Excerpt: The Cure for Anything Is Salt Water

The author, Mary South, throws her life overboard and finds happiness at sea.

ByABC News via GMA logo
May 28, 2007, 3:05 PM

May 29, 2007 — -- At 40, Mary South seemed to have it all: a beautiful home in Pennsylvania, a group of close friends, and a successful career in book publishing.

But shuttling between the conference room at work and her couch in front of the TV at home, South felt more and more empty and unfulfilled. She decided to give up everything to live aboard a 40-foot, 30-ton steel trawler and navigate a 1,500 mile journey up the eastern seaboard.

"The Cure for Anything Is Salt Water" traces South's voyage from the charming Americana of Florida's Intracoastal Waterway out into the often stormy waters of the Atlantic. As the trip progresses, South grapples not only with whatever Poseidon throws her way but also with the ghosts of family and loves lost. For anyone with a secret dream that's gone unfulfilled, the book is a reckoning -- both funny and poignant -- of what's really involved in casting off an old life and making a new one.

Chapter One

It's never too late to be who you might have been.
--George Eliot

Not long ago, I was probably a lot like you. I had a successful career, a pretty home, two dogs and a fairly normal life.

All I kept were the dogs.

Then one day in October 2003, I quit my good job and put my sweet little house on the market. I packed a duffel bag of clothes and everything else I owned went into storage. Within weeks I was the proud owner of an empty bank account and a 40 foot, 30 ton steel trawler that I had no idea how to run. I enrolled in nine weeks of seamanship school and two weeks after my course ended, I pulled away from the dock on my very first trip: a 1500 mile journey through the Atlantic from Florida to Maine.

My transformation from regular person to unhinged mariner started casually enough. Lured to Pennsylvania a few years ago by one more step up the book publishing career ladder, I had accepted a job that was editorial, managerial and very dull. I was busy enough at the office but, after work, I didn't know what to do with myself. I cooked, took guitar lessons, went to the gym, drank Manhattans, watched movies at home and read books and magazines. But still I faced an abundance of excruciatingly quiet free time. On business trips to the city, I'd stock up on magazines. At first, I read a predictable assortment for a girl in exile from the big city: The New Yorker, New York, New York Review of Books.

OK, it wasn't all about New York. There was House and Garden, Dwell, Utne Reader, Cote Ouest, Vogue, Gourmet. I'd read just about anything--which is probably how an occasional Yachting started to find it's way into my stockpiles. When I saw Motorboating, Sail, and Powerboating at the local supermarket, peeking out from behind the overwhelming number of firearm and bride publications (a combination that captured the flavor of the area all too well), I thought "why not?" Soon, I had completely given up on literature, current events, even home decor. I started subscriptions to Passagemaker and Soundings, full year-long commitments. From there, it was a scary slide down the slippery slope to more extreme, niche titles (Professional Mariner Magazine, Workboat Magazine, American Tugboat Review) that I just had to have. I was becoming a trawler junky and I wasn't sure why.

But let's backtrack for a moment. I'd better start by admitting I am an optimist--not just your run-of-the-mill, happy-face, Pollyanna-type. I'm Old School--an extreme optimist of the sort that went out of style around the time of Don Quixote.

And like most optimists who regularly suffer the crushing defeats of a world less wonderful than they had imagined, I'm sure I have developed some finely honed coping strategies. (Or denial issues, if you prefer to call the glass half empty--as I obviously do not.) For instance, although I had just arrived at a new job in rural Pennsylvania full of vim and vigor, the deeply repressed realist within me knew almost immediately that I had made a terrible mistake. But there was no way I could admit that--even to myself.

The vocal Optimist in me said: Hey, this is pretty cool. They have an organic cafe at work and the food's really inexpensive.

But the mute Realist in me knew: Almost all of the food, no matter what it was, tasted weirdly the same, which -- let's face it -- was not good. At any price.

The Optimist said: Wow. It's so rural out here that you'd never know you were only 100 miles from New York City.

The Realist knew: I did not want to live in a place where the Wednesday Bob Evan's special was All the Possum You Can Eat for $3.99.

The Optimist said: What a gorgeous stone house I have found for a bargain price!

The Realist knew: I was going to ruin the rustic exposed stone walls (and drastically lower the resale value) when I splattered my brains all over them after a slow decline into loneliness and alcoholism.

My point is, maybe I wasn't able to admit to myself that I wanted out of that place in the worst possible way but nothing could have been less appropriate to my rural, landlocked situation than a sudden obsession with the boating lifestyle. So, perhaps my newfound passion was just a strangled cry for help, issued from the lonely wilds of scenic nowhere.