Friday, December 26, 2008

Vagabonding

An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel
by Rolf Potts


As I expected, this book awakened in me a yearning for travel, for freeing myself from the constraints, expectations, and routines of this civilized, cushioned world. The best thing about the book for me was its wealth of inspiring quotes that speckled the pages, but the most incisive quote for me was:

"We travel, initially, to lose ourselves; and we travel, next, to find ourselves." -Pico Iyer, Why We Travel

Vagabonding focused not on the nuts and bolts of how to travel for less, but on the philosophy and mental attitudes that allow vagabonding to occur. It is purely an inspirational book, and as such grew a little repetitive-- how many different ways can you say "Leave your expectations at home, be adaptable, and you will grow within your own soul"? It didn't tell me anything new, but it reminded me of important things that get smothered in daily concerns. I preferred the small details that Potts and other travelers shared, about adventures small, large, annoying, trivial, or life-changing. These stories make me want to go out and find life for myself, to experience all these little things and find out what and how I think. Almost like throwing grains of sand at myself to figure out how I'm shaped.

One of the things I realized, however, is that I differ greatly from the author in an important aspect: I don't want to spend my whole life traveling. The author belongs to a sect whose overarching ambition is to grow spiritually in ways that traveling encourages, to learn about the world and themselves by experiencing as much of it as they can. I, on the other hand, have dreams of building an art studio, of developing certain specific skills that require learning my materials and tools and aesthetics. This would be incredibly difficult if not impossible on the road, because I want to develop depth instead of breadth. Vagabonders travel and find out about the people who stay rooted, but what if you want to have some of those roots? Roots allow trees to grow tall and strong and healthy. Both ways have value, and I think my challenge will be in combining the two aspects of life, since I want to incorporate certain lessons from each way into my own life.

Raising a family is also a dream, and although the author commented vaguely about families traveling together, I have doubts about the wisdom of vagabonding with children in tow. It is often not their choice to travel, since they have friends and a life at home, so unless they are on board you are forcing someone else to live your own dream. Traveling cheaply can be done only through the acceptance of hardship and sacrifice, and someone forced into that has reason to be angry and resentful. On the other hand, I can definitely see reasons to take older children along on shorter trips (i.e. one to three months) if you are prepared to provide for a few more creature comforts than you would if you were on your own.

Overall, I would like to put some of the principles of vagabonding into effect: live simply and save money, and then just GO. We think too much about the ramifications of such a trip on the rest of our lives, and so we talk ourselves out of going every time. I would like to simply decide to take a trip when our lease runs out, pick a preliminary destination and a budget, and then go vagabond for as long as our money holds and our travels enliven us. Let our futures figure themselves out-- I have absolutely no fears about what we will do when we get back. We are smart and adaptable, and that will stand us in good stead no matter where and what we do.

2 comments:

  1. Hm I hadn't really thought about how much traveling I'd like to do over the course of my life. I can see what you're saying about setting down roots - especially since your dreams involve setting up a ceramic business and such. I think my career is a little more flexible than yours, since I can work in a place for 1-3 years and then have a perfect opportunity to take a long trip somewhere in between jobs, whereas it would be more challenging for you because it would interrupt your business. If I had my pick though, that's what we'd do in an ideal world - go on a trip of at least 3 months every 1-3 years. I think it would keep us on our toes and expand our lives greatly. I guess the first step is to go on our first trip and see how we like it - then figure out if it's possible to incorporate into our lives.

    I don't know if I agree with your worries that traveling with children might not be a good idea. Sure there are certain ages where kids might think such a trip is stupid (also depends on the kinds temperment). But egads, I would have LOVED it if my parents had taken me on some trips across Europe or Asia as a kid, and I think it would be a very memorable and exciting experience. Haven't you always told me fondly about your trip through the grand canyon? I have other friends whose parents have taken them on long trips, and they also held it up as a high point in their lives. Basically, I think it would work but yes, you'd have to be careful to take the kids wishes into consideration as well in a trip like that.

    As for your idea of just "let's GO" and stop worrying about things - that is probably the best idea :] You're right that we can figure things out - it's just hard to suppress my worrying and dragon side sometimes :]

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  2. True, trips with kids aren't at all bad or impossible. They are just more expensive, since your ten-year-old probably won't like hiking/traveling long distances with strange food and no guaranteed bed at the end of the day. I guess I meant it just wasn't good in terms of true vagabonding. And you are right, I LOVED my trip out west, and that was a six-week trip so a long time on the road. However, we stayed in hotels (cheap ones) and ate decent food, so while it was inexpensive as family trips go, it was a lot more than it would have been if it were two adults just wandering.

    I like your idea of going on a three-month-plus trip every couple of years, making it a habit in life to take time out and rediscover ourselves and the world. And there's no reason not to-- we would take vacations anyway so instead of a week-long stay in Jamaica lets go vagabonding for a month!

    I think we could work my career around the trips. If I had a studio in or attached to the home, for example, it's not like we would be renting a storefront space that would need to be paid off through our travels. We need to make sure that as I build my career it is constructed in a way that doesn't prevent our vagabonding trips.

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