A detailed diagram of a person and a dog with labeled outdoor camping and hiking gear, including a sleeping bag, tent, beef jerky, stove, harmonica, camera, wheelbarrow, tires, harness, water bladder, tarp, jacket, tripod, spare tire, water bladder, harness shafts, duct tape boots, plaque, triple blisters, hot lithium guitar, headlamp, back pack, PVC shaft extensions, and a smiley face speech bubble saying 'Me llamo Aaron!' The person is dressed in outdoor clothing, carrying a backpack, and smiling.

IN 2002 I WALKED ACROSS AMERICA.

From Encinitas, California, to New York City. 3,349 miles in 154 days.

No cell phone, and no support crew.  Just me, my dog Cosmo, a camera, and wagon filled with supplies.  

I wanted a journey so big that I couldn’t see the end.  Without an end in sight the world became very simple, I had only to walk, eat, sleep, and talk to the strangers I met along the way. Cosmo and I found ourselves sleeping in cardboard boxes, behind dumpsters and outside gas stations, in the weeds everywhere you can think of, but most often in the home of a stranger who had offered food and shelter and conversation. 

This was right after 9-11 and much of the country was bonded together in a way that’s hard to imagine today. I stayed with preachers and punks, frat boys and cowboys, veterans and miners, Amish families, you name it, every slice of America welcomed me in. 

On the walk I found my gold shoe superpowers, went to prom, won second place in a hog calling contest, ran out of water in the desert, slept in an open jail cell, got blisters 3 layers deep, almost got hit by more trucks than I can count, loitered a lot, and got really good at playing a children’s electric guitar.

Arriving in New York City didn’t feel like the end, the walk just keeps going through my whole life.  What I learned about engaging with so many kinds of people in their own spaces on their own terms forever changed how I take pictures even 20 years later.