I learned to be a very calm road-trippin’ child. Packing up the car every season became a
familiar ritual.
I remember staring out the window a lot. I used to play a game with the rain drops on
the windows, watching them to see which one would “win the race” to the bottom
of the window. I read every road sign:
those about mileage, tourist traps, construction zones, speed limits – all of
them.
I memorized the places we stopped along the way, our
familiar “rest areas”; the Mcdonald’s just outside L.A., that giant tree
somewhere near Paso Robles, nestled amidst the rolling hills of what must be
equivalent to prairies out West.
I drank in scenery from all of our family drives: the rows
of lettuce fields on the way out to my dad’s “office”, the city parks, the
trees along the freeway. My favorites
were the drives up to Monterey , Watsonville ,
Castroville, and Santa Cruz . I now know these drives were essentially out
to and up the California
coast.
In California ,
I learned to love the ocean. I learned
to recognize the feeling of the almost-too-cool breeze up on the rocks. I memorized what the sun felt like beating
down on my bare skin on warm days down in the sand.
In Arizona ,
I learned to watch sunsets. I became
familiar with people of all different skin tones and cultures. I was accustomed to hearing at least two
languages everywhere I went, sometimes sprinkled with some Korean or some
Middle-Eastern dialect.
The music and food I grew up with were reflective of the
cultural whirlpool I grew up in.
I always used to hear my mother say she was “ready to go
somewhere exciting” or “wanting to see something different”.
I was used to being on the move, and to being around
different kinds of people and culture.
I think this was how my peculiar sense of wanderlust
started. It started very small, very
innocently, and then it grew.
It turned into wanting to be in Times
Square , waving up at the TRL studios, instead of watching MTV from
the living room television.
It turned into wishing with all my being to be out on the
dude ranch with Mary-Kate and Ashley, and then go with them to see Paris . And then London ,
and then Rome , and then Australia .
I even opted for books that were set in different
places. I loved the “Drina the
Ballerina” series, and being a part of tea time or the metro rides in London . I traveled to Stoneybrook ,
Connecticut (a fictional city) and sometimes New York with my friends
in The Babysitter’s Club.
In the spring of 7th grade, when we went back to California as a family
for the first time in 4 and a half years, I held on with every heartstring to
the reliving of my childhood travels.
In high school, I got to travel all over Arizona
and Southern California for my athletic
competitions. The hours on the bus? Bliss.
And then, I moved halfway across the country for college,
and have traveled around the Midwest for my
track and field career out here.
I have traveled to Bolivia
and Grenada
for volunteer trips, neither one of them long enough, each time falling in love
with the native people and connecting with my soul in a way I did not know to
be possible.
I don’t think this really boils down to never being happy
with where I’m at. I think some sort of
a gypsy soul or spirit was instilled in me a long time ago.
Today, my love of travel and culture largely encompasses my
being. I have travel plans, wishes,
hopes, and dreams. They are not really
tourist destinations, so much as places I want to go to connect with people who
carry within them a part of humanity’s history.
I long to breathe the air my ancestors have breathed, and experience the
emotions of trial and triumphs from before my time. I am a lifelong learner, and a lover of all
that is human. I want to understand the
connection that Earth has had with its inhabitants over the centuries.
Some people are content never stepping beyond their front
porch. Not me.
“And miles to go before I sleep; and miles to go before I
sleep.” –Robert Frost
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