

Six years ago Don and I made the decision to sell our apartment and our car, sell or give away almost all our possessions, and travel the world. Five and a half years ago we became homeless nomads. We started with a trip to Italy and Spain and followed it with nearly three months in India, one month in Bali, and one month in Australia. Since then we have travelled to twenty-six more countries in Europe, Southeast Asia, South and Central America, Oceania, and the Middle East.
Home has been hotels, hostels, rented furnished apartments, housesits, cruise boats, and overnight plane and train trips. Every few months we’d land back in Canada for a while and arrange to housesit for friends. We’d rent a car and raid our small storage locker for a change of clothes and the file boxes and printer we needed to deal with business matters. Home was with each other, and in other people’s homes. It was both a crazy, and a rewarding lifestyle. It was also stressful in ways we didn’t fully realise. Until we were forced to.
Over the years, as the blog has grown, the most frequent feedback we’ve received is that we are inspirational and courageous.
For a long time I didn’t feel comfortable with the mantle of being an inspiration, though I’m happy that my life choices proved to be that. After all, I’ve just been living my life in the most authentic way I know how. And then I thought of all the people who’ve inspired me – dozens, hundreds over the years, some in person, some through books. I would never have even come to the point of being committed to living an authentic life if not for being inspired by books I read and people I met. I was actually called fake to my face in my twenties. And you know what? They were right. I was busy trying to be who I thought others wanted me to be so I’d become somehow acceptable. So if in some small way I’m paying forward some inspiration to live a better life, some inspiration to go live your dream, some inspiration to be true to yourself, I’ll own that, and I’m grateful for it.
As for courage, I dismissed that too. We weren’t being courageous; we were just doing what we most wanted to do. It’s only courageous if you’re doing something you’re afraid of, and we were not afraid. At least we were not afraid of selling our home and all our “stuff” and becoming homeless nomads. That part didn’t take any courage. It was so clear that it was the only truly authentic course we could take, it was so clear that this was what would most nourish our souls, that fear never came into it.
It’s only now that I recognise how much fear we overcame, how much stress we felt as we travelled, homeless, for five and a half years. Every time we returned to Canada there was the stress of finding a place to stay, short of paying exorbitant hotel or Airbnb fees. We mostly housesat but it all had to be dovetailed, and frequently offers came in, or were cancelled, at the last minute.
Back in Vancouver for 3 ½ months this was our itinerary, from an earlier blog post: five weeks housesitting for friends, five nights in the guest suite of the building where we used to live, five nights with friends on Whidbey Island, twelve days housesitting for another friend, ten nights in the guest suite, three weeks housesitting for friends in North Vancouver, one night in a hotel, four nights in the guest suite, two and a half weeks housesitting for a friend in Coquitlam, and finally two nights back in the guest suite.
On another occasion we stayed in eleven different places in five months. I can’t deny that we would get anxious about it. It didn’t matter how often things worked out, how often we reminded ourselves to trust the unfolding, there was always that underlying low-grade anxiety – i.e. fear.
Travelling itself causes anxiety. Over and over we would put ourselves in the hands of strangers in foreign countries where we had no idea where we were. Every taxi ride required a certain amount of trust. There was the night we arrived in Fiji after dark and took a taxi to our hotel. We drove and drove. Out of the town, down narrower and narrower roads, until we were driving on a gravel road, and there was nothing around but wilderness. We were getting more and more uncomfortable, and alert, when suddenly we arrived at the hotel on the beach. This is one of many many occasions when we were afraid. Not terrified, but definitely on high alert.
Even with an experienced driver who we trusted, much closer to terrified was being driven after dark in India. There is little lighting, drivers basically go wherever they want, and the roads are also filled with unlit horse/donkey/camel drawn carts, people, and wandering dogs and cattle. We drove ourselves in Australia and New Zealand, which was easy enough, but in Turkey, Spain, and Italy it was definitely stressful.
We wandered streets far far from the usual tourist haunts in many countries with nothing to guide us but trust and intuition. We did things we’ve never done before without being sure we were physically capable of doing them, like climbing volcanoes, ice trekking, zip lining, and parasailing. Over and over we held the anxiety in check and carried on.
So yeah, now I’m also willing to own that we’ve been courageous.
I’ve written before about how stressful it is to keep up with blogging while travelling. I also took on this grand ambition that I would grow the blog to create a following so that when we finally get to write that book we keep talking about we would hopefully have an audience for it. I assumed a great responsibility, and I took it far too seriously. It became an ongoing source of stress for me and has taken me most of the time we’ve been travelling to finally let go. In the end I regret none of it because my ambition has driven me to become a much better writer and photographer, and now, finally, I’m being paid as a travel writer. Still, stress is stress, even if it’s self-created from nothing.
When you land in a new country there’s always the probability that you’ll never get back there. I didn’t want to miss anything. So I would do things when my body would really rather have been resting. I’d chase after sunsets and photo ops, keep on hiking when the body needed to stop, always trying to see what was just around the next corner. Yes we stopped for several months at a time in various places: Cyprus, La Manzanilla, San Miguel de Allende, Canberra, and Vancouver (which was always a break because it’s safe and familiar), but then there was the going again and all the same stresses would return.
So what now?
As mentioned in a previous post I got to be in so much pain that I couldn’t go on, and I understand now that almost all my health problems have been created by stress and anxiety. We realised that we needed to take a time out. We committed to twelve months back in Vancouver to see if I could get healed. We didn’t think much beyond that, except that we knew we would buy a car again because renting one for a year made no sense. We also thought vaguely about whether or not we’d rent a furnished or an unfurnished place, waiting to see what was available, knowing that any rent would be exorbitant. We also knew that we were not in a position to buy again. That was the whole point of selling our apartment in the first place – Don needed to retire but we could barely afford for him to retire and to keep the apartment and the lifestyle we had. Travelling as well would have been entirely out of the question.
We arrived back in Vancouver on March 1, 2017 and for seven weeks we rented a furnished basement apartment from a friend. Our friend doesn’t want to rent her apartment on a long-term basis so we knew that was not an option. We had no idea what our next steps would be and I think Don’s heart sank a little more each time he looked at the accommodation that was available, either furnished or unfurnished, and the cost of it. On the plus side within the first month we did luck into a great used car for a very good price.
A housesitting gig that had been planned for months fell through. Suddenly at the last minute some friends contacted us offering their place as they’d decided on a last-minute trip to Europe for three weeks.
And then Don found the apartment. Available from the date when our friends returned. For half what would be the normally expected rent in Vancouver! It means we can afford to travel and have a home. It feels like a miracle.
We never decided to stop being nomadic. It crept up on us. It was finding the apartment that did it. It was too good an offer to refuse. So I’ve been grieving the end of an era. It didn’t end the way I thought it would. I think I was clinging unconsciously to some big dream of writing a successful book. Instead I discover, probably to no-one’s surprise, that I’m just ordinary. It’s amazing the way the ego will grab a hold of an idea and a desired outcome, and think that’s the only way to be a success. As if success is even needed. It’s so much more peaceful to simply own being ordinary.
The whole backstory of this blog is that we are two people in our sixties/seventies who decided to let go of everything and become homeless nomads travelling the world. It is admittedly an unusual thing to do. I think that many of you who follow the blog were inspired to do so because of the backstory. So now I feel somehow fraudulent. As if I’ve let the side down. We are no longer that couple who threw caution to the wind, but just ordinary: an older couple with a home who are lucky enough to be able to afford to travel. In the end what happens to all modern nomads has happened to us. The time has come to stop.
So we have been nesting. We own furniture and a car for the first time in five and a half years.
Are we done travelling? Not a chance. As soon as I’m healed we’ll be on the road again. But we will never travel homeless the way we did before. We’ll go for two or three months at a time and come back to our own home. No more scrambling through a storage locker, no more living in other people’s homes, no more wondering where the next housesitting gig will come from. Having grieved the end of an era I am gradually getting used to this new normal, this new phase of our lives. Don had no grieving to do. He’s totally happy with the way things have evolved, and we’re both appreciating all the wonderful benefits of having our own home again.
And in the final analysis this is what it’s all really about:
Long Afternoon at the Edge of Little Sister Pond
by Mary Oliver
As for life,
I’m humbled,
I’m without words
sufficient to say
how it has been hard as flint,
and soft as a spring pond,
both of these
and over and over,
and long pale afternoons besides,
and so many mysteries
beautiful as eggs in a nest,
still unhatched
though warm and watched over
by something I have never seen—
a tree angel, perhaps,
or a ghost of holiness.
Every day I walk out into the world
to be dazzled, then to be reflective.
It suffices, it is all comfort—
along with human love,
dog love, water love, little-serpent love,
sunburst love, or love for that smallest of birds
flying among the scarlet flowers.
There is hardly time to think about
stopping, and lying down at last
to the long afterlife, to the tenderness
yet to come, when
time will brim over the singular pond, and become forever,
and we will pretend to melt away into the leaves.
As for death,
I can’t wait to be the hummingbird,
can you?

Future posts in random order: Our new home and all about nesting. My journey of pain and healing. More about Antigua, Guatemala. Several posts about Cuba.
All words and images by Alison Louise Armstrong unless otherwise noted
© Alison Louise Armstrong and Adventures in Wonderland – a pilgrimage of the heart, 2010-2017.
Reblogged this on World4Justice : NOW! Lobby Forum..
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Thanks for the reblog!
Alison
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May the healing come—and come quickly.
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Thanks Peggy. I hope so! Today I walked in the forest for an hour! The longest I’ve been able to walk for months.
Alison
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That’s fantastic news.
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Maybe I started following you for the coolness of your being nomadic and homeless and brave and inspirational and … so many things. But your journey, like all of ours, is not just the outer one, and over time, as I got to “know” you, it became clear that all those descriptors were irrelevant, even if they were true (or in the case of being nomadic, no longer true). I followed you because you are fascinating, intelligent, thoughtful, and certainly not ordinary. And who says the book is not still in there?
I know you are not looking for validation or kudos, but you will still get them from me. You have inspired me in many ways even as I have learned over the last few years that I am probably not meant to be nomadic, as I was so sure I was. (Hell, just a year in DC without a real home did me in! But that’s a whole ‘nother story!) I just wrote on my own blog recently about the yin and yang of having a home and the urge to travel away from it. I’ve learned for myself that each makes the other more valuable and special, and I hope you will find that, too.
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Oh Lexie, thank you so much! I think that I’m going to settle right in to the stability and peace of having a home again even as I look forward to being strong enough to be able to travel again.
I do entertain the idea that the book is still there, but will not go anywhere near stressing about it. It will only happen if it arises organically, (and it won’t surprise me a bit if it does – but maybe in a year or so).
Alison
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You are NOT a fraud. You are entirely authentic. I will continue to follow you and your adventures or lack there of. There is comfort in ordinary, and also more to have in common. 😉 I wish you adventure without anxiety. 🙂
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Oh thanks Dani ❤ ❤ ❤
I do agree there is great comfort in ordinary. There's a great relaxing, and feeling of being at home in myself. I'm okay with ordinary – there's no striving there, just a peaceful self-acceptance. I'm hopeful that the adventures (at home or while travelling) can continue from this space – and maybe that will be one of the great learnings from this entire adventure!
Alison
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I am sure they will. 🙂
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Oh allison, such a beautiful post. I have loved reading your blogs. And I’m so happy that you have been able to find an affordable apartment. Happy that you will have that security and can still afford to travel. Perfect. ❤ ❤ Kate Brunton
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Thank you so much Kate. We are still amazed at how we lucked into this apartment. The stars aligned for us. So now I think we will stay put to discover the joys of being settled for a while, and then be so very grateful when we start travelling again that we will have a home to come home to. As you say – perfect!
Alison
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Choosing to stay is as courageous as choosing to go. Both are honest decisions, neither right nor wrong. The brave thing is to be honest about what you need and assent to meeting it. Healing is vital.
5.5 years of homelessness is enough, I’d say.
As I writer about my own courageous journeys, I’ve found that the truest insights come after settling in for a while until the memories bubble up enough to be written down. Don’t give up on that book yet. I’ll bet there are many insights that didn’t make it to the blog because they were too raw or fresh, and being stationary a bit will give you space and solidness to explore them.
And now that I’ve devoted most of my comment to disagreeing with you 🙂 let me say congratulations on the next phase of your life. I share that bittersweet feeling of saying Yes to one thing, knowing it means No to something else that precious. Enjoy the in-between times, pilgrim! Now the real journey begins!
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Thanks Jen. In the same way that there was no authentic alternative to giving up our home and travelling it now feels as if there’s no authentic alternative to accepting this apartment that the universe has offered us and reestablishing a home. It crept up on us through the back door! We have both admitted that without my mobility and pain issues we’d have just kept on going. So now we acknowledge that the universe has other plans for us and is providing us with all we need. Apparently yes, 5.5 years homelessness is enough 🙂
I haven’t given up on the book. If it’s truly meant to be written it will arise of its own accord, and certainly at this point I have no resistance to it. I suspect that it’s just not time yet.
Yes, now the real journey begins – it will be interesting to see what bubbles up over the next few months/years. It has never occurred to me for a second that the writing and photography will stop.
Alison xoxox
PS I’m looking forward to your next post. I was just thinking a couple of days ago that I haven’t heard from you in a while.
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In a way, it wasn’t the places, but the feelings it evoked in you, that made me want to read the next blog. Thank you for all of them, and what’s to come… and here’s a book for you to read if you haven’t already.
“In 1790, while serving in the Piedmontese army, the French aristocrat Xavier de Maistre (1763-1852) was punished for dueling and placed under house arrest for forty-two days. The result was a discursive, mischievous memoir, his classic Voyage Around My Room and its sequel, Nocturnal Expedition Around My Room. Admired by Nietzsche and Machado de Assis, Ossian and Susan Sontag, this classic book proves that sitting on the living-room sofa can be as fascinating as crossing the Alps or paddling up the Amazon.”
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Thanks so much Keith. I knew from quite early on that I wanted to share much more of our experience than just where we went and what we saw. It’s the way travel moves and changes you that’s important. And yes, there will be more to come, even if it skews a bit differently.
Don has already begun to explore de Maistre’s first book and was quite amused. I look forward to delving into them. Thanks for recommending them.
I hope to find much fascination in my living room 🙂
Alison
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Alison,
See, no matter how you perceive your journey , you remain inspired and an inspiration to those you have sucked in your fold.
And, if I may add, the secret to all this that you may not have recognised is the mere fact that you write and speak from your heart.
Personally, I could never have imagined nor fathomed a time in my life when the world would descend to such nonsensical abyss. Rampant bigotry ,both religious and political, wars and mindless destruction of countries and artifacts, Hunger, poverty, innocent women and children marching to nowhere as refugees.
All of the above, whilst the world has never seen so much wealth. The irony, though, is that the vast wealth is being systematically distributed to the top 2% with an endless appetite for more.
So, what I mean to say is that your writing is akin to reading Desiderata with an open mind… You know , Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence….You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here…
and the end, With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world.Be careful. Strive to be happy.
Ya ! can’t avoid adding …strive to be happy in spite of Donald Turnip.
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Hi Mashoud. I’m sorry I’ve taken so long to reply. I was away from the internet for five days, and then I discovered your comment in the spam folder!
Thank you so much for your kind words and encouragement. I love your Desiderata analogy. It is exactly what we do. There are many worlds, and as best we can we strive to live in one that is open hearted and inclusive, and we see it reflected back to us over and over again. We are happy, despite the problems of the world, and even Trump. He may turn out to be a blessing in disguise by galvanising the masses (who thought they could just quietly live with the status quo) to action. All over the world there are grass roots movements growing more and more powerful. I don’t despair for the world. I think the tide will turn. It’s just getting a little intense as the energy shifts. Walk in beauty, and to focus on all that’s right with the world.
Alison
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Alison there is nothing ordinary about you! Your insights and observations are always extraordinary. You have a unique way of seeing things and you must write a book! Can i order a copy now?! I cannot tell you how much i admire you both, for taking the high road and being fine examples of the human race wherever you traveled. Mary Oliver is my favorite poet – you must be familiar with her poem WILD GEESE ? Relevant to your journey…
Love you guys! Jo
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Thanks so much Jo for all the lovely things you said about us. I have certainly not ruled out writing a book about our adventures, just that I’m not going to force it, or give myself a project that I must do. All I can do is make room to let it arise organically. My feeling at the moment is not yet.
Love to you too.
Alison xox
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Alison, I so truly understand that the seasons of our lives change. Wishing you healing and a return to vibrant health first and foremost. Then when you are ready, may you once again find your travel path waiting and calling for your next adventure. I will be here waiting to read what you chose to share. ~ Joanne
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Thanks so much Joanne. I’m working on the health thing. I do two hours of stretching, strengthening, and self-massage pretty much every morning. I’m determined to get strong again. And to rest rest rest. Then we’ll see what adventures await. Loving reading your current adventures!
Alison
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I am happy for you both! Bring on the peace and TLC!
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Thanks Cindy. It is a good change for us. And I agree – peace and TLC rule!
Alison
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You’ve shared so many wonderful adventures and photos, but there are a lot of travel blogs out there. I’ve actually enjoyed hearing your voice (and Don’s) and your perspective here and in exchanging comments. There are all kinds of journeys we take, whether traveling or just learning to be who we really are and being okay with it. I’m glad you are wherever you are, Alison, as long as your voice is still “out there”.
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Thanks so much Michelle. Yes, this will now simply be a different kind of journey, and just as valid. My voice will still be out there, I’m sure I’ll have plenty to write about, even if we’re not travelling so much.
Alison
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A beautiful post on change. Remember that endings are beginnings too. I’ll be doing something along the same lines with my coming up move to a small less expensive apartment, in order to travel a couple months at a time.
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Thanks Angeline. Yes it was apparently time for a change, even if it took us a while to get the message. And change for you too. It sounds like a good one. Travel is more important than space 🙂
Alison xox
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You and Don make ordinary lovely. I am grateful for that. Grateful for your honesty.
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Awww thanks Kelly. I’m grateful you’re still here, even if you’re not blogging these days.
Alison xox
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I completely understand about the stress of coming “home” to your city, but not having any place that’s yours. I did that for 2 years, and wasn’t looking to “settle down” this year either. But just like you, an opportunity came up to rent a room in a house that was too good to refuse.
For the first time in 3 years, my stuff is out of storage. Some of it is still in boxes, and some went to the donation pile. Even though I’m traveling for 5 months this year, I’ll have a place to come back to, and roommates to see when I do.
I don’t have a big blog following like you, so I can’t speak to feeling fraudulent. It is weird, though, to say “digital nomad” when people ask me what I do, and NOT be homeless.
People think I’m courageous for traveling on my own and living as a nomad for the last three years. But it’s not courageous; I wasn’t afraid of being a single female traveler, and I wasn’t afraid to house-sit for people or get around on my own.
I’m glad you’ve found the next stage of your life, and I very much hope you’ll continue to update this blog, even if you’re not on the road 24/7. You have inspired me, not so much with the travel (though Jordan is now *definitely* on my list!), but because I really like your writing and your style of being open and honest in an approachable way.
And hey, if you’re staying in Vancouver, Portland isn’t all that far away. 🙂
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I completely understand how great it is to get everything out of storage, and to have a home base again. That must feel good. I think travelling 5 months of the year qualifies as nomad! And thanks re your comments about the blog. I do intend to continue. I still have a lot to write about. Hey if you’re in Portland, Vancouver isn’t that far away 🙂
Alison
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Glad you are settled and healing. Can’t wait to see and talk to you next weekend and
see what comes up at the dance Love to you both.
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Thanks Kay. This being settled is starting to feel pretty good. Looking forward to seeing you too!
Love from us.
Alison
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I have so enjoyed your writing, and this post was no different. Your willingness to follow your heart, even to the point of being “ordinary” is very inspiring to me. May you find healing and adventure in your next chapter!
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Thank you so much for your kind words. In the end ordinary is so much more real and restful than any alternative. In the end we’re all ordinary, and we’re all special. That’s how it seems to me. The trying to be special was an ego trip that I’m glad to be able to see in its true light. I’m looking forward to more healing. And more adventure!
Alison
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You two inspire others strictly by being true to your own destinies, based on day-to-day experiences and choices. You have a talent for transporting us into the scene via your photos and stories; We have experienced places we’ve never been, thanks to you!
The Mary Oliver quote is lovely – oh, to reflect on one”s life, see how we’ve grown/evolved, and to anticipate – with a serene smile – to be that hummingbird!
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Thank you so much Lisa. It is really important to both Don and me to be as true to ourselves as we can, probably because we both, separately, lived for many many years trying to be what others wanted us to be, mostly without even knowing we were doing it. That never ends well 🙂
Isn’t Mary Oliver just wonderful?! She really gets to the heart of the matter is such a beautiful way.
Alison xox
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Every time I’m in Ubud (I’m there now) and walk into KAFE for a hot ginger tea or a bag of their vegan almond cookies, I think of you and Don and our first meeting there–Don and I talking like old friends and you, healing an injury from India (an ankle or knee, I think, from a fall?) and working on your blog. Ah, those were the good old days, eh?
It wasn’t your photos, it wasn’t your prose…though I loved them both, especially when your prose turned technicolor like your photos. It was the fact that you were out in the world and DOING it–writing a travel blog–that inspired me to finally get off my duff and do it, too. So even though I had thought about and “wanted” to write a blog for a while (years), you guys were the inspiration of sorts that made it happen…something like “when the student is ready” maybe.
Traveling is hard–some say the word comes from “travail”–and it’s hard on your body. And maybe harder on your mind. Though thrilling, sure. Like some others who commented above, I’m a little amazed that my hard-traveling days are probably coming to an end, also…or already have. Not because I can’t. But because I’ve maybe reached my quota of “doing it.” And it saddens me in a way. I’m back in Bali right now because I just couldn’t face the travail of the road while traveling to some place I hadn’t been before, and I didn’t have a Don to plan things. Nobody’s feeling sorry for me, I know. But I think I know how you’re feeling.
“Nobody likes change” (as Ross on Friends said). But isn’t that really all there is? I’m looking forward to tomorrow and seeing how you guys evolve….
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I remember well our time in Ubud. I do hope we get to cross paths again in real life. We can sit and gab for hours!
In Ubud our journey was only a few months old, and I’m really aware how very much both my writing and my photography have improved since then. I’m so grateful for that (on-going) journey. And even if what I was doing then was not so good I’m glad it inspired you, both for you and for me, because I now get to read what you write. Your writing inspires me to want to be a better writer. I learn things from the way you write.
I’m somewhat in the opposite position to you – I don’t think I’ve reached my quota of “doing it”, but I’m not actually capable at the moment. Hopefully I’ll regain my strength so we can set off again. But never again for more than 3 months max, and never again without a home to come back to.
And yes, change is all there is.
Enjoy Bali.
Alison
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I am inspired by your journey and your honesty. I hope your next chapter is one that is as fruitful as the last, Allison. Be well.
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Thank you so much Jane, for all you’ve said. I haven’t quite settled yet, and my focus is on regaining my health, but I can feel a time of creativity coming. I have no idea what it will look like, and that’s fine for now.
Alison
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Yup, sorry not buying it. Nothing at all ordinary about you. You are blessed and extraordinary. Even if your home appears to be attached to one spot on the planet I know your mind and your spirit will never be. (After seven years living in a van — ending seven years ago — I still can’t seem to convince anyone I’m ordinary either so don’t sweat it.)
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Lol Paige – big hugs to you. And I do know what your saying. At the same time I’m more comfortable inside myself when acknowledging the ordinariness of being me rather than trying to “be somebody” – which is very tiring. Ordinary is just fine.
I can’t believe it’s been fourteen years since you got your van! Wow! And yeah, in the sense that we’ve both led unconventional lives you’re certainly not ordinary either. Hope to see you soon.
Alison xo
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Yes, I can see how this new rootedness gives you freedom. It seems like ‘ordinary’ and yet it’s also letting you off a hook you might have hung yourself up on. I feel a bit like that about having just turned 50. Feels like a new freedom! And Yes! I am soooo looking forward to reconnecting! I love that you’ll be around long enough so that we can actually make that happen. Yaayyyy!
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Nourish and nurture time in the land of your roots. Sounds just right. 💛
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Thanks Val, and yes it certainly feels just right. Resting and nesting and healing are the most important things right now.
Alison
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Alison (and Don),
I have been following your blog and your travels for about two years. I’ve enjoyed reading about the exotic locales you’ve visited and the people you’ve met, and I’ve been awed by your spectacular photographs. But even more, I’ve relished your story-telling and the open and generous spirit that consistently shines through. Whether you never leave your cozy apartment in beautiful Vancouver, or you hop on the next plane to Kathmandu, I will continue to look forward to your posts and to savor them. I wish you health and happiness wherever you may be. Thanks for all the good reading!
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Thank you so much Donna for all your kind and encouraging words. I’m not sure about Kathmandu! But I’m pretty sure we’ll be hopping a plane again sometime in the future, and I still feel as if I have a lot of stories to tell even if we don’t. Health and happiness to you too.
Alison
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There are no rules and you have proven that. Just continue going with you instincts. I have enjoyed your journey and wish you the best. I am in my mid sixties and reading your blog has encouraged me to just “go for it.”
Thanks,
Ellen
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Thanks Ellen. I’m so pleased to hear you’re going to just go for it! As I’m sure you’re aware we only get one chance to really live life.
Alison
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Don’t downplay the courage it took to do what you did, even if you felt that was the only direction to go. Glad you are healing, and glad to have you back 🙂
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Thanks Fiona. It’s good to be back. The travelling took a courage that I only begin to understand in retrospect. The deciding to sell everything and become nomads didn’t really. Oh the process took courage – how to deal with mountains of stuff, and getting Don’s business closed, and that awful tax scare we had, but giving up our home just felt so perfectly right that we were never afraid. At least I don’t remember being afraid. And now as I write this I vaguely remember some writing I did at the time – something about being awake in the night wondering what on earth we were doing. Yikes! So I had to write all this now to get to see that you are right, and that I shouldn’t downplay the courage it took.
Alison
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Aside from your blog’s wonderful photos and well-written stories, I was attracted to your attitudes about travel and life. Change was constant. In my way of thinking, change is still a constant, even though it feels to you like you’ve backed a bit away from your dream. I’m looking forward to more of your posts. Change will continue, and I’m eager to read about it.
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Thank you so much for your encouraging words. Yes, it does feel as if we’ve backed away a bit from the original dream, and it is taking some adjusting, but I’m hopeful something as wonderful will arise in it’s place, and that it will just look different from what I thought it would. And yes of course, change will continue. Sometimes I think it’s my middle name!
Alison
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Change is inevitable and positive. Be healthy and happy.
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Thanks Sidran. You are right of course – change is inevitable, and obviously it was time for us to make a change even if I thought I wasn’t ready for it. Health and happiness to you too.
Alison
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Thank you.
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a touching introspection, dear ones!
wishing you gentle rest & relaxation
wherever the journey
outward or inward
may joyfully
find you 🙂
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Thank you David.
The journey continues,
but not in the way I thought it would.
Life surprised us again!
Much love
Alison
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This is amazing!
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Thanks Lexi. Life is amazing, always surprising us with its new directions.
Thanks for following!
Alison
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Hi Alison and Don,
I was glad to read that you let the nomad life go. Lifestyles come and go, just like everything else, and it’s good to know when one has run its course and a new one is beckoning and needs to be explored.
Don’t worry about being ordinary or extraordinary! Those are just notions, labels we tend to stick on ourselves and on others. We don’t need them. They mean nothing, really.
I wish you great enjoyment in your new settled life, and in eventually finding a balance between time spent at home and time spent on the road.
Best wishes,
Tanya
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Thanks Tanya. I’m slowly adjusting to this new phase, and writing this post is a part of that journey. I’m okay with ordinary. It feels peaceful and grounded and unpretentious.
Alison xox
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From extraordinary to ordinary to nobody……… what the Buddha taught, what Ramana Maharshi taught ……. it’s a wonderful journey! xox
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You are extraordinary to me. And stopping doesn’t take away the fact that you spent six years being nomads. That was amazing and courageous and inspiring. And I think the decision to change direction and do it differently also took great courageous. Sorry, you’re just courageous. I look forward to hearing about the next chapter.
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Thanks so much Leigh. Okay. I’ll own being courageous 🙂
And I’ll certainly own that I’ve led a very unconventional life.
The change is an adjustment. I think as I heal I’ll really start to revel in it.
Alison
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It was interesting to “hear” you talk of anxiety and stress — that’s why I know I couldn’t do what you’ve done. I’ve always had travel anxiety issues and it would send me over the edge to be constantly traveling. So I somehow imagined that you were calm about it all in a way I never could be. You are very good at writing posts about your travels without seeming stressed!
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I am usually fairly calm, and take things in stride. The thing is I hide stress from myself, especially low-grade stress that on some level I know is not really warranted. So it has been building up in the body for years instead of being felt.
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you’re still ‘that’ couple 🙂
yes, the story is fascinating but it’s not over – I follow you cos I like you 🙂
xx
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Aw thanks Annie. No, it’s not over, just different. I think we both still have a lot of living to do.
Alison xox
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I am a new follower – I love your candor and introspection and look forward to reading about this new chapter in your lives!!!
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Thank you so much Mary – for your encouraging words, and for following. I can promise that the candour and introspection will remain even if the travelling is being done at home – now that we have a home again!
Alison
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Alison, this post really resonates with Ben and me. When I first read your blog, you and Don were the first other older nomadic couple blogging about your lifestyle and travels. There is something enormously helpful when launching into the unknown, nomadic lifestyle, to read about someone else successfully managing the transition and “showing the way.” So hell yes, you inspired us! We were already nomadic but reading about your ups and downs while on the road was a reminder that we are not alone and that this is indeed do-able. But yes, not always easy
Travel itself.. the airports the planes, the lodging, the logistics. And now that I see how MANY countries you both have travelled to, I am not surprised that you are tired. It IS tiring and yes of course enormously rewarding. Nothing inspires change and growth as much as travel, as we both know.
Ben is probably like Don and prefers to have a home base. Of course for work it became essential for us. I am probably more like you in that I always want to explore the next border on the map. However, we both always respect the need to stop and do not feel the compunction whatsoever to see everything. In fact, we prefer to get to know a neighborhood and just live in it as locals. This factor alone I think has saved us from tiring out. And now that we are home based in Sri Lanka, it affords us the ease of travel in Asia much like we had when we lived in Nicaragua and travelled from there to a good part of Latin America.
It is perhaps the Buddhism which is all around us on the island of Sri Lanka which leads us to observe that all things are ephemeral and just as the nomadic phase of your life MAY be behind you, a new phase and a new adventure of course, by its very nature, begins. I fully agree with some earlier comments that pausing will likely allow many of the places, and memories to bubble up in a very new way.
We wish you a wonderful period of pausing, reflecting, relaxing and enjoying life in one place. No doubt you will bring the nomadic experience and spirit to your own city as you rediscover the many beauties of your home base.
It has been a pleasure reading you so far and we look forward to your honest, open and eloquent continued writings about this new phase of your lives.
xoxo hugs, Peta (and Ben)
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Oh thank you! I’m so glad we inspired you. We just launched ourselves, without even knowing at all if anyone else was doing it.
You’re so right – travel is very rewarding, and also very tiring. When I look back on what we’ve done I’m pretty amazed by it all. But I do like the way you guys do it where you settle in for a long time. You were in Nicaragua for a few years weren’t you?
I really miss the Buddhism of Southeast Asia. We would walk into temples and just flop down on the floor and meditate – the energy was so beautiful, and I haven’t found it the same anywhere else except perhaps Bali.
I strongly feel the need to get physically strong again, and to rest rest rest – then we’ll see what bubbles up.
Hugs to you two too.
Alison (and Don) xox
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There must be more than one definition of ordinary, Alison! I don’t think I’m alone in doubting that I could do what you have done. I hope you write that book. I hope that you find a peaceful and happy place within yourself and a body sound enough to let the travels roam free. And a paid travel writer! Wow! 🙂 🙂
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Chuckle. Thanks Jo. I will admit I’ve led a pretty unconventional life, but I feel ordinary inside, but in a good way. It feels more stable and grounded. It’s good to have a home again, and to rest. And yes, I’m pretty sure there will be a book forthcoming eventually. I’m not doing many articles, but being paid to write them is such wonderful validation for me.
Alison
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A few days ago I was thinking about how we label ourselves to others and ourselves. When you’re meeting someone in the US the first questions are, “And what do you DO?” or “Where do you live?” and those questions can get rather complicated when you travel full-time. Traveling full-time is an extraordinary adventure but how you define yourself can sometimes become self-limiting as your journey evolves. We had a hard time giving up the “nomad” label when we decided to set up a base in Portugal but, like you, the time was right for us. And speaking of labels, you may be uncomfortable with the “inspiring” word but finding your blog when we first started traveling and following your journey kept us energized and excited about our own travels. Unlike you Allison, I’m by no means spiritual, but finding your bliss or “happy place” or whatever you want to call it is all about listening to your body and heart and tweaking or trading one dream for another. Thanks so much for your honesty and for writing this beautiful post. Here’s to many more years of following your dreams wherever they lead! Anita
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I appreciate your insight about how we label ourselves, and how they can be self-limiting. Part of this new phase is about changing labels, or perhaps eventually letting go of them altogether. It was in thinking of the questions people ask about us, and the kinds of assumptions we all make about others until we know better, that led me to the ‘ordinary’ label. And I’m fine with it. Compared to how it’s been, our life will be more ordinary now.
I’m so happy to hear that my blogging about our journey helped keep you guys energised. I enjoy knowing I’ve been able to pay it forward.
Your definition of bliss, or “happy place” sounds pretty spiritual to me 🙂
My biggest problem I guess was that I didn’t listen to the body enough and now I’m paying for it.
May you too have many years of following your dreams. I hope we meet in Portugal one day.
Alison
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Congrats on your new apartment! Travelling for a few months at a time sounds wonderful to me, and hopefully now you won’t have the stress of figuring out what’s next. It’s so nice to have a comfortable and familiar home base to go back to. I hope you heal quickly. Best!
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Thank you so much. We are definitely enjoying our new apartment, and having much less stress.
Best to you
Alison
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Alison and Don Congratulations on your segue into the next phase. Let’s not give it a label. I am sure it will be as interesting and varied as the last phase. And hopefully a lot easy on the bones and body. Let’s face it living out of a suitcase can be a challenge for five weeks or months let alone five years!
You write well Alison and I am looking forward to continuing reading your next adventures in Canada and away, because however simple or fantastic it will be imbued with your sense of wonder, warmth and adventure with your beautiful photos to help tell the story. I can see a book in all those blog posts, no worries about that! You write well. Very well and you have so many interesting stories to tell.
No more of the negative labels, you are both wonderful and you are still those wondering nomads that have had those interesting experiences. You are not fraudulent. You don’t just unbecome someone and as for “Just ordinary” … there is nothing wrong with just ordinary. The majority of us have ordinary beautiful, fruitful lives.
Enjoy your nesting adventures before your next adventure with your suitcase …. Louise x
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Thanks Louise. Oh I so agree about labels and the way the mind always seems to create an unconscious back-story from the label that subtly takes over, and we do it so easily, then I catch myself stuck in a story that isn’t even true!
Thank you for your wonderful and encouraging compliments. I will certainly be continuing to write. I have at least eight posts in mind at the moment, and I’m actually a little excited to see what inspiration will arise after I’ve completed them. I’ve no doubt something will.
I think you mean fraudulent is a negative label – yes I suppose it is. It was one of the emotions I had to sort through with regard to the place of the blog in the world. And I had to write about it to get there. More and more I come to see that there will just be an organic unfolding of the theme of the blog whether we travel or not.
Owning ordinary felt more like a homecoming, a landing out of ego and back into a more grounded space, and yes, I agree, the majority of us have ordinary, fruitful, meaningful lives. I’m okay with ordinary.
Alison xox
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I don’t think anyone is ordinary. We are all extraordinary. Life is about change (progression if we’re lucky) and it takes courage to act on our realisations. I love reading your blog and look forward to reading many more. I’m sure you’ll still be you whether you’re travelling or staying put. I also love all the many supportive, enlightening comments here. This is a great community.
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Thank you so much Tracey. I do agree with you – we are all extraordinary, each in our own perfect way. And conversely we are all ordinary – even the brightest stars. It was good for me to reconnect without ordinariness – a homecoming from ego into groundedness. And yes, I love this community. I’m so grateful for this community, for the insights and the support and the encouragements.
Alison
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Hi Alison! I don’t remember what post of yours I read first. I also don’t remember if I was aware of your backstory right away or if I found out sometime later. I’m 100% sure, however, that it wasn’t that interesting and inspiring backstory that led me to follow your blog. Rather, I followed you because you travelled with such depth — wherever you were, you were THERE — and your writing reflects that. You write with such insight and thought that sometimes, no matter how much I love a post of yours, I can only click Like and not leave a comment because you’ve already said everything that needs to be said, and said it so well. Nomads are a dime a dozen these days but there’s no one else quite like Alison and Don — and that will be true whether you’re off on an adventure or happily ensconced at home.
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Oh thanks Gaia! What lovely things you’ve said. I really do try to convey what it was like to be there, wherever we were. I home I can continue to do this even if we’re not in such exotic locales.
Alison
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Dearest, I can’t imagine what a weird human being you are, Alison. You can be so thoughtful, you can go so much in depth with others and have no merci about you. It’s not what you went through that made you an exceptional person, an author, a writer, a photographer. It is “the way” you went through all this, the way you were able to communicate and share it with us that made all the difference. Your insights, your sensitivity, your honesty and truth, your ability to look down in your inner-self. The end of a nomadic life is not the end of an author, I’m afraid. And I’ve got even worst news than that, you have all it takes to write a book, I’d love to read you in a “unique body” vs all the delicious posts I see on your blog. And in any case I’ll be delighted to continue reading your posts and can ensure that your different travel style/ way of living life will not make a difference in the passion I read your writings.
Final blast and I’m done: I personally can’t see anything ordinary about you 😉
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Oh Roberta thank you. You are so wonderful, and you made me chuckle. Oh yes, I am definitely a weird person, but I do have mercy with myself, I really do, and at the same time I’m aware that I can be hard on myself.
Thank you for your encouragement, and for your compliments. And I do know that the end of being nomadic is not the end of being a writer. I know there is much more to come, and a book when it is ready to be birthed.
I’m okay with ordinary. Ordinary is a returning home from ego. It feels very good, a true and grounded place.
Much love to you
Alison
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To me you’re still an extraordinary kind of person ❤️
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Alison and Don, you two have been, and always will be, the definition of “cool” to me and James. We’ve followed along with you from the beginning, never ceasing to marvel at your keen insights, awesome talents, and incredible stamina! You could run circles around teenagers.
I look at your decision to have a home base not as the end of an era, but as the beginning of an era. We made the same decision a few years ago and it’s been fabulous – greatly enhancing the quality of our lives. We now celebrate the joys of of both setting out to travel … and coming home.
So, welcome home! We’re so glad you’re back. Life is an adventure – no matter where you are.
Hugs, Terri & James
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Oh wow – “cool” – that makes me smile. Thank you! And thank you for all your lovely compliments and encouragement. But I must say I can certainly no longer run circles around teenagers. I wish!
It is definitely the beginning of a new era and I’m starting to get excited about it, but first I had to find closure with the old era, and writing this post, and all the amazing support that has come in has helped me to do that.
I have no doubt that when we start travelling again I’ll be thrilled to have a home to come home to. Just the thought of it feels good. I remember your posts about your beautiful new home.
Hugs to you both.
Alison
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Don’t look back, look forward. That’s the only way to live happily or else you can get hung on regrets and what-ifs. It sounds like you have lived ‘your’ life for the past 6 years and are continuing to live ‘your’ life now albeit in a different way. The inspirational aspect of your story isn’t the travel or the nomadic lifestyle it’s that you had the courage to live your life exactly as you wanted. Long may it continue.
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Thank you so much Jonno. I think you’ve got it exactly – that the important thing is that we live our lives being true to ourselves, no matter what it looks like.
I haven’t been looking back so much so much as coming to terms with the change, and finding closure with the nomadic life. And at the moment I’m trying really hard to just be present. I’m focused on healing and rest. And then I’ll see what emerges.
Thanks for your support.
Alison
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Alison,
I’ve only been reading your blog for the last few months but, even in that short amount of time, it has been such compelling reading. Your insights into each new adventure have been engrossing and provide an impetus for us to see the world differently. My husband and I travel about half the year but always with the luxury, peace of mind and emotional safety net of knowing there’s our home to come back to at any time.
I hope that the next phase of your life will bring you comfort and peace as you take care of yourself and Don. If that means a book down the line or further travels abroad or ‘just’ relishing life in Vancouver, I, like so many, will be interested in your musings.
Annie B.
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Thank you so much Annie. I do think I am now going to enjoy very much what you have – “luxury, peace of mind and emotional safety net of knowing there’s our home to come back to at any time”. Just the thought of it feels good.
Thanks for your kind thoughts. I certainly don’t plan to stop writing. I’m very curious to see what I’ll be inspired by next!
Alison
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I know many people in their comments remind you how inspiring and extraordinary you two are — a sentiment I also share. But as you mentioned, everything comes down to what you think and feel, not what others think and feel about you. You are the one who went through all the struggles, and experienced the ups and downs. I remember a conversation from Spider-Man (the 2004 movie) between Peter Parker and Mary Jane Watson, “our minds play tricks on us.” There is a truth to this. But to me it’s part of being human. We think, we feel, we do things, we think again, then we feel more. Embracing this leads us to places we’ve never thought we would see, and do things we’ve never thought we would do. You and Don have shown us how rewarding our lives could be if we embrace uncertainties. Sharing our positive feelings about both of you is the least we can do. Big hugs for you and Don!
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Thanks for you understanding Bama. And yes! Our minds play tricks on us. All the time! In some ways I attribute my being somewhat wiser now than I was in my youth to my ability to catch it when the mind is playing tricks on me, or I’m believing its nonsense stories. Oh the humanity! You are so right that embracing the simple humanness of the mind’s tricks, the unbidden emotions, does lead us to new places of understanding and new experiences.
I imagine you know a thing or two yourself about embracing uncertainties – it leads for a much richer live doesn’t it?
Thanks for your support.
Hugs right back at you!
Alison
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Dearest Alison and Don – Everything takes courage, even settling down (a little bit.) What a wonderful next step, exploring your neighborhood and nesting, and having a place to come back to, whenever you want. The issue of ‘home’ is one I struggle with, but one of the things I admire about you is that you seem to be exploring that issue from all angles, and coming up with your own definition. What a way to live!!! Enjoy it all – Susan
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Thanks Susan. The definition of home became very fluid over the past five years, but now it feels very good to have a home of the more conventional type. I think a deep groundedness will seep into my bones as the time passes here. We both love the idea of travelling while having a home to come home to.
Alison
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Many years ago I was inspired by another couple that traveled the world. My journey began in 1993 and since 1998 every year has been another adventure. This trip I felt tired. Felt like enough was enough. Can I do this again? Returning to your homeland to realize you can’t afford to retire there is scary. So, the search for a place where I can lay down roots and live in community continues. In the meantime I work and save. I have friends in Vancouver that have no savings, no inheritance and are getting too old to keep working. They have built lives and community support in this city that they now have to leave. Interesting times. I can’t help but feel the housing bubble is about to burst so investing in property and a place to live there seems foolhardy. Thanks for your photos, you writing and sharing how you really feel. Thanks for being authentic.
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I do feel for you. Vancouver is an incredibly expensive city, and we really lucked out. You may be eligible too for this kind of housing if it interests you. Contact us when you get back and we’ll fill you in on the details. I know there are many here in our age group who simply can’t afford to live here anymore. If the housing we have here is not suitable I do hope so much that you find your place out there wherever it is. Your heart and music and talent with children would be a valuable addition to any community.
Alison xox
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Dear Alison, oh, how both joyfully and painfully familiar all your words in this post were!! It reminded me of all too many scrambles for clothes and other essentials in the storage unit. 🙂 We spent just one year like that, without a place to call ‘home’, traveling place to place, sleeping in the van, under the stars, dirty hotels, tiny homes, you name it. Like you say, it is all thrilling and fun, and such a learning experience, yet still, it is really helpful to have a home base you can return to. You have the best of the both worlds now!! I loved hearing your journeys, and more than anything, reading your words which pour so beautifully from your heart. Thank you for sharing your journey and your wisdom. ❤
Wishing you strength and health,
Kristina
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Thanks Kristina. So you know first hand what it is like to not have a home! It is always a bit of a scramble. It feels good to not have to do that anymore.
I don’t imagine I’ll stop writing or photography, so hopefully there’ll be many more posts to share.
Alison xo
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One secret is, if you had realised earlier you were’ ordinary’ you would not have done any of this.
It’s the same with writing. You come away thinking, That’s the best I’ve ever done! It’s only later you see in the big context it is maybe not so great.
Both the ego and the humility, but in their right places.
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Your opening sentence made me chuckle 🙂
I do so appreciate your understanding of how it was for me – the ego thinking it was/wanting to be special (and the movements that come from that), and then the humility, and relief!, that comes in realising I’m just ordinary, and that ordinary is what’s authentic.
I do think we’d have still done what we did, but it was the ego that thought it made us special lol. I will own that I’ve led an unconventional life.
Alison
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