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#WPLongform, acceptance, gratitude, home, How travel changes you, inner change, nomadic life, travel, Vancouver BC
From Alison: August 31st was our six-year anniversary of becoming homeless and nomadic. Five years and nine months later, on May 8th this year we reestablished a home in Vancouver. We are not done travelling, but we are done being homeless.
It has been an adjustment having a home again, and when we get talking about it with friends we miss travelling and want to get going again. On the other hand being settled externally is creeping into my bones and I find myself more and more settled internally. When I look back and remember how I was six years ago there seems to be a great chasm between who I was then and who I am now. Don says I’m less brittle. No doubt he’s right. What I find for myself is that I’m more grounded, more content, more grateful, and more openhearted.
These are the things I’ve noticed:
A cool fall day, getting into a car made warm by the sun, wearing a cozy fleece hat and jacket and luxuriating in the warmth as we drive to our forest walk around the golf course. I sink with bliss into the blanket of warmth.
The simple joy of washing my hands under warm flowing water, holding them there longer than necessary just to enjoy the sensation.
Driving across town and thinking of where to park when I get to my destination, and suddenly without warning, and for no reason, being filled with love.
Walking in the forest, up and down hills, hiking poles shifting back and forth in a steady rhythm, and pretending I’m on a much longer hike, or even walking the Camino, the forest surrounding me with a soft green embrace. Filled with joy and hope.
During dinner with friends watching the tree in the front garden through the window. On the second floor I’m at the same height as the tree. The leaves are just starting to turn yellow, and are made more yellow in the darkness by the golden streetlights. Glowing. Rain is falling, the first rains of the fall and it makes the glowing tree sparkle like Christmas lights. Such beauty right out my window.
Most mornings after a cup of tea I begin exercising. It’s all about core strength. And stretching. And balancing. Taking care of the body. This daily routine has helped keep the pain at a minimum. Most days I sit on the couch and write, read, watch TV, and edit photos. Most afternoons I walk in the forest for forty minutes to an hour inhaling it’s tall strong presence and soft green embrace. Most days I am grateful, over and over, for simple things, things most of us in the developed world take for granted: always enough to eat, ice cream with a good movie, a safe comfortable home, good friends, hot running water, being able to afford a physiotherapist, a reliable car, the luxury of a hot shower. I am deeply content in a way I never was before. Although I would like to travel more, and it’s likely we will, there’s no longer any yearning for something more than simply what is. Life is gentle, kind, sweet, easy.
I seem to have let go of a lot of ideas about how I should be, how life should be. There’s barely any striving anymore and I’m content with that (it’s the reason blog posts come slower these days). I seem to have let go of striving to be someone. It’s what we do in our twenties, thirties, forties, and fifties. There’s always more to achieve. Even into my sixties I was still chasing something. Now that seems to have largely fallen away. It is a natural progression as we age I think. What was important before is not so important now. Now the most important things seem to be gratitude, presence, love, and an abiding focus on all the good in this world. I have no complaints.
From Don: I feel content and settled, happy to be staying in one place for an extended period of time, happy to be back in Vancouver, my hometown.
The nomadic life was fun and exciting most of the time, but also wearing on me: always having to find the next place to stay, always sleeping in other people’s beds with other people’s sheets and pillows, using their furniture, and kitchen utensils, and their always dull knives. It’s lovely to know where everything is kept, to have our own dishes, cutlery, and beds once again. I seldom miss travelling, except when I read about the beauty of Morocco, or the excitement of seeing the Big Five on an African safari, and I feel settled and content much of the time now. We’ll probably start travelling again next year, but for shorter trips than we used to take: two months at a time instead of four to six months at a time.
Through travelling I discovered that doing scary things has made me the most alive I’ve ever felt: whether it was walking through potentially crocodile-infested waters in northern Australia, taking a ride in an open boat under a huge waterfall in Argentina, or parasailing over the ocean off Playa del Carmen, Mexico, I always felt energized after the event. There’s nothing like feeling scared to death to feel more alive!
I was struck in my travels by how much the similarities in people’s basic nature all over the world far outweigh any differences in language, culture, or outward appearance. People-watching in many different countries revealed to me a basic love of family and of community, a basic humanity. I asked Google to find out how much of my DNA I share with other human beings: 99.9% according to a recent study. Despite obvious differences we are way, way more alike than we are different. This was proved to us over and over again by the kindness we were shown by complete strangers wherever we went. There’s a basic humanity that supersedes any differences in race or religion. These experiences have made me less judgmental than I used to be about appearances, and kinder towards otherness.
Travelling for me, much like being married, has been abrasive in a good way: it has helped to grind off the rougher edges of my personality, and has led to a greater acceptance of otherness both in myself and in others. I feel like I’ve been pummeled by a good masseuse: it was initially painful, but it has left me softer and more flexible.
I’m less scared of change than I used to be. I complain a lot less. I’m far less attached to things than I used to be, and far more grateful for whatever I receive on a daily basis. Having stayed in many small poorly furnished rooms and apartments in our travels, having a small apartment now that is furnished with a few beautiful things of our own choosing feels like a luxurious blessing. We have seen people all over the world with very little and yet they are still happy. We travelled with very little, living out of carry-on size suitcases and yet were still happy. Both the example of others and our own experience has proven to us that happiness is not dependent on things.
I turn 75 in a couple of weeks. I have my own rocking chair now, but I’m also exercising for close to an hour every morning to maintain and improve my strength and flexibility. Many of our neighbours are elderly, and I see them out in their wheelchairs, or pushing their walkers, or stooped over as they walk slowly and painfully along. I don’t plan to become like that, so I’m doing what I can to stay as fit as possible for as long as possible.
Every night before I go to sleep I give thanks for all the blessings I’ve received during that day and for the ongoing blessing of a comfortable home, food on the table, and a loving wife.
From Alison: We’re both softer than we were, we’re both more openhearted than we were, and more content, and much more grateful for all the small things. We dance with and around each other with a smooth easy flowing, and we settle into having a home again feeling blessed and supported.
All photos were taken close to home. We live in a natural paradise. There’s a reason they call Vancouver Lotusland.
Next post: Trinidad, Cuba – the beauty and the beast
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.
what a lovely journey for both of you in so many ways, and happy you can appreciate the roots and small things of home –
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Thanks so much Beth. It’s been an amazing journey, both inner and outer. We feel very blessed.
Alison
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It fills my heart with delight to read how both of you are settling in. In both your paragraphs the love of the lessons your leaned on the road, speaks volume. Happiness is close at hand in small everyday joys. Thank you both for sharing those valuable insights ❤
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Thank you so much Anyes. We learned so much on this journey, about the world and about ourselves. It was truly invaluable. So now we rest a while and until we see what the next chapter brings. I think we really have learned that happiness is a choice.
Alison ❤
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A beautiful post in so many ways. You are both so honest and it is refreshing. I just returned from traveling back to Vancouver and Alberta for a month and I too was impressed by the beauty that I took for granted when I lived in those two amazing provinces. As much as traveling is fun and educational, having a place to call home is always good. For me, that is in Span right now but I guess my heart will always be in western Canada. Who knows what the future will hold but like you I am grateful for the life I have.
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Thank you so much Darlene. Western Canada is so beautiful, and such a special place. We are lucky to live here. I was going to visit you in Vancouver. I even had it on my calendar, but the time you were at Chapters was the only time I could get an appointment with my osteopath and it had to take priority 😦
Perhaps one day we’ll meet in Spain. We talk of visiting Portugal and Morocco so Spain is an obvious addition.
Alison
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Dear Louise,
So glad for both you and Don to find contentment and balance at this stage of your life’s journey and the remarkable way you voice it.
Often, in a conversation with people, I mention my next idiotic journey and inevitably the response is one of caution and alarm. You will get killed or kidnapped, etc. etc.
Funnily, my go to counter is , ” Have you followed Louise and Don on ADVENTURES in Wonderland ? If not, you better do it if you want to know the power of a simple “Hello” in any corner of this wonderland”.
I so agree with you for the simple pleasures everywhere provided you have the eyes open and a spirit without malice or judgement. Personally, with all I am blessed with, a hammock and two coconut trees is all the medicine I long for. Keeps one sane.
My best wishes and please let us know when you come East. We are an hour from Montreal with lots of room for friends.
mashoud
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Hi Mashoud,
Thank you so much for your kind thoughts, and what a compliment that you use us as examples!
I think we can find our hammock and coconut trees in any place and in infinite ways, don’t you agree?
Thank you for your kind invitation.
Alison
PS: you can call me Alison. Louise is my middle name 🙂
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Lovely post & thank you for sharing. We are almost 2.5 years on the road now & i can identify with much of what you reflect on with your travelling life & what i sometimes yearn for from your settled present. Best wishes for good health. Your photos are awesome! Dave
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Thanks so much Dave. Travelling is so transformative, and choosing to be nomadic for an extended period of time even more so – as you’re obviously discovering. And thanks re the photos – Vancouver is full of so much beauty.
Alison
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Lovely images and lovely reflections.
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Thanks so much Christine.
Alison
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so beautifully your inner journey’s
are expressed, outwardly
even when there’s no place
else to go,
as you’re truly home! 🙂
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Thank you David.
Yes we are home
and it’s deeply comforting
yet home more than any place
is with each other
We are lucky to have both.
Alison
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Amazing journey, photos, and amazing couple… God bless both of you.
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Thank you so much Dina. We feel very lucky and very blessed.
Alison
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What a lovely post on traveling and staying put in one place. What a rich experience for you both.
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Thanks so much Arlene. It feels lovely now to have the stability of a home again after so many years on the road.
Alison
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So glad you are finding new kinds of contentment in being settled for now.
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Thanks Peggy. Still miss travelling though :), but for now home is good!
Alison
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Gorgeousness. So beautifully expressed and felt! Welcome home!
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Thanks Cindy. We are feeling very blessed to have the stability of a home and the inner contentment that brings.
Alison
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Another chapter!! Maybe not the one you anticipated, but still worthwhile and fulfilling. I could feel your grieve when you first talked about the (temporary) end of the travelling, but you have shown just how adaptable and resilient you are. Here we are, just a few months later, and you are explaining how you managed to turn it all around to find inner peace and contentment.
As a fellow traveller, I also realise that the more I experience of the world, the more I understand how similar we all are and how little we really need to be happy…
Lieve
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Yes, another chapter, and one that is becoming more comfortable. Acceptance is always the key of course, and no doubt with time having a home again will become even more fulfilling. I still want to travel, and still look forward to when we can again, but meanwhile things are pretty sweet right here. I’m really learning just how much happiness is a choice.
Alison
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I’m so happy for you that you’ve settled in so well and found such growth and change in yourselves! While I love hearing about your travels, the way you look inward and share your growth and understanding is what I appreciate most. And you do it just as well from “home” as on the road.
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Thank you so much Leigh. We do feel like we’ve settled in. And yes, we’re both so different than we were 6 years ago. It was an amazing adventure, but now the adventure continues, just in a different way. For sure we’ll continue to share the inner journey.
Alison
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You both have expressed some very good lessons for us all, regardless of what stage in life’s journey we are on. Your thoughts on gratitude are especially meaningful and strike a chord. Your appreciation for each, taking care of your bodies, not striving for more and yes to Don on having a sharp knife for cooking are all simple things worth savoring. All the best to you both.
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Thank you so much. We’ve really learned the power of gratitude, how important it is to give thanks for what is. It’s so liberating. And yes, an appreciation of the little things, the ordinary things, allows us to feel joy in the moment. It seems to me the more grateful we are and the more accepting we are then the more blessed we are.
All the best to you two too on your nomadic journey into Portugal. Now doubt you are appreciating the same blessings.
Alison
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So happy to read this post which affirms that things work out the way they are supposed to and that you did make the right decision. Life is, as you so eloquently put it, about finding joy in the small things. Your nomadic adventures have led you to appreciate home and stillness in a way that is unlikely without that journey. I so agree that travel gives us a greater appreciation of so much.
I always say, with love, and health…We can have happiness. Of course a comfy bed and hot water are definitely additional “plus” factors!!
Love the photos. What a great place to have come home to.
Peta
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Thanks Peta. Yes things do tend to work out the way they’re supposed to, and I do agree that our nomadic journey changed us in ways that would probably not have happened had we stayed at home. Home and stillness feel pretty good right now. And yay for a comfy bed and hot water. And sharp knives!
Vancouver is a very special city. Even with all our travels we could not imagine living anywhere else.
Alison
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Hi, Alison and Don – This is such a beautiful post. It resonates with me in so many different ways. A couple of sentiments that deeply struck me:
• Observing more similarities than differences in people from around the globe–a basic humanity.
• A natural progression in what’s important to us as we age.
• Witnessing people with so little be truly happy. Happiness is not dependent on things.
I look forward to reading more about your insights from your new home base in Vancouver.
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Thank you so much Donna. It is always good to hear that a post resonates. The three things you mentioned – I suppose we “knew” them before we set out on this journey, but now it seems we really know them – that people are all essentially the same, that what’s important to us changes as we get older, and that happiness is not dependent on things. I’ve understood for years that happiness is a choice. Now I really know it. Hopefully there will be more insights to come 🙂
Alison
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Hello neighbours! How extraordinary that you have settled down very near to where I live now, on the banks of the Fraser. I have followed your journeys over time and am so happy to hear how positive you feel about his new chapter in your life. I am sure you knew that you would arrive at this phase some day and now that you have, it’s wonderful to hear how you embrace this change. I hope our paths will cross some day soon.
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We are only a five minute drive from the river, near the end of Kerr St, and right across from Champlain Mall. How amazing that we ended up so close, with you and us having been through so many changes since we last met.
I suppose I did know that this phase would come, but it came quicker than expected so it took a bit of an adjustment. Yet here we are, happily settled. I’d love to get together for coffee, but it will have to wait for a while. I’m still not very mobile, but have found a solution. It’s just a matter of time, and I’ll post about it eventually.
Thanks for your kind thoughts.
Alison
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So happy for you that you can find such contentment – wherever you are. I can identify with so many of the changes that you say travelling has wrought in you, but of course these changes can happen to anyone, anywhere – if a person wills it, and is open to it. You are, and I look forward to reading more of your adventures whatever, wherever, they may be.
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Thanks Tracey. I do agree that the changes can come without travel, but travel kind of propels you into it, even if a person may not be open to it, though I’ve seen a few who just get more boorish and rigid 😦
I must admit I’ve always been open to inner change, and outer change too. I look back on the travelling I did in my twenties and thirties as some of the best years of my life.
Alison
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You certainly haven’t left beauty behind! That last shot of the Fraser River – gorgeous.
It’s interesting to hear you say that there’s a schism between your pre-travel self and your newly-settled self. I notice that when I’m home in Portland over the winter, and especially now that I have a permanent place, that I’m grateful for things that most people take for granted.
Things like walking to the same grocery store every time, or being able to sign up for a class and actually take it from start to finish. Even knowing the public transit system as more than a tourist is a delight. And of course, reconnecting with friends and singing are delightful.
By the way, I also have my eye on the Camino. I’d like to do it all at once, but don’t think I can take 2 months of work. I’m on the lookout for an opportunity, though.
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I have 2 hometowns – Canberra in Australia, and Vancouver. Both cities offer endless opportunities to be in nature, and wildlife in its natural environment, without having to drive more than 5 minutes (or walk 20) and it’s the reason I love both cities. I don’t think I’d do well leaving nature behind. I’m happy to live in a city but I need the beauty of nature to be easily accessible. I see racoons in Vancouver and kangaroos in Canberra 🙂
I think travel, and discovering new cultures, and living out of a suitcase all force us to reassess everything, even when we’re not aware of doing it. And then becoming aware of how you’ve changed when you go back home. I think your delight with knowing the public transit as a local is the same reason I was filled with love thinking about a place to park – the warmth of what’s familiar and safe.
Ah yes the Camino – it is a dream, that may or may not come to fruition. We’ll see . . . .
Alison
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I spent three years as a nomadic worker, moving from one installation to another, although I always kept a settled base back in the UK. Sometimes it’s nice to settle and appreciate what you can get from being “at home”.
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I do agree Mike, that the settling can be good, and no doubt you discovered, as we did, a greater appreciation of home.
Alison
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Both of you sound so content that it warms my heart. I am happy for you! Contentment and growth don’t have to be mutually exclusive, I think; growing roots is as much of a movement (and accomplishment) as growing branches. xx
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Thanks Gaya. We are content. And I think now, having been rootless for years, I really understand the accomplishment of growing roots.
Alison
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Such an honest, heartwarming post, Alison! A few days ago I stumbled upon an article about what the most important thing in life is for most people is, which is happiness. Sometimes the path to finding true happiness can be a long one. It can be very exhausting and challenging, but in the end it’s rewarding. Glad to know that this phase of your life brings more happiness to you both, and the best thing is you’re not giving up on traveling and exploring the world!
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Thanks Bama. I must agree that the path to true happiness is a long one, at least it has been for me 🙂
And for sure we’re not done travelling yet!
Alison
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What a beautiful post. You are both so articulate. Life hands us treasures, but it is up to us to accept them – sounds like you have received them all.
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Thank you so much V.J. It did take me years to accept the treasures life offers. Now we’re both getting pretty good at it 🙂
Alison
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Wonderful post, Alison and Don. Travel is broadening in so many ways, but learning to live simply has to be one of its biggest lessons. And learning to appreciate what you have. In the end, it doesn’t take much. Certainly having a loving companion makes a huge difference. –Curt
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Thanks Curt. Learning to appreciate what I have has been a big one for me, but now I do and feel so lucky that I finally I figured it out beyond theory 🙂
I’ve always lived pretty simply, but it’s even easier now. We really don’t need much and stuff won’t make us happy, though I must admit I was pretty chuffed when we got our 50 inch TV 🙂
And yes, loving companion is the best thing of all!
Alison
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Peggy is pretty happy with her 50-plus inch screen as well. Laughing. I tend to accumulate books. 🙂 Far more than I need, Alison. –Curt
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I’m so happy for you both, Alison and Don, that you are right where you need to be. It’s no small pleasure to have a kitchen with everything you need, a comfortable chair to relax in, and a good book to read. It’s no small pleasure to feel your body flex and the pain ebb, take a walk in a beautiful setting and visit with friends. And it’s no small pleasure to have a place you can call home with things you treasure, furniture that you’ve arranged in a way that pleases you and colors that soothe you. Isn’t it funny how the many small things that add up to a feeling of happiness and contentment really are the big things in life? Anita
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Thanks so much Anita. The whole situation feels very soothing now, and very right. We’re relaxing into the stability of it all. Your last sentence says it all, and we feel very blessed.
Alison
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Reblogged this on World4Justice : NOW! Lobby Forum..
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Thanks for the reblog Dave.
Alison
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Looking at these photos you surely do have reason to be grateful, but that’s what comes through most strongly. Your sense of peace, harmony and contentment. These are great accomplishments in themself. 🙂 🙂
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Thanks Jo. I really do feel more content and peaceful. I’m still surprised by it. Continuous travel kind of pushes in your face what’s important and what’s not. These same lessons can, and frequently are, learned without travel, but I think there’s a heightening of experience when everything is constantly new, and it’s kind of shaky ground underfoot.
Alison
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This is beautiful. I read this a couple of times and it really hits close to home. I haven’t done nearly as much travelling but I had experienced some similar things like enjoying the feeling of running water with my hands and seeing the similarities of human kind through my travels. Happy to be from Vancouver as well!
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Thank you so much Sharon. It sounds as though you’ve had similar experiences that have led you to recognise the joy of simple things. Perhaps we’ll meet one day!
Alison
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It makes me happy to know that you are content! Transitions are so hard (for me, at least), and you two have eased very nicely into your new reality. I know you will be back out in the wide world, and I can’t wait to read about that, but your settled life is just as interesting. I laughed out loud at Don’s comment about being tired of dull knives! 🙂
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Thanks Lexie. I’m still surprised by how relaxed and content I am, and how easily we moved into this new phase – with sharp knives 🙂
Also looking forward to being out in the world again – with a home to come home to.
Alison
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Beautiful and important words. Acceptance and gratitude flows through this post like water. Such a great reflective piece of writing, it made me feel calmer just reading it.
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Thank you Ilona. We have been so very blessed. Don was ready for this new phase. It came sooner for me than expected so it took me a while to ease into it. It seems to me that the biggest difference in both of us is greater acceptance and gratitude. I’m glad some of that could transfer to you 🙂
Alison
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Lovely post. I think everyone who commented basically said what I would like to, so I’ll just echo their sentiments! Love your photos, great colours and clarity. Oh, and I think the combo of a comfortable home to come back to interspersed with a couple of months of travel sounds like a perfect balance!
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Thanks Amanda. There’s so much beauty in Vancouver. We haven’t been getting out that much, but it’s always easy to find a natural setting and wildlife close by. It nourishes my soul, and it’s one of many things I love about Vancouver. Looking forward to travelling and having a home to come back to – next year probably
Alison
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It is so hard for people to appreciate the little joys when there are so many other major things that can take away those little joys. Some people are so fortunate to have those little joys yet don’t realise it. Thats how the universe created all of maybe? Finding a balance is key and so glad you guys have found it.
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Thanks Shilpa. I think creating a balance is so important, and I also think many people get caught up life’s problems, and yeah, life can send some real doozies, so they lose sight of the joy of small things. We feel very blessed to have this life, where there is enough peace that we can still focus on what’s important.
Alison
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Beautiful Alison. Loved this post. As much as I love to travel I also love being grounded and having a home. I have never had a nomadic life and now is not the time with kids. I wonder if I’d ever dream of doing this down the road? I envision myself going in spurts with my husband on 1-3 month adventures yet always coming back. Only time will tell!
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Thanks Nicole. I must say being nomadic for 5.5 years, with no home base at all, is certainly an unusual choice, but we don’t regret it for a second. It has been so enlivening and we’ve learned so much. Maybe when the kids have grown you’ll decide to travel for a while, but your idea of 1-3 months sounds pretty good too.
Alison
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Alison and Don – Congratulations on a wonderful step on a long and eventful journey. Small walks close to home and settling into a homey place are adventures all by themselves. I’m so glad you’ve found a place. Susan
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Thanks Susan. We are enjoying the adventures of small walks close to home. It seems enough for now, and we feel very blessed.
Alison
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Bliss to both of you.
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Thanks Pam. It feels pretty good right now 🙂
Alison
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I’m so glad to hear that you are both content, and that you Alison are better managing the pain. There is nothing like taking a walk in our beautiful forests to restore body and mind. Great photos! I particularly like the Fraser at sunset. Best to you both, Caroline
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Thanks Caroline. I am better managing the pain, and I’ve found a solution which I’ll write about eventually. I expect to be back to normal within 6-9 months. Our beautiful forests are so healing – even being in pain, a daily walk has helped immensely, and being so close to the river is a joy.
Alison
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I can imagine how nice it must be to have a home again after 6+ years on the road. Having a home-ish in Bangkok the last two years had been nice, and have a routine of exercise and familiar places to eat and shop is a great pleasure after years on the road.
You can live in a place like Vancouver and still have endless things to explore in the city and nearby mountains and islands.
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It does feel good to have the stability of having a home again, and necessary now. I may have thought for a while that I was not ready for it, but it feels right now. And yes, Vancouver and surrounds is a pretty amazing backyard for exploring.
Alison
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Your reflections from “home” are every bit as appealing to me as your reflections from the road. I love those moments when love and gratitude simply arise, and we are calm in our bodies and our minds. I’m grateful to be here reading words from you two again.
I liked your observation about the natural progression of our awareness as we age. I just finished reading the novel Olive Kitteridge and it was sad in a number of ways. I’ve had to think about that some and realize somehow the characters seemed absent of the golden dewdrops out the window–the book seemed a rich exploration of the parts of life that can haunt us, rather than the parts that sustain us. Though both are there I think. It’s a choice, isn’t it? The distance between the two is so slender.
With just a breath sometimes we pass through the veil…
Peace
Michael
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Thank you Michael, as always, for your wise words. I have to confess that I had to read a review of Olive Kitteridge to get a sense of what you were referring to. As you say, there is always a choice to be made between looking back with sorrow and regret at our past mistakes, and feeling grateful for the choices we made and continue to make. I can flip from one to the other in an instant, but continue to do my best to choose the path of gratitude for what I receive.
I also liked your line ‘With just a breath sometimes we pass through the veil. . .’ I’m reminded of the usually brief moments during a meditation or when out in nature when a sense of the ineffable arises unbidden.
with gratitude,
Don
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It’s always great to savor your words, admire your images, and feel as if we’re in the same room together via your lovely style of blogging. Yes, there are times when we embrace the comforts of a home base, just like any rhythm or cycle in life.
Over the past six or so months, I discovered a second food that was contributing to my joint pain, especially in my hands.. peanuts! – no other sign of ‘allergy’ but apparently my body sees some part of the peanut as foreign… long ago it was potatoes, and now peanuts.. both easy to dodge, and having pain free hands is a true gift. i also use fresh turmeric and ginger, brewed in a large pot with guayusa each day and then sipped at room temp throughout the day. Perhaps that’s contributing to the reversal of pain…. Anyway, it sounds as if you are both doing really well, and you awaken with a smile in your hearts each day.
We’re blessed to know you!
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Thank you so much Lisa. It seems this was a time of the turning of the wheel for us back to the place of home, and it now feels right. There are times in life when the comforts of home are what’s most needed.
I’m so glad you’ve discovered what not to eat – having joint pain in your hands must have been painful on so many levels for you. I can’t even imagine. How wonderful that you figured out the cure.
Blessings, Alison
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You are both an inspiration to travelers ~ accepting the lifestyle that is not easy and finding such beauty around the world to call home. And then, finding the same beauty on the return home, and all the great things life brings. Wishing you all well.
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Thank you so much Dalo. We feel very blessed – to have had the travels we did, and now to have found home again in beautiful Vancouver.
Alison
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Home is where the heart is. Welcome home.
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Thank you so much Eileen. Really home for me and Don is with each other, but beyond that the heart is in Vancouver, in part because of it’s natural beauty, and in part because all our long time friends are here, our community is here.
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It’s a shame that as adults, we often lose sight of the many small joys we experience as children: reading a book or lying in bed as rain patters on the window, a mug of hot chocolate on a cold day, the relaxed state of just being. Alison and Don, you both bring such wisdom and grace to the travel blogging world and I’m glad you took the time to document this life-changing journey that started in 2011. And what a joy to settle down in a place as beautiful as Vancouver – I have fond childhood memories of looking out the window as the plane landed after the 12-hour flight from Hong Kong, and seeing the mountains and then the downtown skyscrapers rising from what looked like a forest.
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Thanks so much for your kind words James. It’s been a huge process documenting the journey, but I’m really glad we did it too. As for Vancouver – what a huge blessing to be able to live here in this beautiful place. I don’t feel done with travel, but I imagine it will be a great pleasure to travel while having a home to come home to.
Alison
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Your post shows appreciation and esteem! What a great journey, I’m happy for you!
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Thank you so much Celia!. I’m glad you enjoyed the post. It has been an amazing journey!
Alison
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I’ve so enjoyed the exquisite beauty your photos portray, and the sense of serenity. I dwell on your words too on settling into the ‘love of small things’ and in the recognition of gratitude. Your thoughts inspire.
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Thank you so much Liz. It’s easy to find places of beauty and serenity in Vancouver – it’s one of the reasons we love it here so much. Gratitude is probably the biggest thing that has changed for us after the years of travel. Of course we thought about it before, and understood that we’re very lucky, but now it seems to have seeped into our psyches as a way to live. I think it’s this that has led to greater noticing and love of small things.
Alison
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I appreciate your authenticity Alison and your landscapes are beautiful…and yes happiness is a choice and the more we have the more joy we can share…thank you for your posts and wisdom 🤓☺️☀️ compose a beautiful day ❤️
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Thanks so much Hedy. It’s taken me a long time but I do think I get it now that happiness is a choice, so these days I never stay in a funk for very long. What a blessing! A beautiful day to you too. ❤
Alison
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the more happiness we create the more joy we can share….i do believe this… ❤
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Me too ❤
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Love this post. It is really very inspirational. And the pictures are amazing as well.
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Thanks so much. I’m glad you enjoyed it.
Alison
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I read your article with such interest and my heart tugged many times by your honesty and descriptions of how the years have changed you. Don in particular your paragraph comparing travel and marriage and how they had left you softer resonated with me. Perhaps it is since Dave and I have been together for multiple decades and now we are traveling more that I can relate to much of what you have shared. Thank you for such an open and honest review.
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Thanks so much Sue. I’m not surprised to hear you can relate to our experience.
Our marriage definitely became stronger through travel. When you’re together 24/7 it’s sink or swim eh? We’re lucky we figured out how to swim 🙂 It has been, and continues to be an amazing journey. I’m looking forward to more travel from this whole new space.
Alison
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Hi Sue,
Many thanks for your kind reflections on this post. I’m very grateful for the softening that has come from the years and the miles that Alison and I have travelled together.
Best regards,
Don
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Excellent.
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Thanks Rabirius
Alison
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I love your reflective posts…so open, so honest, soul-searching.
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Thank you so much LuAnn. It felt good to record a bit of how we’ve been feeling as we settle into having a home again. I’m glad you enjoyed it.
Alison
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We just returned from our travels and I have to admit to feeling truly blissful when curling up in my own bed at night. We slept in a small cabin all summer, without the ability to cook in our own kitchen. We loved the experience but there is nothing like enjoying a nice cup of tea in the quiet of your own home.
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Beautiful. Your images complement your sense of well being. Stay happy.
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Thanks Madhu. Vancouver’s a lovely city, and it’s nice to be settled again.
Alison
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