When I travel, I continuously make one of the biggest, most common, most ludicrous mistakes over and over and over again.
Almost every time.
You’d think that I’d learn. You’d think I’d realize the pattern. But no. I do it every time, never expecting. Never thinking it will happen to me. Doing the same thing, expecting different results.
Insanity.
Kids, this is my #1 travel tip of all time.
Scratch that.
It’s my #1 tip of all time, and it applies whether you’re traveling or not.
I’m sitting here, on a city street corner in a room surrounded by glass, and a salty breath of ocean breeze has found its way inside. It kissed my cheek and made me smile and reminded me of where I am.
I have a giant cup filled with the best chai latte I’ve ever had, which doesn’t hurt.
My mood is impeccable and I feel, maybe for the first time since Justin left, like I can breathe again.
I’m in a coffee shop, of course, and I realize now more than ever that this atmosphere is not conducive to writing. Especially this particular coffee shop, with its eclectic music, colorful street traffic, and sailor-mouthed old man sitting across the room.
The staff here at LION Coffee are friendly, the windows are open, and I know I’d come here again and again if I lived in this town. They’d know my name, and they’d know my drink, and I think I could probably be happy.
Until I’d want to move again.
Next time, I wouldn’t order the breakfast burrito.
With its cheese, potatoes, and bacon, it wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t awesome. The spicy salsa made the difference.
I would, however, order the acai bowl with yogurt, fruit, and granola. It looks incredible.
And the coffee? I could drink this all day. I could drink this all day and develop chronic shakes and totally not care because it’s just. That. Good.
And San Diego?
(That’s where I am, by the way.)
I could learn to love San Diego. I’ve been here before, and I’m happy to see that it sill makes me smile. With its people and its restaurants and its ocean and its perfect, perfect weather, it’s hard to be unhappy.
I’ll admit it. This is something I should’ve written a long, long time ago. Two years ago, mayhaps, around the time I quit my well paid office gig for a 2 month bout of Costa Rican hot sauce cookery during my first ever existential crisis.
I’d like to think it was my last, but let’s be realistic. I’m a writer.
If you’re new here and have no idea what I’m talking about, you might want to check out this. Or this. Or just go to my travel section under “Costa Rica” and read everything there.
The short of it is that I realized that I was doing nothing. My life was slipping away, day by day, and I’d somehow hopped on this windowless, nonstop express train, streaming movies and midnight visits to the dining car the only distractions from the mundane ride, and lethargic retirement its final destination.
Melodramatic, maybe, but it’s how I felt.
I’ve written before on the top 5 regrets of the dying, and while they’re each insightful in their own right, the one that speaks loudest to me — the one that makes me think, YES! Where, along the shaky path between youth and adulthood, do we lose this? — is, “I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself — not the life others expected of me.”
Yet, there I was. Sitting in a gray office cubicle, wondering how I’d gotten there. Had I been asleep? What next? Kids? As a military spouse, I could hardly count on climbing the corporate ladder, so kids were the next logical step.
And that’s when I knew.
I had to get off this train.
I’m fairly certain that I’m not the only one who’s felt that way. Who’s felt that I somehow missed the announcement when the conductor said, “If you want to be an adult, make your own choices, and live your own life, get off my train. If you want to do what’s expected, what your parents want you to do, what society expects you to do, and live your life in a sea of ‘shoulds,’ then by all means, stay on board.” It never even occurred to me that there might be an exit. As a kid, people were always telling me to just be myself. They said I can do whatever I want to do — be whatever I want to be. Days were spent honing creativity and imagination. It was okay to laugh and be loud and just live in the moment.
But then?
Then.
Then we’re supposed to grow up. And apparently growing up means forgetting everything they told us about being ourselves and instead we need to be what they want us to be: Demure. Put together. Successful.
Apparently fun and finger painting had gone the way of Santa Clause and the Easter Bunny and consequenceless cupcake binges.
Growing up, it seems, means accumulating student loan and automobile debt if you’re smart, and loads of credit card debt if you’re not. It means bills and payments on some things you need and many you don’t. For the majority of us, it means going to work for someone we hardly respect, sleepwalking through our days just so they’ll end, and being too exhausted at night from under stimulation to manage much more than a Lean Cuisine and a few hours in front of the tube.
Then we do it again.
Tomorrow, we think. Tomorrow will be different. We’ll go for that run. We’ll cook that amazing meal. We’ll start that diet. We’ll plan that vacation.
But we don’t.
Because it’s easier, sometimes, to sleepwalk through life than to sit back and examine our own state of being. We reach certain preconceived milestones and assume we’re supposed to be content.
The problem?
We’re not.
Because milestones are fake.
They exist so we can see if we “measure up” with our fellow humans — do we make enough money? Do we drive a nice car? Are we married? Are our kids great at sports?
It takes the acknowledgement of dying regrets to realize that none of that matters. At least, it doesn’t matter if you’re doing it so others won’t criticize the life you’ve chosen.
That logic is useless because
here is the deepest secret nobody knows here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;
(E.E. Cummings)
They’ll criticize it anyway.
They will. Your neighbors will talk about the grass you forgot to water or your sofa with the tear or the way your dogs bark at every passerby.
The truth is, you will never be good enough for the standards of another. So until you start caring only about the standards you set for yourself, your need for approval will never be sated.
So.
What does this have to do with travel?
Too many of us want to embark on an adventure, but we don’t. We create excuses. We fear the unknown.
For me, at least, my decision to quit my “normal” job came with a price. While I was fortunate enough to have a supportive husband, some select supportive friends, and the savings to make quitting fiscally possible, it became very clear that my decision was somehow threatening to others. Many of the uninvited warnings were incredulous, unsupportive, and often cruel.
I cried.
A lot.
How could they say these things about me? I’m lazy. I’m a quitter. I’m going to get my husband in trouble with the military and drag us into the poor house. Oh, and I’m probably going to get raped and robbed while I travel, so I better just be prepared.
Best of luck.
But you know?
This process helped. It helped Justin and I weed out the people who matter and the people who don’t. The people who encourage and lift us up, and the people whose happiness, it seems, is dependent on our failures.
Why don’t more people — people who have the desire — travel long-term or more often?
Because.
It’s hard.
It forces us to admit that we’re caught in a trap of our own design.
We sometimes have to spend time away from people we love.
We might have to sacrifice some modern comforts in order to afford it.
People will criticize.
It’s hard.
But think. Why do some people gather the courage to jump off the train?
Because, my friends… they can never really understand the why until they’ve experienced it themselves.
Even so, I just don’t cook as often. See, I still like to eat well. But as many of you singletons have been telling me over the years, I’m learning that it’s hard to stay motivated when you come home to an empty house. It’s hard to want to cook, when you’re the only one there to enjoy it.
But then, when I stop to think about it, I realize — one of my favorite foods is a hot dog. A thick, juicy, grill-marked, real meat dog on a crisp toasted bun.
Birthdays are strange in the sense that as we get older, is seems like we have so many so often that they start to lose their luster.
No longer do they represent a special day where people lavish us with gifts for something over which we never had any control — being born. Instead, they represent aging. Deterioration. They turn from something to celebrate into something to dread.
1. Do not worry. I haven’t decided to quit my day job to write erotic literature, nor will I start charging blog readers by the minute. (Unless, of course, you’re in. In which case, I’m in. Just… you know… let me know.)
2. My friend Stefanie had her baby. Five pounds, 12 ounces, and I hear she is beautiful and will be able to go home soon, where I will visit and tell her harrowing tales about how her mother, while 7 1/2 months pregnant, moved across the country and survived apartment fires and dealt with dying vehicles and leaked amniotic fluid on my office chair all in an effort to find her a safe place to live. Stefanie’s husband, by the way, made it home safe from Afghanistan in time to greet his daughter.
I used to flip through my mom’s novels — you know, the ones she kept on dusty basement shelves — and look for the dirty bits.
I’m not going to lie.
It started when I was bored. I’d already gone through my stack of library books and Mom said, “Go find something in the basement. I have tons of books down there,” and then suddenly my mind was opened to the likes of John Grisham and Sidney Sheldon and their twisted, dramatic worlds of crime and greed and super soft-core suggested sex.
Sex?
People can write about sex?
This was news to me.
See, I’d picked up a paperback by Karen Robards called Heart Breaker, which was probably spankin’ new at the time but now has those tea-stained yellow pages with curled corners — the charming kind that smell like dusty antique stores when you flip them past your nose* — and it promised to have action and romance and, if I was lucky, a little kissing, so I snatched it up and let me just say Boy, was I surprised when I got to page 251.
One of the best ways, I’ve found, to become intimate with a new place is to attend a festival. Any festival. Food festivals, naturally, rank #1 on my list of the most desirable festivals to seek, but art, I’d have to say, ranks a close second.
Or it could be because, through years of diligently studying the field detective tactics of one Horatio Cain and his partner, Eric Who-Cares-What-My-Last-Name-Is-Have-You-Seen-My-Ass-In-Magic-Mike? on CSI Miami, I’ve honed my forensic skills to a startling level of hyper sensitivity.
But probably not. Most of the time, I have the awareness level of a sloth toked out of its mind while drooling over Johnny in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
Is it just me, or does it not even really feel like the Fourth of July?
I mean — it’s the 4th. Of July. Literally. But does it feel like a holiday? Probably not, if you’re not in the U.S. And probably not if, like me, you are in the U.S. but aren’t planning any grilling/feasting/playing-with-explosives-while-consuming-large-quantities-of-fermented-beverages activities.
Fireworks make me nervous.
They’ve always made me nervous. Even as a kid. So while I won’t hesitate to rappel waterfalls in Costa Rica or jump from a Cessna Caravan soaring high above the Hawaiian Islands, the thought of setting off Black Cats and Roman Candles and spinners and even “harmless” sparklers and those little popping sperm-like things you throw on the ground that explode with a mini-fierce CRACK that really probably aren’t harmless at all because seriously — what’s “harmless” about exploding sperm? — the thought of all that makes me twitchy and paranoid and inclined to repeatedly shout things like, “Be careful!” and, “Run!” and, “I once heard about a kid who lost his entire hand from an errant Black Cat — his hand!” and other general phrases that make people who are actually enjoying the dangerous, drunken festivities want to tie my leg to a rocket bomb and set it alight, just to see what happens.
Take my word for it — there’s nothing fun about exploding sperm.