Archive for the ‘Places’ Category

where would you go?

I recently spent a weekend exploring the UK city of Manchester with my beloved… and one of the places we checked out was the Art Gallery.

I don’t know about you, but I’m a sucker for the kids area, which is usually interactive and has fun stuff to play with!

Part of the interactive area was a wall of suitcases where visitors are invited to write their dream destination on a luggage tag and attach it to a bag. I loved reading about the places (both real and imaginary) where people would love to go.

I’m in the midst of packing my bags again, off to realise another of my dreams – a trip to Mexico for Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), so I leave you with the question gypsies…

If you could go ANYWHERE (real or imaginary) where would YOU go?

+++

Leonie Wise is a regular contributor to Gypsy Girls Guide

The Moment

Note:  I am, at the moment, very sick and unable to create a new post. I have chosen one of my favorite travel entries from my own blog for today’s GGG entry. I hope you enjoy reading about one of my most meaningful moments abroad. Written March 15, 2010.

It was actually a few steps back when I caught my first glimpse of the Treasury at Petra.  After walking through a narrow canyon formed by rock the colors of deep mustard, rust, and blazing orange for a mile or so, the first bit of the Treasury that can be seen is part of the top.  A few steps further and the perspective above comes into view, an image that has been photographed a zillion times over – one of the most iconic images of a city a group of Arabian nomads called the Nabataeans built around the first century B.C.  I had dreamed of this moment for years – tried to imagine what it would be like to stand in front of this structure built into the walls of a canyon and then explore all the other details of an area that goes on as far as the eye can see.  We only had about a day and half to soak in a place that really needs a week or more, but I’m not complaining.  It was this moment – the moment when I took the photo above – that was my reward, a moment that did not disappoint.

I am back home now, still not entirely over jet lag, a husband home sick, groceries to buy, work to do, deeply troubling family issues still to resolve.  In other words, that moment is past now and I have slowly wound my way back into the day-to-day of my life in Santa Monica.  But my day-to-day now has this new piece, this new detail; like the bracelet I purchased in the nook of an antique shop in Amman, it is here with me now, adding an entirely new dimension to the background of my days.  I rode two airplanes, a van and a horse to get to that spot, and then I made my way back home, and even though all the dust from Petra has been washed out of my hair, the memory is lodged in my consciousness permanently, guiding me to my next ideas, dreams and challenges.

While it would be over-dramatic to say that moment changed my life (or maybe it did – it is likely too early to tell), it did lock another puzzle piece into place.  To be perfectly honest, I feel like my bank account of Dreams Come True is bursting at the seams already, but I still somehow manage to forget the immense power of these moments.  I have written much about the smaller moments, the moments that look ordinary and worn out, perhaps sometimes trying to deflect too much attention away from these grander instances when I am standing smack in the middle of a longed for experience.  At the same time, I have also made it my mission to encourage the world to pursue their dreams and create a meaningful life; I built a business around the idea, and I continue to cheer people on as much as I possibly can.  But have I written enough about these moments?  About the exact instance I looked up – not expecting to see the Treasury just yet – and saw it peek through the canyon?  The moment it came into view and I immediately looked away, tears in my eyes and heart pounding, wanting so badly to stop the clock and squeeze every bit of emotion I could out of that millisecond of time in the history of my life.

All I could think as I walked towards the opening in the canyon to stand in full view of the Treasury was, “I am here…I am here,” not quite believing I had managed to get myself to a Middle Eastern country surrounded my all kinds of tension and chaos, to this place that was once a thriving metropolis so long ago as to be unfathomable.  It is not like the high of a drug – an experience that becomes a craving, something that I live for in blindness to all beauty in my everyday life – it is more a reminder of the expansiveness of possibility in the world:  What is possible?  Anything!  On the same note, it provides a bittersweet recognition of how strange the story of a life sometimes is…how it can be easier to travel 7000 miles away to one of the most dangerous regions of the world and return home safely than to open one single door of communication between myself and a member of my family.  How I felt more seen and understood by people I had never met before this trip than someone I have known my entire life.

It is dichotomies like those that I love exploring.  I cannot help but turn the bright side of a coin over to its darker face, wanting to understand every possible facet of meaning in these moments.  Because to only expose myself to one or the other, I lose the opportunity to fully understand and embrace all that I am given.  And it is not about wanting to downplay the magnificence of the moment of realizing a dream – it is not about wanting to hang a dark cloud over it or smother its voice – it is about seeing all the feelings and thoughts it inspires, and instead of judging them as good, bad, happy or sad, I simply sit with all of them, knowing they all have their place in yet another extraordinary story in the journey of my life.

Christine Mason Miller is an artist, writer, and explorer who recently enjoyed her second Coca-Cola in Rome.

Global Village

Okay I admit it. I’m a townie (translation for Non-Newfies: a snobbish and self-important individual reputed to regard oneself as more cultured and sophisticated than anyone in the entire province of Newfoundland and Labrador who is not from St. John’s). And for the record just let me say that baymen (individuals not from St. John’s who are reputed to smell of fish and rely on all terrain vehicles for transportation) are the true heart and soul of the Rock, the salt of the earth, which I have to say for fear the Sullivan brothers from Dildo (yes that’s the real name of a real town) will show up on my doorstep ready to beat me to a bloody pulp, the townie vs bayman issue is not to be taken lightly.

Anyway, beyond a lesson in Newfie culture, the point is here I am, glamourous townie, installed in France’s version of ‘around the bay’ (any place in Newfoundland other than St. John’s). Now there’s no actual bay or fish and chips stand but I can’t understand a word people say and and there’s a big tractor garage as you come into town so it’s close. But I have to tell you being a townie offers little prestige here.

Honest to god you would not believe the people found here in this little ‘backwater’ of Semur en Auxois. Apart from our other worldly friends we’ve met American physicists/inventors who clearly have a few brain cells firing between them. Last week there were Danish filmmakers hanging about. There’s the Russian artist who left NYC to peacefully paint here in the Burgundy countryside, the high level luxury hotel executive based in Hong Kong, the cafè owners from Senegal. Sure we could have the Olympics here next week if we wanted to. I’d be heavily favoured for the gold in nagging and self-recrimination.

Last week we had drinks with two international journalists from Paris who have a weekend house here. She covers France for the US and he works in French news television after stints in Washington and Russia. We were chatting about the DSK case and it came out that he knows Christine LaGarde, the first female head on the IMF and rocking silver fox. We were talking about my endless French language difficulties when he mentioned that UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon was learning French and was doing well. How did he know this? Because he KNOWS Ban Ki-Moon. I thought about breaking out the story of how I once met Kathy Bates in a restaurant bathroom but I decided it was a tale for another time.

And to top it all off this week, no more than 5 doors down the hill from the housette, you’ll find an ultra right wing, wacky, misogynistic CNN/FOX news political pundit bastard freak guy. As you can see this peaceful life of French funemployment has rendered me serene and free from judgement of others. I haven’t met him yet but I’ve seen him a couple of times now through the scope of my rifle. Oh now I’m just kidding. It’s a water gun.

It’s exciting to be around this kind of energy and to have the rare opportunity to learn so much about the world. And here I thought I was coming to a place that might be too small town for someone as suave and cosmopolitan as myself. We townies talk a good game and while we think we’re big fish in a small sea the folks here are the ones casting their nets far and wide.

Bobbi French is a regular contributor to Gypsy Girls Guide