The other day, I grumbled on my Facebook page (where I have become a chronicling fiend for my travels) about how I went to a hotel restaurant called “The American Grill” when I heard they had a “buffet breakfast,” but was flummoxed that there were no pancakes, bacon, waffles, or hash browns –all stuff we consider critical back home. Instead, baked cheese, grilled vegetables, steamed mushrooms, and other oddities I would never see at a breakfast buffet.
Someone took issue with how I was travelling and if I didn’t want what was on offer, I should stay home.
It really irked me, because if I’m going to travel for five years and there’s some insane expectation that I should like all of it, then I might as well just hang up my writing gig now and not share any of it, because you’re asking the impossible. Undoubtedly, there will be a hell of a lot of road bumps along the way. And sometimes, all we want is a little touch of home to help us think we’re not so far-flung from the life we’ve left behind.
In fact, there already have been lots of struggles.
In less than 3 weeks of being abroad:
- I have been sick for 15 days
- I had my coat stolen in the Iceland airport and had to survive my first 5 days without any, because the “overnight delivery” coat I ordered in London came after I left 3 days later (and has cost $70 to send here)
- I had the only non-functioning TV on my intercontinental flight, my paid WiFi didn’t work until the last 3 hours, AND I couldn’t sleep
- The “deal” a London shopkeeper gave me on a SIM card turned out to be because he scammed me with a non-functioning card (but I got by with no-data-needed Ulmon City Maps2Go app and GPS — take that, unscrupulous vendor!)
- My first lodgings had crap beds that messed up my back and cleanliness was an issue too
- It rained for my first 10 days in Zagreb, where it traditionally never rains more than 2 days
- I lost my brand-new Fitbit, which was malfunctioning anyhow
- I got to my new AirBNB after spending a whole day talking myself out of my first lodgings (and finding the new one) and had a nice shower but then immediately had the hot water heater fail, leaving no hot water and no heat for a day
- I’ve slept an average of 5 hours a night for every single night I’ve been on this continent and I’m near to losing my mind with fatigue
And there have been other fun little things too. So, yes, I wanted a specific breakfast one day and went out to have a weird interpretation of what an American breakfast was (totally not even in the ballpark) and it was the breaking point and I complained. Comfort food, man, it heals a lot, and when you don’t get it when you think you’re gonna, it’s crest-falling.
Despite all that, I’d still make this plunge for the travel life. I know there will be awkward adjustment periods. I know it’s worth riding out. Sometimes the great stuff only comes when you stick it out through all the crap.
Unlike a lot of people who maybe take up this lifestyle choice because they’ve travelled and want more, I’ve never been abroad other than to London at the age of 17 with my mother being the one dealing with logistics, and we stayed with family friends who sorted the weirdnesses out for us.
For me, I had to pretty much either accumulate more debt to travel (not cool) or sell off everything and make travel my life, in which case I might actually SAVE money (very cool). Would I like a “home” to return to now and then? You bet. Am I crazy about my life being at the mercy of AirBNB hosts? Not so much. But those were my choices. All travel, or none at all.
Here, I’m alone, and it’s a foreign language, and I’ve never, ever done anything like this before. Jetlag is a first for me. Culture shock, also totally new. Currency conversion, all of it — new.
That it’s not begun smoothly is not a surprise. If you’re wanting to do a big thing like this, I guarantee you, it’ll come with shocks and challenges for you too.
For anyone who’s ever moved house, you know how stressful that can be. Well, I didn’t just “move,” I sold everything I owned, I wrangled paperwork, insurance coverage, two years of research, bookings, and fine print, and it was pedal-to-the-metal for 6 full months before I got here.
All that chaos before I left made me so tired I wasn’t aware someone stole my coat off my chair in an airport, or notice that I had left my FitBit in the security bin at the next airport. (A fun $400 loss between the two.) It’s made this lack of sleep due to jetlag a completely different hell I didn’t see coming. I was sure I’d show up so exhausted that I’d just sleep whenever I wanted to sleep, but it turns out that’s completely naive and the body doesn’t work that way.
And yet: My life is awesome.
I know these things will solve themselves. I know I’ll catch up on sleep next month when I’m living in a little medieval town in an area that is described as being akin to Tuscany from 50 years ago, population about 600, with starry skies, fog-filled autumn valleys, surrounded by vineyards and truffle forests, with a hot springs and full massage spa just a 10-minute drive away — and I’ll be there for 28 days.
Every day, no matter what frustrations I’ve felt, I’ve also found something awesome to make me smile or feel jazzed about the choices I’ve made.
If this were easy to do, everyone would do it. But there are real sacrifices and struggles that come with living your dream. If you think otherwise, then good luck achieving yours.
When I share my travels with you, I want to do so honestly. When I tell you about amazing things, you will believe me, because I’ll have told you about the bad days too.
There are enough sanitized lives on the internet. It’s flat-out unhealthy for the rest of us to be exposed to people with seemingly “perfect” lives. It’s unhealthy to try to pretend your life IS perfect. No one’s life is perfect. Everyone has bad days. Let’s be real about those and share them.
In the end, if you see that I have these struggling days but, gosh, some freakin’ amazing ones in the mix too, then if you decide to take the plunge and try the nomad life, you’ll be prepared and possibly even emboldened by the knowledge that my times came with a mix of all of these things.
And isn’t that what writing is for? Sharing the human condition? Letting us all find commonality amongst ourselves? My pain is like your pain is like their pain? My joy is akin to yours?
So today I write for you with the knowledge that Croatia’s onslaught of rain appears to have turned the page. Sunny days are here again. If I’m lucky, tomorrow I’ll learn my long-lost, far too expensive coat has finally reached this city — and hopefully those who have agreed to receive it for me are honest enough to pass it on.
And if not? Well, I’ll figure that out too. Somehow it’ll all work out, because I’m resilient and that’s just what I do. After I complain a bit and get it out of my system, that is!
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[…] voice of the Full Nomad. This year she set off on a five-year round the world travel journey. And she chose Zagreb as her launch pad. The first two weeks in Zagreb it was pouring with rain so Steff hung around her local […]
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Looking forward to continuing to read about your true experiences, no fluff just tell it like it is. Also hoping things do get better for you. Enjoy your journey what ever it brings, it will be like no other!
Resilience is everything!
Dear Steffani – welcome to Zagreb. I knew you were coming and that you would begin your RTW trip here, which is really so cool. Sorry you had to go through these bumps so early on. There’s nothing we can do to improve the weather in Zagreb – it’s true, this is a very unusual Autumn! I wish you have contacted me before so you could stay in my apartment. Many travel bloggers have stayed so far and I always make sure they uncover the true character of Zagreb – I also help out with those boring but annoying everyday details. 🙂 Let’s see if we can fix things quickly: for some true pancake and bacon comfort food, check out Kava tava on the British Square and their breakfast menu. I think that might help with foggy overcast weather 🙂
“If this were easy to do, everyone would do it.”
This is so true. Keep keeping it real. Authenticity is it’s own reward.