the most important. You two are the perfect pair with many similarities and the best differences, the ones that make each other be better people.
Love you both and miss you horribly!
Loved this! It happens, and the most important thing is the hug and kiss at the end. Karl and I have been together 24/7 for over 24 years, working together, living, laughing and the trials of it all. We share each others joy and support each other always. What a treat to see the love you share and the “working it out” that makes you each individuals. Have a great week.
i love the reality here. beautiful writing, and gorgeous photos as always.
Damn. Great post. Miss you both, miss California, the PCH, the Pacific Ocean, and Pfeiffer … think I might know the log you were sitting on. Great place for a couple apologies, that. You guys remain an inspiration, whether or not every day on the road is picture perfect.
So well-written I can barely take it. Great post, and thanks for the honesty (isn’t that what a blog is about?).
But really, work, kids (on the way), and Tivo (thank god for tivo) really can be an emotional picnic.
Miss you guys.
Kelley, you and Patrick are definitely among those “Phoenix friends we miss.” (And I should state for the record that I didn’t seem to mind TiVo when it allowed Jill and I to catch up on Mad Men episodes at your house. Good times.)
Scott, after 41 years of marriage, I can tell you that the words “rational” and “estrogen” are mutually exclusive. It’s a battle you cannot win. Just buy Jill one of those leather helmets the biplane pilots wear. That’ll keep her hair in place and then you can put the windows down.
We almost had another fight over Jill publishing this post before I edited out the typos. But I held my water. I’m not in the habit of riling such a good co-pilot, especially one that would look cute in a leather biplane helmet.
The best post you guys have written so far. Amy and I are celebrating our 10th year together. For the last 8 years, we’ve worked side-by-side in our own businesses – first a business valuation firm and now GoPetFriendly. In 10 years, we’ve never been apart for more than 2-3 days at a time. We’re together 24/7 … and now together means together in a 24 foot by 8 foot wide RV. BTW, I feel like we’re living in the lap of luxury compared to how you guys are getting by – and I love peanut butter sandwiches. My advice, for whatever it’s worth is this: Don’t give in and don’t try to be more like each other to minimize the rocky roads. Realize that you each have qualities that keep you balanced as a couple – allowing you to stay on the road, rocky or otherwise.