BootsnAll Travel Network



Waking Up to Follow One’s Dreams..On The Road

In planning my trip to Calcutta. one thing I’m really aware of is how different I feel about going there than I did when it was just an idea or a dream.

I can’t even believe how different I am now than I was a year ago.

A year ago I was nervous and scared and not all that self reliant.

Back at home, I had been an interesting person, a creative person, and perhaps an independent thinker, but I wasn’t anything like the way I am now.

I know myself better now. I know the world better now, too. I know about parts and peoples of the world that before I had only heard about.

I know how to make a canoe, hike up a mountain, butcher a large animal, give myself stitches, be still when I see a large snake. I know what it is like to see someone die, to see someone give birth, to see someone starve, to see someone get their first pair of shoes.

I’m now so much more self reliant and aware of the world that I look back at my old life in the USA and wonder who was that living that half-life?

Because that’s what it was–a half-life. I had had big dreams but I never really followed them.

In spite of being from the USA, where supposedly anything is possible for one’s life, where no dream is too big, where if one wants something they can usually work hard to achieve it–I never really felt that anything was possible for me. There were so many people telling me that I couldn’t do certain things (or the rules and way in which to do them if I tried), that it became second nature to me to accept limits instead of breaking boundaries.

I think one’s community of family, friends, and relationships play a big role in this, too. People mean well, but truthfully..they just want us to want what they want. Then it’s easier for everyone.Everyone means well, but in the end..it seems to me people often end up living a life that has very little to do with who they are.

This mindset mixed with certain cultural expectations of how things are supposed to be in one’s life left me–and my desires, dreams and goals –unreachable. There is a whole status quo, which has certain expectations one has to meet about pretty much everything in your life. The culture tells you how to live.

Culture tells everyone, all over the planet, what to do and when to do it-even how to do it.

One thing I’ve picked up on from travel is that cultural expectations differ from one group of people to the next. As I’ve visited each place, my own expectations of what is deemed culturally appropriate have changed, too.

It makes the expectations of my own culture suddenly seem extremely arbitrary and silly. I don’t care about meeting the status quo in my own country anymore, because it makes no sense to me.

Another big change is that I have become more of a leader. I’m tackling big projects, having bigger ideas, and deciding that yes, I can. So much different than the main question I was asking myself when I left, which was, “Can I?”.

About a year and half ago, I was talking to a close friend, and they told me that they were worried about me because “trying to do too much.” I was doing alot of different things at the time, and probably not all of them particularly well. Some of the things I was doing I wanted to do, and other things were just things I thought I should be doing.

A whole culture has been built up around the “doing too much” disease. There are books for “women who do to much” and retreats for “families who do too much”. It’s an industry!

I don’t think it is a question of doing too much, but more of a question of who gets to define what you do and how you are doing it.

Generally speaking, it isn’t you who gets to decide how your life goes. That’s because the cultural expectations are entirely set up towards two goals: money and fame. It’s all about who has the most toys in the end.

What a sad future for young people to look forward to. Have you noticed that young kids, when asked what job they want, are now choosing based on the salary, not on a dream? Not on any particular talent? Not on any particular principles, except the making of money? And who can blame them? They are just following the models they have around them–us.

Traveling to some of the places I have this past year has drastically changed my perception of what is necessary to have a life of value. I find myself more and more interested in living a life that has less impact on the planet, and less and less interested in making money and being self important. Simple living and service have become my new goals.

I’m not sure money making or fame were ever my goals in the past. But they certainly had something to do with the script I wrote out for myself of how my life was going to be and what would make me happy.

I’m redefining who I am through the experiences I have on this trip. ..and one thing I have changed is what my motivators are to have a happy life, a full life, a passionate life.

And this new script is being written by and for a very confident woman.

I think this newfound confidence and can-do attitude comes from having to make decisions-hundreds of them-every single day, about everything. Where to eat. What to eat. Where to sleep. Take a bus. Take a train. Walk. Kill a scorpion. Paddle a canoe…it’s endless.

Travel, especially traveling alone as a woman, is literally forcing me to be responsible for every single thing I do. There are no rules, which I can rely upon and lean on.

I’m making it all up as I go along.

Part of me is concerned about what it will be like to go home again.

I’ll be going home for about 5 weeks after India–before heading back down to Panama. I’ve already visited once, and that was…odd. I was only there for about a week and a half, and I had barely dealt with getting to have hot showers and going to the supermarket. I never had time to deal with the people in my life and how the changes I had been through would be received by them.

And back then, I thought I had changed alot! But now, even the woman I was back then I don’t really recognize. I’ve changed even more, and I would imagine after the next five months in India, I’ll be even more changed.

I think it is this aspect of going home that I find the most troublesome.

Maybe you’ve never noticed this, but people in our lives like us to pretty much stay the same. They generally don’t mind minor changes, as long as they get to stay the same and treat us as they always have. And..it’s not so much that I mind that people don’t want me to really change..it’s that I already have changed.

I feel vital… excited..passionate. I feel like I have, in front of me, a very clear path to walk on–for the first time in my life.

I’m setting up some very clear goals to achieve when I return home, all based around the wonderful decision to devote my life to service. It’s funny how when our lives become not about us anymore, that everything is is so suddenly simple. In fact, devoting my life to the service of people who need it most has so not only simplified my life, it’s taken out any obstacles that were in the way of me doing  anything I put my mind to.

This is a far cry from the woman I was when I left. I was always a people pleaser. And in a way, I still am. I mean, I want people to be content and happy…

But now, I’m more concerned about people and things that deserve my time and concern.

I was a pretty self centered person before I left on this trip–and frankly, so were most people I knew. People are convinced that their tiny concerns are important–when actually they aren’t at all. It took some serious hardships in the third world for me to understand that.

What does deserve my attention are those people and problems that I find myself suddenly passionate about. Things like human rights, hunger, sustainable agriculture..and more.

I find myself awake for the first time in my life…and I never want to live that half-life of my past again.

It’s been a painful journey, in some ways, to get to where I am today. But it’s been so worth it—I’ve had a very long year of self reflection and tests that pushed me to places I never thought I would go. I’ve been so sick I couldn’t stand up, forcing me to rely on strangers. I’ve been so overwhelmed at the sight of extreme poverty that I couldn’t sleep. I’ve eaten food that was..inedible..in my culture. I’ve been confronted, head on, about everything I believed about myself, humanity, good, bad, right, wrong… So many more challenges come to mind… and, I’m sure I have more challenges and opportunities for growth ahead..

There have so many times I wanted to go home. So many times I was lonely. So many times that I wanted the familiar. So many times that I thought I was going to go over the edge.

And when I finally did go over the edge, it turned out to not be scary at all…but liberating.

I will remind myself of this in the coming months!

gigi

gigi



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4 responses to “Waking Up to Follow One’s Dreams..On The Road”

  1. What you describe is a very natural awakening many of us go through on the road. When I left Europe for South Africa some years ago, I was an average mid-career woman in search of a slice of life. When I came back three years later, everything I owned could fit in a backpack and I was a different person. Like you, I was more confident of my abilities to face life on life’s terms, and my values have changed.

    We never know how travel is going to change us – almost the only constant is that it will. And usually for the better.

  2. Kathy Moore says:

    I have a lot of catching up to do, with the “new” Gigi. I’m happy to see the content feelings you exhibit as a result of your experience. Your experiences cause me to examine some of my life choices.

  3. Bette Larbie says:

    Only a smiling visitor here to share the love (:, btw outstanding style and design. “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not one bit simpler.” by Albert Einstein.

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