THE first year of the pandemic, Walton Goggins and his family bought a Mercedes Sprinter van, a 22-footer, and drove across the country in it. They christened it “Vacilando,” a word lifted from Steinbeck’s Travels With Charley. Old John says the verb has no precise English equivalent, but someone who is “vacilando” is going somewhere without a clear destination, whether they know it or there, although he has direction.
“Today, though, we’re just lost. We’re somewhere in the Hudson Valley, rolling down a country road canopied by psychedelically bright autumn leaves. On the Sprinter’s navigation screen, we’re in some sort of uncharted blue-green grid.”
“We’re in the fuckin’ Matrix right now,” Goggins says, confused and amused. He turns the wheel and points us back toward charted territory.
Goggins has lived up here for a few years and he’s done this drive many times, but he’s been out of town a while, and usually he comes a different way. We’re headed to a farm that he uses for things we’ve been instructed not to mention, or have reached the end of their working lives. This is Goggins’s idea. He knows quite what to show people when he’s asked to let them see how he lives. When he’s not working, he lives simply.
This story is from the February 2025 edition of GQ US.
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This story is from the February 2025 edition of GQ US.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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