Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

May 25, 2012

Four Stories from the Langtang Trek

After returning from our trek through the Solukhumbu, we had about 3 days at Ama Ghar to wash the dust out of our clothes and sleep before we headed back out again. We were unexpectedly invited by a family friend, Doc PJ, to join in on his medical rounds through small Tibetan villages in the Langtang region (along the Nepal-Tibet border) for two weeks. We had originally planned to spend a few days of rest in Nepal before moving on to India for a yoga/meditation retreat in the last week of May, but this opportunity was just too good to pass up, and we are SO GLAD we made the decision to go! Our experiences with PJ and the Lama family taught us so much, and gave us so much to be grateful for. Thiley Lama, the patriarch of the family, is currently the Representative for the Tibetan Refugees Living in Nepal (should I capitalize that? I don't know), and his family has been living in Langtang for the past 13 generations (in fact, he and his wife are direct relatives of the last King and Queen to rule the Langtang region before the regional union of Nepal), so we had the rare chance of hearing their firsthand accounts of the Tibetan culture and history of the area. His eldest son, Mipsang, and daughter, Jangmu, came along as well. Mipsang has gone to medical school and is serving his residency in the Philippines, but he came back to help PJ with the medical work (and get some much-needed rest). Jangmu has a degree in Tourism and spends much of the year managing the family's lodge in Kanjim. For this trip she was dubbed the official Team Leader, and she managed to take care of every member of the crew at every possible opportunity! They treated us like royalty the whole time and we will be forever indebted to our new friends for their generous hospitality. We asked PJ what we could possibly do to repay him and the family for gifting us with so much, and he told us that all we have to do is pay it forward. We intend to do just that.
As you may expect, we have many amazing and amusing stories we would love to share with you, but to help you avoid eyestrain we have narrowed it down to four.

Story # 1: A Day in Kanjim
The day before, we hiked a short two hours from Langtang up to Kanjim, where the Lama family runs a guesthouse called Yeti Lodge. We stashed our bags then hiked up to the top of the mountain right next to town, to take in the amazing 360 degree views. We made it up in a little over an hour, and spent several exhilarated moments looking around in silence. The wind was blowing hard, pushing all the warm air out of the valley in a big rush which we could see as well as feel. A few birds were riding the swells, probably getting a pretty big rush of adrenaline at the major turbulence, and I could see the same look in my fellow onlookers’ eyes: Oh, what it would feel like to fly like a bird! Some of the mountains were masked by the big afternoon clouds, so we all decided we would just have to come back up again tomorrow morning to get a clearer view.
This morning, we were awakened by PJ’s quiet knock at the door a little after 5am. He headed out just before us to race to the top, and we couldn’t even see him on the mountain by the time we got out, he was that fast. I managed to take a wrong turn somewhere on the clear path straight up the mountain, which is a distinct (though unintentional) skill of mine, and I ended up going around the mountain into a small valley. I decided to keep going and enjoyed a pleasant, gradual hike among the rocks and yak tracks until I realized I would miss breakfast at this rate and chose to walk straight up the side of the mountain. As I walked higher, I felt the sun begin to warm my crown, then my face, then creep slowly down until the whole view was bathed in sunlight. I got to the top right at the spot of a giant rockslide which had carved a deep gash into the side of the mountain, leaving a bare space which made the rocks beneath look almost naked. I leaned over to see better, and got a very steep, shocking view of the looooong way down. I quickly took two steps back, then one deep breath, and started walking along the ridge to my intended destination, where my companions patiently waited. After having a good hike and contemplation time on the top, we were all excited for breakfast. PJ went down first, bobbing and weaving in his bright yellow windbreaker, and Neal and I followed, a bit less gracefully and far less quickly on my part, but we still made it down right in time to eat.
After breakfast, we all got to ride on Mipsang’s small but sturdy horse (don’t worry, Neal’s friends, I have pictures), and then we went for a leisurely walk to the river, where we looked at flowers and lazed next to a small pond. On our way back, Ao spotted a black female yak (aka a nak) stuck neck-deep in mud. The team went immediately into action. Neal and PJ grabbed horns and rump and pulled, while Ao extricated her limbs one at a time by plunging his hands deep into the mud and heaving. Jangmu and I kept up commentary and took photos, and the nak furiously ground her teeth with anxiety. The moment was tense, but it wasn’t long before the nak was being dragged out and laid onto the nearby grass to recuperate. She was clearly exhausted, and almost didn’t have the strength in her tired muscles to stand up, but a few well-placed rocks to her side from Ao got her moving higher to safety. We all stood around and congratulated each other for a job well done. Capes and badges for everyone! Good work, Team Nak Rescue!
Everyone was energized and walked lighter after the Great Nak Rescue. Neal talked of making t-shirts (Team Nak Rescue, First Responders), while Jangmu replayed the video and I gave a recap of the highlights. It was not long after this proud moment that PJ welcomed us into the highly esteemed He-Man Jungle Doctors’ Club. What an honor!

Story #2: “Escape ceremonies”
The work that the medical team does for the people in these villages is very much appreciated, and the people are glad to show their gratitude. Generosity and appreciation are inherent in daily Tibetan culture, but when Doc PJ and crew comes around, they take it up a notch.
Every morning after a clinic day, we would wake up, pack our bags for the next town, eat breakfast, and participate in what PJ liked to call the “escape ceremonies.” This consisted of going to a number of houses and being offered thanks through tea, prayer scarves, food, tea, blessings and conversation, drinks, and tea. It is an honor to be treated so respectfully by such loving people, but it is also a bit of a strain on the belly and the bladder, particularly right before a day of hiking steeply up for four hours. PJ and Thiley got very creative about shortening the time these interludes would take in the mornings, choosing to go to houses the night before, split up and cover more than one house at a time, or allow one family to make us dinner and another to make us breakfast. It was a clever strategy. PJ has also learned how to be very graceful about declining further refreshments when he is full, which is something I have discovered that I struggle with, because I always found myself looking incredulously at the fresh mountain of food on my plate even after telling myself I could not eat one more bite. On one of our last days I remember looking at the full cups of Tibetan tea, coffee, beer, and soda in front of me and gravely wishing I had not eaten so much breakfast. Tibetan tea is a salty butter mixture which probably helped a great deal in getting through the hard mountain winters through the generations, and it is very popular in the area. PJ wasn’t a huge fan of it; Mipsang laughed as he told us, “He has tried many times to like it, but he cannot like it.” I found the taste pleasant, but the consistency too rich to drink much more than a few sips before feeling satisfied. Instead, I settled with the delicious milk tea made with local nak milk, but after a morning of tea ceremonies, even the most pleasant of experiences can be a burden when you have too much of it. This is a good lesson for me to remember: know your limits!

Story #3: Fellow travelers
We met a few Western trekkers along the way who hiked and talked with us for awhile.
The Langtang area is far less touristy than the Solukhumbu, but it still had its fair share of fair-skinned faces, and even one swanky cafĂ© which was tourist-run! One nice couple around our age, a French girl named Celine and a Japanese guy named Keita, spent a few days sharing lodges and meals with us. We had some great talks about travel, and one particularly interesting morning chat about how travel affects family. Traveling for me has been a wonderful experience, but it has been difficult to be separated from my family for such a long time. I know that when I go home, I am going to want to spend as much time with them as I can to catch up. I also know now that I would not be happy living far away from them (like in another country, or even too many states away) for extended periods of time—it just feels like I am missing too much. It was therefore really interesting to hear the accounts of other travelers. Keita has been traveling for many years now, and he has gone as much as two years without seeing his family. When he does come back, he is happy to see them and spend time with them. Being away is an experience which makes his time at home more enjoyable. “When I go home,” he says, “nothing has changed. They are all still doing the same things they did the last time I visited. My father does not even like to vacation outside of the area surrounding his home. Only I have changed. I come home and do the same things with them that they love to do, and I can entertain them with stories of my experiences. It is fun for both of us.” Keita does not want to go back to a life in that town with his family, but he has found a balance which suits them both.
Celine has also been abroad for a long time, and she had a different story. She had been traveling away from home for a year, and she decided to come home for a few months to surprise her family. But when she got there, she said it was not the same. “They didn’t even seem to want me there,” she said. “Nobody was that excited to see me, and it was like they didn’t know how to relate to me anymore. It was very strange, and now I am not sure that I can even go back.” Being away caused her family to distance themselves from her, and she is left to continue her journey without relying on their advice and genuine support, an occurrence which I doubt she had foreseen when she first left home.
Neither Keita nor Celine plan to return to their hometowns to settle once their journeys are over. I, however, have realized in my travels just how wonderful my home really is. These are just two of many conversations we have had with others who have been far from home for a long time. The travel experience is a quick and easy way to open a lot of doors in your life, but we are discovering that it has its consequences. Relationships are hard to maintain even when the people are close by, but absence from those relationships for too long can change the dynamic in unexpected ways. Even PJ talked to us about how it is hard to find someone who wants to hear stories of his travel experiences. “Most people will give you about 3 minutes,” he says. The travel life is just so different from daily life that it can be extremely challenging to reconcile these two worlds, and people outside of those worlds have difficulty understanding the ways in which you have changed. I have not a single regret about coming on this trip (though it is going to be pretty hard to miss my sister’s college graduation), but conversations like the one with Keita and Celine make me wonder how this big trip is going to play its part in the rest of my life.

Story #4: Old and new
Nepal is a place where old and new are coming together, interacting, and creating a unique way of life. Every place has bits and pieces left over from the people who came before, and history is everywhere. We walked past an ancient Mani stone one day and Jangmu pointed out a cluster of rocks half-buried in the ground beside the trail. “This is where the lamas used to perform sky burials,” she said. A Sky Burial is an ancient Tibetan ceremony where the person who has died is chopped up into small pieces and fed to the vultures, which to me sounds like an extremely powerful and spiritually charged method of going back to the earth. This practice is becoming less and less common, however, because there aren’t any lamas in the area who are trained in the ritual. Now, it is more common for people to be cremated or buried in the hills. Sometimes people’s ashes are mixed with clay and formed into small temple-shaped figures, then placed in caves or near holy sites like gompas. We saw a few such figures near a gompa we visited, sitting there for who knows how many years, protected by the weather under a large rock. The prayer flags, another ancient tradition, are covering the hillsides and holy places, and adorning people’s homes. The fresh ones are placed alongside the faded and tattered ones, refreshing the prayers and blessings while honoring the fragments of hopes and dreams of old. Many house interiors are painted black and decorated with white tsampa flour in celebration of the New Year, and the tsampa is left to chip off slowly with time. We watched a video of a yearly festival which happens near Langtang, with people in traditional and modern dress swaying and singing in a big circle for hours and hours. People come from all over Nepal to attend. Every person knows the songs, every person moves in time to the music. The ancient life is its own thread in the grand weaving that is shaping the Nepali life, and one of the great themes is honoring the passing of time.
Another related theme is acknowledging the changing times. We walked past a woman separating grain from its husk outside her home, listening to loud Hindi music on her cell phone as she worked. Even from so far from Kathmandu, we continually heard news of the constitution-passing process and the pros and cons of the newly forming government. And we heard many stories from the old Lama family history, stories of how the land was passed down for generations and how they lost their family name in the process of applying for citizenship, stories of their yak herding days and stories of their new life in Kathmandu. Even for a family who lives steeped in the history of their ancestors every day, it is hard to hold on to the old ways, hard to remember all of the stories of their people. On our last morning in Langtang, before beginning the long walk down, we were served breakfast made by Thiley’s 92-year old mother, the last noble queen of Langtang. She honored us deeply by coming up to the house herself, a rare occurrence these days, and sitting with us for awhile. Her presence was tangible, powerful, directing the reverent focus of all in the room toward her. PJ thanked her for coming, and tears welled up in her eyes, then his. It was an indescribable moment which invoked so many emotions and feelings about the unavoidable passage of time, a moment which PJ described as “more powerful than meeting the Dalai Lama. Her life represents a transition, between what used to be and what will come.” After we began our journey down, I stopped for a moment and turned back to the house. She was standing outside facing us, looking like a tattered prayer flag and a solid Mani stone at the same time, knowing yet distant, wise but somehow lost. I wanted to go up to her and tell her everything within myself, but I had the feeling like she knew it already. I wanted to ask her everything about her life, but I also felt like I had been shown it in more ways than I yet knew. Instead, I turned around and began to walk. This is Nepal, in all of its crashing together, its weaving of fragments from all walks of life and all times, holy and irreverent, simple and complex, beautiful in its brave and unselfconscious display of its own truth. Here, mysteries are only mysteries until you truly see what is right in front of you. Here, gompas and mountains and the bare earth are all monuments to the sacred. Here, you can discover yourself and that which is far greater than you in a single, timeless moment. Whether or not I will come back to this place is something I cannot know, but that I will be forever changed from this experience is something I am certain of, and deeply grateful for.

October 16, 2011

A Little Background For Y'all

Hello World! The sun's rising on Friday and the birds are singing. This experience in Fiji has been amazing, there is so much to take in and at times it is overwhelming. But before I go into explaining the Fijian life I want to catch up on this past summer and fill you all in on what it took to make this trip happen.
I can not believe we are actually doing it. I think I may have proven once again that it is possible to manifest your own destiny. Whatever it is you desire in this world you can have, all it takes is a little hard work and a dream.
I have been dreaming of a world adventure for years and at the beginning of this year my trigger finger was getting itchy. So in February of 2011 Siri and I began discussing the idea of traveling together. The idea sounded exciting, but we knew that embarking on a trip of this magnitude together had the potential to tear us apart. We also understood though, that if it didn't it would make our relationship that much stronger. Either way it would be an experience we could share, it would make memories that last forever, and it truly would be a trip of a life time.
So we decided to stay together and shoot for the stars knowing that if we only made it to the clouds it would still be one hell of an adventure. I began doing research on a trip from the US to Alaska, Hawaii, Fiji, New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia, Thailand, Nepal, India, Israel, and Turkey and came to the conclusion that a multi stop trip like this would would cost about $2o,ooo. This was a huge price tag especially considering the fact that Siri was a full time volunteer and I hadn't had a steady job in over a year and virtually no work for the previous three months. So at the time we decided to go for it we had no money and I was barely paying my bills, so $20,000 seemed impossible. But what the hell right, why not try.
So I decided I needed to make some big changes in my lifestyle and needed a good job (any job). Within days of deciding it was going to happen I was offered a job with my good friend John Fitzpatrick doing an office building install which put about $2000 into the travel fund for about a weeks work and at this point I realized the universe had already started its magic. Right after that job I started working for my friend Ron Andrews from King Cage full time and at this point the snowball was already picking up momentum. Shortly after this I moved out of my house and into my truck with my dog, started selling everything I owned, started building furniture on the side, got rid of all my unnecessary bills and started saving every penny I made. If these affirmations weren't enough, I was also finding a penny every single day, which is insignificant in the big picture, but gave me confidence daily that what I was doing was right. At times I would be walking my dog, and best friend, Takoma, and realize I hadn't found a penny yet and literally find one within seconds... Talk about coincidence.
It was truly hard to sell all my belongings I had become so accustomed to and move out of the house knowing that it would be the last place I called home for the next 2 years. But once it was all gone I felt free and realized how unnecessary this baggage was in my life. At this point it was all or nothing.
Takoma took the move hard at first, but slowly began to get used to the drifter lifestyle. We began to spend every minute together, which was great considering my future plans unfortunately did not include him.
I worked for a while and slowly began to realize that at this rate I would not be able to save enough for this trip, so once again I needed to make some changes. First, I needed to sell my motorcycle and second, I needed to find a full time job that paid at least $20 per hour. The night I made this realization I went to bed with the intent that I would have these two things. Within no more than a week I sold the bike and received a phone call from my good friend Dontje asking if I could help him on a job, which turned into a full time $20 per hour gig, once again proving the law of attraction.
Shortly after this I made the decision to buy the around the world tickets through Airtreks, which was the first time I realized this dream may actually become a reality. As the date neared we began purchasing the gear we needed and received an offer to take photos for next year's Gregory Backpacks catalog from my friend John Pieper, in return receiving our packs and duffel bags for the trip. Everything seemed to be falling into place.
The day before we left I decided it would be fun to add up all our expenses and savings up to that point and found that we had saved, in about 8 months, almost exactly $20,000 and I couldn't help but laugh. Manifestation, destiny, or coincidence, this is up to you to decide.
So what seemed to be just another pipe dream in the beginning has turned into the start of an adventure that will live on for years to come through our stories and memories. I truly hope that this trip will inspire everyone I know in my life to follow their dreams, whatever they may be.

October 4, 2011

Why are we doing this??

To be honest, not a lot of people actually ask us this question. The "Why" seems to be the same for just about everyone who is interested in travel. Here is a list of some commonly sought offerings of the travel experience:

  • Getting away. Travel offers a feeling of FREEDOM that you can't get at the office-- being able to do anything any time of day and any day of the week. 
  • Finding different ways of doing things. Travel gives insight into other cultures that cannot be understood from textbooks alone, and it gives us a unique perspective on our day-to-day lives.
  • A simplified form of living. The traveler is engaged in and aware of every decision he or she makes from the moment of awakening to the moment of sleep.
  • Sunrises, sunsets, and landscapes. The natural world offers an inexhaustible supply of food for the spirit.
  • Meeting people from all walks of life.
  • "In the end, I meet me." The endless journey of self-discovery.
  • It is something you just cannot live without anymore.

We can all agree that the reasons for traveling are worthwhile; it is the HOW that seems to be the mystery for most of us. Most often when we tell people that "no, we are not going to school or getting a job, we are traveling the world," they respond with a big smile, lots of excitement, and some excuse as to why they haven't traveled yet, ending with a wistful sigh and a long stare into the distance. The excuses typically revolve around money, age, and time. And often, people will try to figure out how our situation is different from theirs in some significant way which allows us to manage a trip like this. My advice is to stop looking for the differences and start seeing ways in which you can get out there in whatever way you can. I would recommend to those of you who are interested in traveling to not let the struggles with HOW become one of the reasons WHY NOT.  Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "Once you make a decision, the universe conspires to make it happen," and I support that philosophy wholeheartedly.
So I suppose rather than ask us why we are doing this, it might be more beneficial for US to ask YOU: Why not??

September 28, 2011

The Adventure Begins!


...Actually, the adventure for me began a long time ago. As of today, I have not slept in the same bed more than twice since completing my year-long program with the Urban Servant Corps on August 9th and spending the following week in a stupor at my grandparents' house. Since the day USC ended, I have seen two concerts at Red Rocks Amphitheatre; been to various art exhibits and seminars; reconnected with a few good old friends; taken a road trip with my family through Wyoming, Montana, Yellowstone National Park, Spokane, Seattle, Portland, Boise, and Park City; ended the long-distance part of the relationship with my boyfriend; celebrated  with my friends in Durango; said many goodbyes; drove to Michigan; said many hellos; and marveled at the life changes that seem to be occurring like crazy among myself and my peers.

But those were just my activities in the past month and a half. For those of you who haven't heard from me in awhile, let me backtrack a bit and briefly explain my life since graduating from Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado. I graduated in 2009 with a major in Art and minors in French and Psychology, and immediately used my last opportunity as a student to take an Innovative Month trip to India with Reyes Garcia of the Philosophy Department, his girlfriend and traveler extraordinaire Tracy Davis, and several FLC students. Seeing India opened my eyes to the vast differences in cultures and lifestyles that can result from only the slightest difference in location or political and religious belief. I looked people in the eye who had lived in ways I had never even thought to imagine, and I was eager to learn how their experiences had shaped them. I got a taste of the depth of the human spirit, and I hungered for more. When I got back to the United States, I immediately began searching for the next lesson in humanity. I wanted to have more experience working with people and coming to understand the human condition in a more real sense before going back to school or starting a career, especially since I still had little idea of what field I wanted to pursue. I spent the next year living and working in Durango, researching opportunities like teaching in France, living at Holden Village in Washington, and joining the Peace Corps in Africa. I began seeing Neal around Christmas of 2009, and pretty quickly the "2 years abroad for Peace Corps" option was out, so I started looking for programs a little closer to home. My mom, being the ideas person that she is, was the first one to suggest joining the Urban Servant Corps in Denver for a year, and after that moment it was pretty much a swift roll down the steep hill of Fate. The Urban Servant Corps is a non-profit organization linked to AmeriCorps and associated with the Lutheran Church. It combines the tenets of simplicity, service and social justice with the intentional community model. I lived in a house with nine other people, all of us volunteering full-time at nonprofits around Denver and spending our off-time learning the complex meaning of Consensus. My volunteer placement was at Sewall Child Development Center, an inclusive preschool-type setting for "friends" aged 2-5, where I played with sand, practiced yoga, and learned the complex meaning of Give-and-Take. Living and working in community was a challenging, humbling, and transformative experience, one that I would trade for nothing and a lesson I hope to continue learning throughout my life.

And now that the backstory is in place, let's move on to the Year-Long Summer. Neal had been planning a global adventure of his own since before I met him. When I heard his plans, I was excited and a little jealous but had no thought of actually joining him. Little did I know that I was cresting another ridge of Fate Mountain. Ideas became discussion, discussion became research, then guidebooks, then itineraries, then budgets, then plane tickets, vaccinations, visas....and here we are, at the next course in my lifelong Humanity lesson. I knew after visiting India that I would have to do more traveling, though I hadn't expected it would be so soon. Well, no better time than now, right? Both Neal and I had talked to many people who had traveled within the United States or to other countries and stayed with locals. We wanted to have an authentic cultural experience, and be able to see as much of the areas as possible without spending a lot of money. Through our  conversations and online research we discovered the WWOOF program, which is a website connecting local farmers to volunteers in locations around the world. The premise is that the farmers provide room and board and the volunteers work an average of 5 hours per day, for typically 2-6 weeks. It is a good opportunity to get to know local culture through the locals themselves, and get firsthand experiences of the culture, the language, and the land. We also plan to use the websites CouchSurfing.org and servas.org to connect us to local English speakers who are willing to take us in and show us around a bit. In between hosts, we will be backpacking, camping, climbing, surfing, snorkeling, working at an orphanage, visiting friends, and who knows what else.

A lot of people have asked us how we managed to save up the money to do such an extensive trip, and to be honest, I don't really have an answer to that question. You'll have to ask Neal what he thinks did it, because I am convinced it was a side effect of the Cosmos responding to our intentions. Of course, I only made $75 a month the whole year I was volunteering! Neal definitely bore more of the responsibility for the financial sector, by working hard all year long post-graduation, moving into his truck for the summer, and liquidating as many unnecessary bills as possible. It was hard work and a lot of alternative thinking, but I believe it was more than that. How would you explain Neal finding a penny on the ground every single day for the past 4 months? Every bit counts. Hopefully our story will inspire you to start thinking differently about how to travel the way you want, or at least give you hope that this sort of thing CAN be done.

Be sure to take a look at our trip itinerary, which will probably be altered or completely changed many times in the course of the year. And if you are wondering just WHY we are doing this trip in the first place, and what the heck we plan to get out of this whole experience, you'll just have to read our next post!

...The title of the blog is a little misleading, since we had a full summer in Colorado before our year of summer even began, and it will be closer to springtime when we get to New Zealand, but "A Couple Summer Months, a Hint of Fall, Fiji, Spring, then Almost a Year of Summer" seemed a little too unwieldy and not as striking to the imagination. So we're keeping it simple.

Please feel free to comment on our blog and send us your own travel stories and advice! We would love to get some conversation rolling in our communities about what inspires all of us to explore the world outside our doors. Let's make this experience a shared one.