I remember JL once buttered my bread. We were at the dinner table and he simply
took knife to butter to toast and then handed it to me. I thought this was very
strange. How would he know how much butter I wanted on my toast? More to the point, how would he know I do
not, in fact, like butter on my toast? We’d only known each other a month or so
at the time, a point made all the more apparent by the fact he did not know
these tiny details about me. And yet he
still did it. As though the easiness
we’d developed somehow overflowed onto the dinning table. It did not.
Traveling is like that piece of toast. Some like it buttered
and others do not. JL had no idea whether I liked butter on my toast or not. It
may have taken months or years to get to that level of familiarity. They say you don’t really know a person until
you travel with them. I wondered if that was what it would take for JL to know
all those tiny details of my life. Is
that what it will take for anyone to know me fully?
Like the amount of butter you prefer on your bread,
traveling is personal. I’ve never
thought of it that way until I started thinking about having someone join me on
my long trips. Would they keep up? Would
they question the methods to my madness? Would they know me differently after
having traveled with me? Would they still want to know me when we returned?
What I like about traveling so much is the chance to simply
be me; to not have anyone to impress or worry about, to not have to keep up
appearances or schedules. Traveling is
the chance to be the me I am when no one is looking. Abroad no one I know is
looking. They are halfway around the world. Friends and family may be reading
about my travels on my blog and keeping up with my goings on, but they do not
know the every day traveling me. I’m
pretty sure that’s a good thing.
You see, anybody who knows I travel, might know where I’ve
been and why I go. They may know a little about what I’ve done and seen, but
the daily, routine of things is unknown to anyone, except perhaps those I meet
along the way. I like it this way. It’s a guilty pleasure; a secret that I
didn’t know I was hiding, one not hard to keep because there’s no one around to
run into to discover my dirty laundry.
Oh, it’s not that dirty, but I imagine it’s much different
than most people who know me would imagine. I travel on a budget, usually a
very tight budget. This allows me to go
and stay for longer. I get by on 1-2 meals a day, often eating half of one and
saving the other half for later.
Normally a foodie, on the road I get by with whatever is cheapest,
usually the plato del dia. I bring snacks from home and often subsist on
those alone for days. Friends marvel at
the fact that I go on ‘vacation’ and actually lose weight. I tell them it’s the
budget diet, works every time.
I stay in the
cheapest accommodations I can tolerate, and I can tolerate a lot. Shared bathrooms, snoring bunk mates and
concrete rooms with no windows are not unusual. I don’t do laundry, rather I
bring enough under clothing to make it through and am fine wearing a bikini as
such as well. If I do need to wash
something, the sink and whatever bath soap I’ve brought will do.
I take long overnight busses because it is cheaper than
renting a room. I hitch rides with
strangers heading where I’ve just discovered I want to go. I walk miles to beaches and restaurants to
save money on taxis. I enjoy the view.
I talk to strangers.
Everyone you meet traveling is a stranger. I really like the idea of
that; a world full of strangers for me to meet. I take the opportunity to
practice my Spanish. I offer a different representation of the American
traveler. I share meals with families who notice me dining alone. I spent whole days on a beach with only a
book and a journal. I might go days without speaking to anyone.
I try to imagine all of this with someone else tagging along
with me. Would they do it without
complaining? Would they find it as exciting as I do? Would they try to change the way I’ve done
things for years? Would I let them? The
way I travel is never something I’ve had to explain. It is simply something I
have developed through the years that works well for me. I’ve never had to
think about someone else being with me.
How much butter you prefer or don’t prefer on your toast is
personal. The way I travel is personal.
It’s not something I try to hide. It is simply something hidden because
no one is around to see it. It’s like
the way I dance in Zumba when I know no one I know is watching me; a little
freer, a little crazier, a little more me.
Would having a partner with me change everything?
No comments:
Post a Comment