Showing posts with label Nomad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nomad. Show all posts

04 March 2015

When the "exotic" life abroad becomes just as conventional as the "settled" life at home

- I think moving abroad would bankrupt me. My 1500 square foot apartment is full of stuff.
- I used to have a rule to always limit myself to two suitcases when living in a country.
- Two suitcases? I could never live that way, being so limited. I mean I love to travel, but I also work really hard to enjoy some comforts at home. When you love your home you don't have to travel so much to enjoy yourself.
- That's very interesting. I see having few possessions as an expression of my freedom, and you see collecting things that bring you joy or comfort as your expression of freedom.


Three weeks ago I was on a project management course with a 30-something Belgian who works in Jerusalem for the UN, and a 40-something Dutchman who works for a large cable company in Amsterdam.

Throughout the course, we would relate the theoretical work we were learning about to our real-world experiences. The Belgian would relate one project management process to the time he was building a new temporary school in a refugee camp, and the Dutchman would talk about network architecture and engineers. Over lunch the Belgian described how exciting it was to be constantly surrounded by different people with different experiences, and how enriching his life was compared to if he had stayed home in his village in Belgium, and the Dutchman seemed very satisfied to have a good-paying job which he could work from 9-5 and come home and focus on his family.

I was the outsider and the insider, able to partially relate to both of these realities, but also playing devil's advocate. To the Belgian I asked how deep his connections were with the people he was meeting, if he would ever see them again when his post was over in 2 months and how long he imagined living this exotic international life. To the Dutchman I asked if he had ever felt a genuine excitement or passion about where he lived or his work, and what he found interesting and challenging about what he does.

The Belgian responded that the only thing he found difficult about it was finding and keeping a life partner, and that if he had children he thought the best place in the world to raise them would be on a post in Africa. The Dutchman said he admired people who are passionate about their work but never felt that way himself about it, and that his work involves constant growth and change and that it keeps him on his toes.

Am I the Belgian? Or the Dutchman?
At this moment in time, my life more resembles the conventional life of the Dutchman than the exotic life of the Belgian.

I have officially been living in the Netherlands for five years now, I am married, I own a condo, and I have 1.5 children. I often catch myself spending more time than I would like to admit thinking about re-negotiating our mortgage, which neighbourhood to move into so that our daughter can go to a good school in 2.5 years, searching real estate websites, and calculating the ideal distance between work and home.

This is the longest I've lived anywhere except my home town, where I spent my first 21 years. The other nine years were spent -- in descending order of time spent -- in Abu Dhabi, Montreal, Toronto, Japan, Ghana, Turkey, and France.

Settled vs. Mobile
What I love about being more settled in Amsterdam is the deeper relationships I've built, the new facets of life that I've gotten to see, actually learning the local language (for the first time) and really feeling like a genuine member of society.

What I don't like about being more settled in Amsterdam is that being part of society means that you are more influenced by what people think, and it's easy to slip into patterns that give you more material freedom but less mobility freedom.

In my home town of Vancouver I knew what it all meant: to live in a particular neighbourhood, to have a detached house vs. a townhouse vs. a condo, what each square footage bracket was, what car you drove, where you holiday, and what clothes you wore. I knew what it all meant to other people.

The downside of being a contributing member of society
For over a decade I lived outside of all of that: I didn't have much choice in the neighbourhood I lived, I didn't own possessions, my wardrobe was a collection of items I had bought in countries where I didn't have anything weather- or occasion-appropriate, and anyone who knew what any of these things "meant" never communicated it to me.

And now I own oyster shuckers, champagne flutes, and other unnecessary objects that symbolise settled-ness. And our priorities for good housing and owning a car are starting to eclipse our priority of being mobile and available to experience new things in the world.

Am I seeking more comforts in possessions because I'm getting older? Or am I simply diversifying the things that entertain me? Is the source of this change from inside myself? Or is the influence of my surroundings seeping in?

Regardless of the source, we have decided to start planning a mini-retirement to reset our values.

25 September 2013

Uninvolved

- Mala, I heard you're moving to Kenya?
- Yes. I'm excited and terrified! I've got a place to live, but I don't know what my general security will be like.
- Are you going through an established organisation or company? And will you be living with other ex-pats? In Ghana I lived with a Ghanaian and had a nightwatchman sleeping in front of my window every night, and had no problems. In Istanbul we had three ex-pat women in one apartment, no security, and had big problems. But that was like 10 years ago.
- I didn't know you lived in Africa and Turkey! Don't you ever feel like you just can't relate to people anymore because of all the experiences you've had? I'm worried that normal life just won't be possible anymore after living abroad for so long.
- Mala, I'm married, own a condo, and just had a baby. Every one can relate to me.
- Ha, true.
- And yes, there were definitely chapters where I couldn't relate to my friends back home, but then 6 months later in a different context in a different life, you can't relate to who you were in those un-relatable chapters. We are constantly feeling involved in something, and uninvolved in something else. Life goes on, we adapt.

What I didn't have the heart to tell Mala was that every time you leave a place, you leave a piece of yourself there. And every time a friend leaves you, you retract just a little bit more in the next friendship. So the life of a nomadic ex-pat is one of slowly retracting yourself into a self-sustaining island, slowly becoming less and less involved in your surroundings.

- Guy's brother just had another baby.
- How many is that now?
- 5 children.
- How do they cope? And in the diplomatic corps, don't they have to move every 5 years? How do the children build reliable friendships?
- Exactly. That's why you need to have such a large family. You sort of breed your community.

I think army families have it even worse, because they know they have to move every 2 years. I was listening to an interview with an army woman on the BBC, and she said in her first week in a new place, she joins a minimum of 3 clubs. That's how she feels like she "lives" there, like she's involved, rooted. And then after two years of getting the house just right, when she's starting to find serious character flaws in her "friends", and as the clubs change and aren't like they "used to be", it's time to move on anyways. And the cycle repeats itself.

With virtual communication, you can build a sort of virtual community these days too. And in Amsterdam, there are months of the year when I don't have any time to see my local friends because I have so many visitors that they keep me occupied. So it's a sort of international community of travel-a-lots and we get to see each other more than our local friends at times. But it's not a real life somehow.

This is the longest I've ever lived in a place since leaving my hometown almost 13 years ago, and this is the least I've travelled too. When I was pregnant, and people would ask if I was planning on putting my child into Dutch school or international school, I was completely dumbfounded. The thought of knowing where I would be when my unborn baby was going to primary school was completely alien to me. And now as I research childcare options I have to keep reminding myself that I need to think through to her needs as a walking, talking child, and not just as a still baby.

I've joined a neighbourhood group. I'm planning on joining a choir in the new year. And I'm actually learning about the personal business of my neighbours. I'm becoming involved again.

27 August 2007

Been there, but have I really "done" that?

-You saw Hadrian’s Arch in Rome?
-Umm…yes. That’s the arch next to the Colloseum right? There are so many…
-Wow – what an incredible experience. I mean, I’ve never been there, but I took a course in Roman History, and wrote a paper about Hadrian. Did you know he built that arch after [blah blah blah]? But, what do I know. I’ve never been there.
-Well I’d “been” to Rome 4 times before this particular trip. I did a degree in Archaeology and didn’t want to go to Rome before I had the chance to really research the place and dedicate a lot of time and effort to do the experience justice. But eventually, I realised I’m never going to have the time to do the experience justice, so on the fifth trip, I finally dove in and saw Rome. But really, there are a lot of places I’ve been where I honestly believe someone who has read a book about the place has “been” there more than I have.
My last trip to Italy was a two-week holiday with my mother as her retirement wish. When she met me in London to depart for Italy, I was in a sorry mental and physical shape – I was recovering from living in Ghana where I was constantly sick, a month in South Africa where I was in chronic pain from some of my medications, and was experiencing quite a bit of culture shock from re-entering the Western World. Despite all of this, our trip was one of the most enriching trips I’d ever had in Italy. Not so much because of places, but more because of the Italian lifestyle, and getting to share the experience with my excellent, and ever-deserving mother.
When travelling, many of our experiences are defined by how hungry/thirsty we are, by the company of people we find ourselves in, by our mental state, and by how friendly people were our first hour in a country. Perspective is important when trying to mitigate these internal and external effects on our travelling experiences, but really, what is travel if not being internally and externally affected by environmental circumstances?
I’ve written before about how travel and living abroad can be vastly different experiences, largely depending on depth of experience [see “Aspiring to be a piece of meat”]. The more places you tackle in a shorter time, the shallower the layers of the experience can be. In one’s lifetime, they can see a thin version of the entire world, a deeper experience of some few key places, or a profound experience of one place. All these experiences are worth having, as long as we keep the objective of our discoveries in mind: vacation, holidays, travels, or cultural immersion?
All inclusive packages. North Americans work very hard, and when we go on vacation, we want a vacation. Travelling means constant decision-making, and it can be far more relaxing to have someone [presumably] in-the-know make all those decisions for you. Plus it’s often cheaper to get the package than the plane tickets alone. While for me a vacation means going “home”, I can entirely appreciate why some people would want to go to Cuba to have the experience of being in a hot Canada, rather than the experience of Cuba. Mingling with locals, gauging expectations, and being a model citizen while travelling is exhausting work, and often requires a recovery period afterwards – a real vacation. Sit, relax, drink daiquiris from filtered water ice cubes, and be served. Just make sure you say “thank you”, try to patronise more sustainable resorts with proper environmental and labour policies, and remember that you are on vacation – you are not travelling Cuba.
Backpacking. Above anything, backpackers are about hanging out with other backpackers, and can be a hugely entertaining way to see the world. Within minutes of meeting these people from all over the world, you will find you have days worth of things to talk about because, regardless of your geographic origins, you all studied social sciences and come from middle-class families in former British or Spanish colonies. You can spot the rookies by conversations about accents or different words we use in Canada vs. the US vs. Australia vs. England. The Aussies will poke fun at the English, the Kiwis at the Aussies, and the Canadians will swear we don’t sound anything like Americans and promise we can tell the difference.
Some of the best laughs I’ve had in my life was with a group of 6 backpackers – 2 from England, 3 from Australia, and me – whom I had the pleasure of spending 24 hours in relentless company with in Lithuania. I had been to Lithuania 3 times before, but as a Lithuanian where my family picked me up from the airport, toured me around, and dropped me off at the airport. I had never experienced Lithuania as a tourist, and wanted to see how my homeland compared with other European cities I had travelled to.
With these backpackers in Vilnius, we cooked a communal feast together for dinner, toured the city together, everyone offering fun anecdotes about how this place reminded them of ____ in ____, and where to go in ____. We drank beer on a creek side terrasse, got shushed by the locals during a Lithuanian poetry reading that none of us could understand, and we will all remember what a good time we had in Lithuania.
This experience can be repeated all over the world, and if stuck to exclusively can become very tiresome. I swore I’d never backpack again after I saw Indian Dreamcatchers being sold in Thailand, China, Vancouver, Venice, and Paris -- all within a 3-month period. But in smaller doses, backpacking is yet another excellent way to enjoy the world.
Travelling alone. The loneliest birthday of my life was spent in the French Alps in 2002. I was an archaeologist in central France, but took the afternoon off of work to spend the weekend in Annecy – a picturesque ski village about 45 minutes south of Geneva, complete with medieval canals and stone buildings. When I arrived, it was already dark, the hostel staff wasn’t answering their phone, and I didn’t have the address of the hostel. I hitch hiked into town and found a cheap hotel room in an empty building in an empty neighbourhood, and didn’t see another soul for the rest of the evening. Sometimes you just need bodies around you, even if they’re unfamiliar.
The next day, the hostel staff managed to answer their phone, and after a long day of walking around town, I spent the afternoon chatting with the hostel bartender. He and some of the hostel staff were going out that night to celebrate a friend’s birthday that lived on the other side of Lac Annecy, and there was an extra seat in the car. This ended up being one of my most enjoyable evenings while travelling, and would have never been possible if I weren’t travelling alone. I have similar stories about walking from Greece to Macedonia alone, travelling to the Sahara desert alone, and a fun coach to Istanbul alone.
Travelling with friends. I have lot of friends who I don’t think would be very fun to travel with, but I have also had company who have made the best of some pretty dodgy situations. Despite constant obstacles and sickness in Peru, I most remember all the clever banter with Sarah. In Latvia, poor hostel organisation and roommates with grossly different personal boundaries turned out to be a platform for Anastasia’s excellently delivered comedic reactions, even after having to share a bed with a drunk Spanish boy who climbed in with her for 3 hours.
Friends who you meet while travelling alone are great because you instantly have something in common, but equally important are friends with whom you have history. While I have bonded with all sorts of people all over the world, often very quickly because of obvious common interests and personality traits, but there is no substitution time-tested friendships, regardless of how irrelevant you are to each other in contemporary contexts. Human relations are about filling roles, and when we travel we meet people who mutually need someone to fill those familiar roles for the duration of that particular, however temporary, context. Having a lot in common with someone is also really important in friendships and has an important role in terms of familiarity and feeling understood, but old friends have the familiarity of resilience and the comfort of knowing that they can overcome obstacles.
Travelling as a couple. It can be exhausting trying to maintain emotional health by keeping in touch with familiar people back home while building new communities of people along the way. Bringing a partner with you really helps with emotional issues, allows you to share something profound with your partner, and, as a woman, travelling with a man can really help with some of the daily discomforts of being approached by opportunistic men. It’s like you can have your life and travel too. However, travelling with your partner can easily limit how deep your experience is locally, because you don’t need to seek comfort from your environment, and so it’s easier to turn to each other instead. Plus, the only people who want to talk to you are other travelling couples.
Particular knowledge. I live around the world and have friends who live around the world, and visiting them is my favourite introduction to a new place. They understand local customs and some language, can hold your hand through the initial discomforts, tell you the good places to go, and are often excited to use you as a partner in adventure for things they can’t do with their local friends. The benefit of growing up in Canada is that many of my friends are first-generation and have family to visit in other parts of the world. I also enjoy theme travelling -- microbrewery road trips around Cascadia, wine tasting in South Africa, archaeology in the former Roman empire, wildlife viewing – these are activities enriched by developing a particular expertise about one common layer. Or by travelling with someone who holds that particular knowledge.
Expats. There are technical differences between expats and sojourners, but I will combine the two here. Expats are like backpackers who graduated to the next level. Expats vary greatly – in most ex-pat communities, people are some combination of: (1) the expats who only hang out with other expats, whose definition of a good place is based on having cool expats there, who transport their world to different geographical locations around the world; (2) the expats who will have nothing to do with other expats. They do not greet the only other white person in town, they can’t remember the last time they spoke English, they write in their day planners in the local language and only eat non-Western foods; and (3) the expats who have local and expat friends, but whose expat friends are actually enriching their local experience rather than solely being a source of escaping it [also necessary at times].
When I lived in Ghana, there were only really 2 white people who lived in town: Kathryn and me. Kathryn and I didn’t meet until she had been there 4 months, and I had been there 2 months. Kathryn lived with a family, had to learn Twi to get by, worked in a small office where no one drank alcohol, and was living on a much tighter budget than me and therefore ate a lot of street food. I lived with a young Ghanaian woman, my friends were constantly speaking in really fast Twi, I worked in a huge office with all sorts of politicians, private consultants, technocrats, bureaucrats, Community-NGOs, and general members of the public, where the big men would scoff at the idea of street food, but I could cook vegetables at home. I learned more Twi from Kathryn than from any of my Ghanaian friends, learned about taboo subjects like family life and the treatment of children, and ate street food all over Ghana because of her. Kathryn learned about young Ghanaian social life, how Ghanaians drink, how Ghanaians settle a bill, the politics of Ghanaian marriages, and how to tell stories in colourful English to a Ghanaian audience. Our friendship was a necessary escape, but also an enrichment of the Ghanaian experience.
Nomads. I’ve written about nomads a lot. Nomads are everywhere, and yet nowhere, can feel at home anywhere, yet nowhere. Nomads don’t compare how many countries they’ve been to or how long they’ve been on the road. They do normal things in extraordinary settings, have a wide range of insatiable interests, and have gotten really good at letting themselves be in the hands of others. They like to have guest rooms whenever they are temporarily settled, and they know another nomad when they see them.
There are limitless ways of experiencing the world, and while some classify them as being a greyscale of shallow to deep, I think of them more as different axes across a landscape. Depending on an individual’s interests and objectives, they are all experiences worth having, none being necessarily more important than another. While my journey seems to be profoundly geographic, others chose to understand a variety of contexts in one place, or concentrate on their relationships with their partners, or study something like meditation, or yoga. If I didn’t travel so much, I think I’d be a much deeper person.

04 July 2007

Reflections of a Nomad.

This is my third trip to Toronto where I have attempted to move out of my beautiful home on Brunswick and College. Once in May 2006, once in September 2006, and now in July 2007. Each time I take out another load of my stuff, either shipping it to my parents’ house in Vancouver, or spreading the burden to new households across Toronto.

I've been travelling around the world visiting old friends for over four months now. It certainly takes the bite out of being unemployed [and plants it squarely on the wallet].

Constantly visiting dear friends has finally gotten me used to answering questions about myself. Going to my High School reunion, a mini-elementary school reunion, and having a facebook reunion with people I grew up with in summer swimming has given me a lot of practice. It's been lovely seeing everyone -- everyone looks the exact same and it all feels very ordinary and familiar to me. Yet everyone I've reunited with -- especially at my High School reunion -- has been struck by how surreal it is to see each other, and how different everyone looks.

-So, do you still live in Burnaby?
-Um. I don’t really live anywhere.
-What do you mean?
-Well, I just came back from living in Africa and am probably moving to the Middle East.
-How long are you in town then?
-I don’t really know.
-What do you do?
-I’m an urban planner.
-Where do you work?
-Um, well I do contracts, so I'm sort of a freelancer.
-Ok, so your last contract was as an urban planner, working for whom?
-My last job was in international development, and my job before that was as a researcher.

-But before that you were an urban planner?
-No.

My facebook reunion asked the question more simply: what are you all doing now? I replied as such:

Story #1 - I'm unemployed, unmarried, and stay at my parents' house in Burnaby.
Story #2 - I'm an international woman of mystery who, since ending her swim coaching career in 2000, works half the year abroad as an archaeologist/teacher/waitress/urban planner, and spends the other half jet-setting around the globe.
Story #3 - I secretly married a spy back in 1997 in Scotland.

The life of a nomad can be a balancing act sometimes. Having pockets of possessions dotted around the world can leave one feeling stretched out and un-gathered. But removing all your stuff from a place makes one feel like there’s nothing left there to go back to – the final slamming of the door behind you. The symbolic gesture of having wine glasses, chopsticks, a duvet, and a carpet leave the door open slightly ajar for a possible return.

Stuff.
Place.
Self.
Friends.
Heart.
Head.

They’re rarely all in the same space. The luxury/burden of being spread out across the world. Always everywhere, yet never anywhere.

Whenever I leave a place, I can safely say that I’ll probably see that community of friends again. After living in Japan in 2001, I went back to enjoy my Japanese community in 2003 and 2004. I have had several reunions – in Toronto, Vancouver, and Cape Town – with my Istanbul community. I revisited my Austrian community of France in 2002 when I went to Sicily in 2003. And the list continues. It’s a comforting thing to know that leaving a place is more of an “Aurevoir” than a “Goodbye”.

I have become a bit of a chameleon – immediately adjusting to whatever environment I find myself in, and effortlessly revisiting the facets of myself that surface from familiar friends, no matter how much time has passed since I last saw them. “Every time I see you, it’s as if no time has passed!” It’s like I live neither geographically nor chronologically, actually forgetting all the various time-space experiences that have passed since I last said “aurevoir” to any given community.

If that wasn't confusing enough, I also have a whole community of people whom I only see abroad. We meet under very temporal and contextual circumstances, yet we seem to be one of the few consistent things in each other’s lives. The few people we can really count on seeing are each other, because we literally could be anywhere [and therefore everywhere]. Experiences which seem surreal to others are common for us, and what’s common for others is surreal for us.

Sometimes it can be difficult to explain to people exactly what I do, and it can be a lot easier to be mysterious than to give direct answers. Direct answers always result in the same direct question: how do you afford to do what you do?

I hate to burst everyone’s bubbles, but I am none of the following: an heiress; the beneficiary of a rich Japanese business man; secretly on a CSIS salary; multilingual; have unknowing husbands all over the world writing cheques for me; nor do I take some sort of miracle pill that enables me to do what I do.

I wouldn’t change my life for a minute, but I do what I do because I made sacrifices [and because I have very understanding friends and family who are fabulous and share their lives and stuff with me so I don’t have to transport my own of everything, everywhere I go].

We are constantly making priorities in our life, adjusting and re-prioritising elements of our lives in the face of changes to our own definitions of self-success. No one has all of everything. It’s like you have a pool with all sorts of toys you can fit inside, but the size of everyone’s pools are pretty much the same. I’ve filled mine with traveling and learning, and made sacrifices in the home-ownership and marriage departments. Most people do a better job at balancing which departments they fill their lives with. Whenever people are like “you have the coolest life” I say “but I don’t have anything except pictures and memories. I don’t even actually own my suitcases – I borrowed them from my mother.”

Just when we nomads think we’ve got it all under control, floating around the globe with only our blogs knowing exactly where to find us, it’s when we are packing that it all catches up with us [or when we’re trying to find someone to insure us!]. It can be deeply scary packing everything into a suitcase or two, putting it in a corner by the door. Like THERE IT IS. All you have to show for your life fits into a small corner. But it also fits onto your back, so you can take it anywhere!

I pack the wine glasses and decanter Paul gave me for my birthday when I first moved to Toronto. I’ll donate them to Danielle and Andrea. My duvet that was my grandmas and I brought out east my first winter in Montreal six years ago is at Chrisa’s. My sushi dishes from Japan in 2001, my chopsticks my brother gave me in 1999. They really are nice wine glasses. The kind I would love to have in my own place someday.

The only thing I can’t seem to find are my speakers. How much joy did those speakers bring to my life! I don’t have my phone numbers with me, so I can’t call my Brunswick roommates to ask where I left them. What a convenient lack of organisation on my part -- I guess the door is still open for a return some day. I flick the glass of wine and listen to the long ring that persists, pour some wine in it, and toast to myself a final glass before I give the set to Danielle. I smile and realise I'm not going to find my speakers -- d
espite three moves, I'm still managing to leave some trace of myself at my beautiful Brunswick and College home after all.

05 May 2007

Needing a vacation from being on holidays.

I've been in Morocco, Spain, England, and Latvia in the last week, and am off to Lithuania tomorrow.

Caught some Italian opera...in Latvia...where I've met up with a friend whom I met in France 6 years ago...who's from Oregon...while trying to coordinate my next means of employment with people in Canada and the Middle East...while I'm in Africa and Europe.

It was so difficult trying to explain to the expats in Morocco that tourism was #4 on my list of things to do in Morocco. #1 - look for gainful employment; #2 - re-connect with my friends and family in preparation for landing; #3 - relax and enjoy some sort of lifestyle while my bags were firmly in one place; and #4 - see some of Morocco.

Unfortunately, Morocco is a tourist's heaven with its rich culture, starkly varying landscapes, history, and cuisine. But I just wanted a vacation from being a tourist. I wanted to sit at a desk, do mundane tasks, not go outside and enjoy the sun, and not see anything new and exciting.

Luckily here in Latvia, Anastasia and I seem to be on the same page and have spent most of our time here passively soaking in Latvian culture via meals, drinks, strolls through medieval city centres, and bathing on beautiful Baltic beaches.

And while I feel like I could stay in the Baltics forever, I'm also looking forward to an extended vacation from being on holidays when I land back in Canada in a few weeks. Excitement is always what deviates from the norm of one's usual existence.


05 April 2007

Domestification.

People seem to imagine I lead this glamorous life of nomadic globe-trotting, never knowing what corner of the world I shall find myself in next. This statement is true in all but the term glamourous – there is a fine line between excitement and fear, and glamour generally refers to that which differs from the norm of one’s existence. Anything done consistently begins to feel like a chore, and current activities that excite me include things that are associated with longer stays in a place: buying spices, decorating apartments, hanging art, buying crafts that don’t fit into a suitcase, reading the globe & mail, and having enough plates and cutlery to throw a dinner party for more than one guest.
On Saturday night Leanne and Guillaume threw a house-warming party to celebrate their arrival in their new home. Leanne is a dear friend of mine who was my flatmate when I lived in Istanbul in 2003, and has been one of only a handful of people I know around the world who could really sympathise with the lifestyle of living out of a suitcase for the last six years. We came to Cape Town 5 days ago and have been staying with Leanne and Guillaume, buying things for the house, eating breakfast on the veranda, watching BBC on digital satelite television, cooking with appropriate utensils, reading books in the garden under a tree, and letting the experience of Cape Town slowly trickle into our lives rather than actively pursuing it. At the house-warming party, people kept asking us where we’d been in Cape Town, and mostly we could only name some restaurants, bars, a hairdresser, and some shops we’d been to, plus one spontaneous detour up Table Mountain to watch the sunset while we were dropping off some friends at their hotel.
Travel is hundreds of decisions being made hourly – are we hungry? Thirsty? When should we book a tour of Kruger National Park? Rodden Island? Which towns to stop along the Garden Route? What day should we leave Cape Town? Constantly sizing up the potential worthiness of a place and re-aligning our priorities based on this blind assessment. Pressure to see it all while still giving ourselves enough time to ourselves in order to make it enjoyable – balancing this equation is a full time job.
-So, what do you do?
-I’m a municipal planner. I’ve been in Ghana for the last six months working as a community development planner. Basically, I’ve been working in international development.
-And when do you go home?
Home. Where do I even start? Are strangers allowed to ask such deep and exposing questions? WHEN is difficult enough to answer, but HOME? Ouch. When living out of a suitcase, one clings to anything familiar. Leanne and Guillaume are familiar, and home seems to be more of an essence than a place. Being domestic in their beautiful new home in this beautiful city is more glamourous to me than the backpacking I’ll be doing next week.
-I figure around the end of April I’ll have some time to start looking for my next means of employment, and that will dictate where my home will be. Either that, or I’ll just go to Vancouver to see my family and let my health recover for a few months. Get my teeth cleaned, see some doctors, and the like.
-Ooh. What a glamourous life you lead!