Archive for the ‘Fearless’ Category

Cue Theme Music

{Taken in front of the Pantheon in Rome, October 1990}

“Fortune favors the bold.” ~Pliny the Elder

I’m back on the topic of Italy again as I prepare for another flight across the Atlantic. Since this has been a more frequent topic of conversation lately, I’ve had the chance to share a few stories from the last time I was in Rome, which was on my first overseas journey in 1990 for a six-week backpacking adventure with my best friend. After exploring places like Paris, Munich, and Florence together, I decided to go further south in Italy, and ended up taking a few days in Rome on my own. And it was there that I had a transcendent experience with a can of Coca-Cola.

If you’ve never gone backpacking through Europe on a college student budget, here’s a quick snapshot:  You sleep in hostels, where you may or may not have your own room and your nearest bathroom is likely down the hall. Your diet consists of bread, pizza, and water. If you are in Munich for Oktoberfest, the only other addition to that diet will be beer. You get around on public transportation and on foot, and the majority of your entertainment is nothing more than people-watching. You wash your clothes in the sink, and you carry your own tissues to avoid having to pay for toilet paper in public restrooms.

In other words, it’s a blast.

By the time I reached Rome in the fall of 1990, I had been traveling for over a month. I made a new friend within an hour of arriving in the city – that’s another part of the backpacking experience, fellow backpackers are your instant friends – so had someone to pal around with for my first couple of days there, but after he left I was on my own for another day. I walked all over the city, stumbled upon the Coliseum by accident (such a thrill!), and finished the day enjoying a rather chatty few hours sitting on the Spanish Steps. (Tip for the introverts out there – if you’re looking for a place to sit in a quiet, meditative space for a spell, head somewhere else. It’s a friendly bunch over there!)

That day, sitting I don’t even remember where, I decided it was time to splurge – big time. It was a gorgeous, sunny day, I had the entire afternoon to myself, the crowds were happy, and I was thirsty. And there was only one beverage that would satisfy me:  Coca-Cola.

I’ve had plenty of cans of Coke since then, but my memories of consuming them vanished the instant I took the last sip. It is only this one – from a sunny day in Rome when I was 22 years old – that has stayed with me. It probably cost no more than two dollars – a mighty sum when trying to find places to sleep for only twenty – but it was an expense that made me feel downright regal. The bright red logo, the cold, metallic can, and the spectacularly sweet bubbly goodness that I savored from my very first sip to the last swoosh down my throat. Every gulp was confirmation that I had what it took to live a life of bold dreams and fierce independence. I decided to risk my budget and throw caution to the wind, and all it took to satisfy that longing was one can of Coca-Cola. Who knew such a simple purchase could inspire such bravado? Who knew it would end up being one of the most delicious moments on a journey jam-packed with what was new and exciting and exhausting and exhilarating?

But that is the joy of travel – the unexpected twists and the unanticipated gifts that lay waiting in the smallest of spaces – as small as a twelve ounce can, as brief as a swig of soda.

Christine Mason Miller is an artist, writer and explorer. Her next book – Desire to Inspire:  Using Creative Passion to Transform the World - is coming this November. She’s pondering a stop in India as part of her book tour.

Hipstamatic Safari

Gypsy Girls! I’ve been thinking of you. Am just in from a week bushcamping in Botswana and off on business to Chengdu, China. Spending today in a traveller’s lounge in Hong Kong airport using wifi, having a massage, sampling my first Chinese noodles of this trip. All along the way I’ve been wondering to myself, “When did this become my life?” More on that another time.

Thought I’d share with you a few images snapped on safari. When my camera batteries died, I experimented with Hipstamatic on the iPhone. I only felt a little silly next to the intrepid photogs with giant lenses… my iPhone’s got a hot pink polka dot cover, too. I suppose it was pretty silly… I enjoy the images, though. Very Out of Africa, don’t you think?

Sunset on the Okavango Delta

Kala, guide from !Kung tribe, liked the iPhone very much!

It was a beautiful, mind-boggling, life-altering experience. Remote winter camping with trackers… one day we saw 16 different lions. For more images (shot with my Canon point n’ shoot) see XpatAdventures.com.  Anyone want to go next year? Let me know…

Rebecca is a regular contributor to the Gypsy Girl’s Guide. She’s an American gone global, with an apartment in Zurich.

Born to Run

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It was a typical Friday night for my partner and I in Alameda, California–we were wandering up Park Street, chatting about nothing and everything, when we wandered into a favorite locally-owned bookstore (Books, Inc.).

“Don’t let me buy anything,” I told Andy, which is something I seem to say a lot in bookstores.

As we wandered, Born to Run by Christopher McDougall drew my attention. Less than one week before, I’d finished San Francisco’s Bay to Breakers race–a triumph I was still giddy about, since I’d a.) finished (I had signed up for this race several times and never even made it to the starting line because of repetitive injuries), and b.) finished the 7.47 mile course in 1:28, below my goal time of 1:45, and c.) finished in the top 1/3 of all racers and top 25% of all women who participated in the race.

I’d been committed to finishing, even if I walked the entire way. Finishing a full 15 minutes faster that I’d anticipated, and in the top 1/3 of all runners after making a comeback from an injury, had blown me away–I was still trying to figure that one out, because a helluva lot of people had breezed past me (approximately 14,000 people, in fact, out of the 43,000 who finished the race).

So, you know where this is going–I bought the book. Then I devoured it, finishing itin fewer than three days–but this post isn’t about the book. This post is about the realization I had while reading Born to Run.

First, for context, I’ll give you the lowdown on Born to Run: McDougall has an injury (cuboid syndrome, the same injury that I had) and receives the same standard medical advice for it from doctors (there’s nothing that can really be done; quit running; wear orthotics) and he won’t accept that as an answer (which is precisely how I responded). He finds this tribe, the Tarahumara, who run long distances (50, 100 miles, even more) without injury, and they love doing it, and this takes him down a long rabbit hole of finding out that the super-techno ultra-padded orthotic shoes we’re all paying $150 or more for are not actually helpful for running. What’s more, the shoe makers know that, but they also know they probably can’t get you to pay $150+ for shoes unless they convince you that the super-techno ultra-padded orthotic shoes are better for you. More importantly? McDougall comes to the conclusion that we are, in fact, born to run–by evolutionary design–and he’s not alone in that conclusion.

Read the book; it’s fascinating.

But as I said, that’s not what this is about. Here’s the thing:

I. Love. Running.

I actually love it. Adore it. Wish I could do it every day. The idea of waking up, throwing on some clothes and gliding out a few miles? Sounds delicious to me.

But for the past few years, I have not been able to run everyday, like that. McDougall’s research lead him to indigenous tribes in Mexico. My research lead me to a chiropractor who knows how to correct my injury–the one doctor I found who knew what he was doing, among the milieu I saw during two years of searching for answers in a medical community that had no answers–other than, of course, to tell me I could not be a runner.

With the exception of my amazing doctor, I heard again and again and again how “running is bad for you.” I heard again and again the chorus of people who said that you couldn’t fix the type of injury I had. My injury occurred in 2005. It took me until 2011 to be able to regularly run again, and during that time I’ve lived with fear that at any moment, the injury could re-surface. After all, it came out of nowhere last time. What’s to stop it from coming back, again?

I think that I closed my heart off to something I loved when I heard that same, repetitive message. It’s painful to love something and not be able to do it.

To read McDougall’s book was to feel as if I were having a conversation with someone who understood–several people, in fact, because the book is about people who are passionate about running. To spend hours immersed in this world was pure delight–a world where “running is bad for you” was not an acceptable, or even accurate, position.

Regardless of whether or not McDougall’s book had provided anything in the way of answers, it’s important for me to notice this place where I closed off my heart a bit from something I loved. In the days since reading it, I find myself wondering where else in my life I might have done this, because the choice to keep loving openly felt too painful.

And oh– what a limiting life that might be!

It’s worth considering–where in your life do you feel tempted to shut down or not fully love, because you’ve experienced a rejection of sorts, in the past? Where in your life have you heard the message that something is not possible?

And most importantly–how much do you want those experiences to influence your choices?

Kate Swoboda is a Life Coach, teacher and writer who works with women from around the world who are interested in living lives of courage, integrity, passion, and power. She’s the author of the Courageous Living Guides and creator of the Courageous Play and Create Stillness retreats. She’s excited about learning languages, reading as many books as she can, getting bendy-stretchy on the yoga mat, the quest for the next amazing chai latte, and running.