I had to make this rule because there is no way I will not be returning to Chile , my home for nearly two years. I have vowed to return for my friends’ Vendemia, a wine harvesting at their farm, and I am sure I may want to attend a few weddings in the future. Besides that, how can I not return home?
And so it worked out that I would visit Guatemala again. While traveling in Belize , the last of my Central American countries, I took advantage of the proximity to Guatemala . Having been a little under whelmed by Belize and particularly missing the chance to speak Spanish, I was excited to cross the border into Flores , Guatemala .
I stayed only three or four days and visited the ruins of Tikal . We woke at 3 am to travel to the site, climb the sun temple and watch the sun rise among the sounds of birds and monkeys waking. I enjoyed the cheaper hotels and actually splurged on one with a pool and private bath, something I rarely do. I leisurely walked the cobbled streets and spoke to restaurant owners and store venders in Spanish. I watched children and teenagers plunge into the waters of Lago Petén Itzá, wishing to join them.
I don’t necessarily like my rule of never returning to a place. As discussed in B is for Belize , I would return to 42 out of the 43 countries I have visited so far. Happily, eagerly. There is an ease that comes with returning to a place you have traveled. It is a comfort you don’t find the first time. One that says, ‘I’ve been here before.’ But nothing can compare to the excitement and thrill of discovering somewhere new.
No comments:
Post a Comment