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Outside Magazine

See You in Six Months: Maximum Dose
Roland Merullo fled to Micronesia in search of a new life. He found it - but it was not what he expected.

By Roland Merullo

Intro | Live Vast | Falling off the Edge of the Moroccan Dessert | Nevada's Loneliest Town | High Lonesome in the Himalayas | Maximum Dose in Micronesia | White on White in Antarctica | The Mountains of Bolivia

Metropolitan Micronesia: the bustling Truk atoll.

WHEN THE PEACE Corps informed me that I was being sent to Micronesia, I went straight to my atlas. After much searching and squinting I found a sprinkling of dots just north of the equator and 2,000 miles east of the Philippines. Finally I located the Truk islands, my soon-to-be home: 11 small grains of pepper on the map's wide blue middle.

Almost immediately I constructed an imaginary Micronesia—beautiful island women, succulent fruit, warm trade winds, translucent seas. I would spend my mornings helping desperately poor islanders, my afternoons snorkeling in wild, unpolluted waters, my nights reading in my thatched hut, or making love. At 25, I had already spent years dreaming of an Eden free of the rush, spoilage, and obsession with money that I felt surrounded me. Now I was sure I'd found it.

Remote File: Australia and Oceania

Continent Size
3,074,800 square miles

Population Density
10 people per square mile

Claim to Fame
Longest reef: the Great Barrier Reef (1,247 miles)

Most Remote Region
The Great Sandy Desert, Australia

Required Reading
The Songlines, Bruce Chatwin
Sailing Alone Around the World, Joshua Slocum
After a long flight across the Pacific and a few weeks of training on Guam, it was a two-day sail to my island, a speck of sand called Murilo, in the Hall group, eight degrees north latitude. Finally, on a brilliant September afternoon, I climbed down the ladder of the field-trip ship and into the skiff that would take me to the atoll. Above hung an enormous sky burned white by the tropical sun. Ahead was a Robinson Crusoe­like crescent of land fringed with palms and pandanus trees. On all sides, as far as I could see, the green Pacific sparkled and rolled. For a minute or two I was struck full in the chest by the wonderful mercilessness of the nonhuman world, the immensity. Salt spray flying up against my sunglasses, I sat amid an embarrassment of luggage, bearing big dreams.

Murilo was home to 200 people. Its summit stood six feet above sea level; you could walk the entire shoreline in 15 minutes. During the day, the heat was so intense that the Murilans sought shade whenever they could. But as soon as the sun set, bathing the cumulus clouds stacked on the horizon in scarlet and lavender, a sweet breeze rose off the water and blew until dawn. Yet it quickly became apparent to me that my visions of paradise had been absurd. The humidity curled up the edges of my notebook paper and glued my envelopes closed. Tiny flies swarmed my face and arms. The single females were all under the age of eight. The food—fresh fish of a hundred varieties, breadfruit, taro, coconuts, bananas, pumpkin, lobster, pig, dog, snails—while as tasty as I'd imagined, carried bacteria that plagued even the locals.

There was no mail. The only way on or off Murilo was the field-trip ship, which stopped by with supplies every three months. Worst of all, however, was the fact that I was completely superfluous on Murilo. The people were content—more content, by a good measure, than those I'd left behind. The women sang as they made rope from coconut-husk fibers. The men passed cigarettes around a circle, two puffs apiece, and carried buckets of fish over to a neighbor's house after a lucky afternoon at sea. My elaborately detailedPeace Corps job—writing up the island laws into a kind of constitution—took an hour a month.

I filled the broiling, empty days by teaching myself to fish with a snorkel, a spear, and a slingshotlike loop of surgical tubing the locals called a Hawaiian sling. The waters around Murilo were full of sharks, nurse and black-tipped reef sharks, mostly, but tigers and hammerheads too, so the speared fish had to be killed immediately—by crushing the skulls between my back teeth. Every morning I returned to the sea, losing myself in schools of angelfish, surgeonfish, and barracuda, diving down after my speared lunch—living, for a few hours at least, like a full citizen of the natural world.

Despite the thrill of spearfishing, I lasted only five months, climbing back onto the field-trip ship with my idealism bruised and my body host to battalions of infections. The Murilans, friendly and hospitable as they were, simply didn't need me. Still, when I stepped out of Logan Airport, after the 30-hour flight from Truk, I was carrying a fishing spear wrapped up in cardboard and tape. I keep it in my workshop now, a rusty reminder of the most remote place I've ever been. And sometimes, swimming in the waters off Cape Cod, I take a breath and dive, running my chest along the sandy bottom, imagining a solitary surgeonfish there, just ahead, just out of range.

Kelly Slater, Outside Magazine January 2009On Newsstands Now:
January 2009

The Wellness Issue
Kelly Slater
Rogue Waves
Winter Lodges
Colin Haley
Chamonix
Michael Phelps, Outside Magazine December 2008Online Issue:
December 2008

The Oustide 100
Michael Phelps
Holiday Gift Guide
Greg Mortenson
Fitness Mistakes
Robert Allen Hale


Next Page: In Antarctica, visitors fall from the sky, discovers Mary Roach,. What they find there comes from both heaven and hell.

Intro | Live Vast | Falling off the Edge of the Moroccan Dessert | Nevada's Loneliest Town | High Lonesome in the Himalayas | Maximum Dose in Micronesia | White on White in Antarctica | The Mountains of Bolivia



Roland Merullo's most recent novel is Revere Beach Boulevard, which was a finalist for the L.L. Winship/PEN New England Award. A memoir entitled Revere Beach Elegy is forthcoming in January from Beacon Press. He lives in western Massachusetts.