I’ve always loved to travel, and while I have never been a
globetrotter by any means, I’ve gone some pretty great places: Italy, the
Caribbean, Mexico a few times, NYC, Hawaii, Minnesota (via a road trip that
spanned eight or nine states), Arizona, Texas, Florida, and lots of places in
Nevada and here in California. We couldn’t afford extensive travel as a kid, so as an adult it’s been
something that I’ve always enjoyed having the option to do, even when I have
not taken advantage of it. Unfortunately, since having Sawyer, my travel has been
limited to California and the itch to go somewhere new has been increasing. Why
I didn’t jump on more planes for weekend trips before him is beyond me.
Meanwhile, in the midst of this wanderlust, I listened to
Kristin Newman’s What I Was Doing While You Were Breeding, a travel memoir of
her single life gallivanting around the world, exploring new places whenever
there was a break in her TV-writing schedule. Near the end, she said something
that strongly resonated with me, so much more than the fun stories of her flings and shenanigans. She talked about one of the reasons why travel
has been so important to her is because she believes that we humans think about
twenty thoughts, just in different combinations and with slight variations.
When we travel, though, we are forced to ”think new thoughts.” And there it
was. That, right there, completely explained why I need to get out of my
comfort zone a bit: I need to think new thoughts.
The thoughts I currently think aren’t all bad, but sometimes even the chocolate
ganache or Hawaiian pizza gets old (two of my favorite foods, thanks for
asking). So, yes, while I love my
son, husband, our home, my job, running, and making plans for the weekend,
things can still get old. And the things I think about that are less enjoyable,
like all the papers I need to grade, the chores at home that are undone,
wanting to pay off student loans, politics, my loop of perpetual exhaustion,
and those other unpleasant thoughts one can have, get even more mundane. I’m also the type of person who thinks
nonstop, 110% of the time. Apparently there are people that can zone out? I
can’t even fathom the notion.
I need to think new
thoughts.
My son is finally at the age, three and a half, where I feel
comfortable going on a long trip alone with him by myself. He can happily wheel
his own suitcase in an airport, responds to directions fairly well, is out of
diapers, and is incredibly flexible. I’m not super psyched about the prospect
of the car seat in an airport an rental car situation alone, but I can manage (my husband’s work schedule
makes it hard for him to get away with us). I’ve decided we are going to head to Banff National Park in
July- my personal deadline is booking the hotel part of the trip by this
Friday.
I need to spend some time alone, too. Before having my son I
spent a few hours every afternoon alone after work and before Scott came home.
I wouldn’t trade Sawyer for that time, of course, but the last few months have
felt like a whirlwind of everyone needing me, all the time, and I have had some
serious moments of real struggle. Between work and home I am “on duty” for
about fifteen or sixteeen hours straight every day and I need to
breathe, alone, without people asking me seventeen things at once. Yes, I am alone responsible for my life and how I live it. I know. I promise I'm not trying to pass the buck. We recently
finished Michael Ondaatje’s Running in the Family at school and his grandmother, Lala,
says to have minimized physical contact with her grandchildren because she felt
like her space was so constantly invaded. I don’t necessarily feel that on a
physical level, but mentally and emotionally sometimes I do. I know some people
who prefer being surrounded by people all day every day and some who would
prefer total isolation, classic introvert vs extrovert mentalities. I guess I’m somewhere in between? Anyway, in a few weeks, I am going away
for a day and a half alone, up the coast (in the interest of full disclosure,
part of the reason I am going is also because I need a night of uninterrupted
blissful hotel sleep, too).
I need to think new
thoughts.
I think part of the reason I’ve always been so drawn to
reading is because it often is a wonderful substitute for travel- it too allows
you to think new things, based on setting character interactions, controversy,
and even writing style. Five Days at Memorial forced me to consider ethical
questions that made my uncomfortable, dystopian literature makes me think about
how horribly I’d do under apocalyptic circumstances, Crazy Rich Asians allowed
me to pretend to be incredibly wealthy, and so on and so forth.
Whether you like to travel or not, I think it’s important
that we all take Newman’s advice to some degree and figure out how to “think
new thoughts.” Get off the hamster wheel, hit reset, and
be willing to branch out. It’ll be good. I promise.
This is a really interesting way of looking at travel! I’ve always enjoyed the bit of traveling I have done, but traveling does stress me out — I think you are brave for all trips youve taken with your son already even if they were small! I can’t imagine traveling solo with my kiddo right now — not least of reasons because he’s a runner and soooo Curious — which is of course a good thing, be he can dash away from me in the blink of an eye wayyy too easily and it scares me. Anyway, someday I’d like to do a little more traveling, but know myself enough to know right now I crave rest more than adventure and I’m ok with that :) A few days away for my friends wedding soon is all I have planned and is probably the perfect mini getaway for me anyway right now.
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