My global adventures began a decade or
so later, when the day after I turned eighteen I hopped on a plane
with an oversized, multi-pocketed bright red backpack bound for
London, England and a summer of exploring Europe. I put my
hitchhiking skills to the test by hitching from London to the
southernmost extreme of England at Land's End (where one can gaze
wistfully westward across the Atlantic and imagine all the previous,
much more adventurous explorers who set out across that ocean, with
high hopes of finding a better life in the land I'd just departed).
From that far end of England's land I
turned back north and hitched all the way to the top of Scotland at
John'O'Groats. I made my way across northwestern Scotland to the
ferry and hopped over to Northern Ireland; hitched to the other side
of Ireland; and then back again to Dublin, where I started using a
Eurail train pass that would get me around the rest of Europe for
another three months.
In the course of that trip I would
sleep on the beaches of Greece, walk from the Aegean Sea to the peak
of Mt. Olympus, hike through the Swiss Alps, experience my first
traveling romance, sleep out on the streets of Paris and stay in a
local's barn for the night in the Pyrenees of southern France. My
trip ended with the theft of my backpack while sleeping on the
historic Pont Neuf bridge in Paris, in which I lost almost everything
I'd traveled with the past 4 months, other than, fortunately, my
passport, flight ticket and enough cash to just barely get me back
home. I'd never imagined I would be going through U.S. Customs with
only a small day pack, wearing a pair of shorts and my Greek sandals.
But it is, of course, the #1 rule of travel that you don't do it if
you expect everything to go as planned.
I wouldn't leave the country again
until another decade later, other than a couple quick jaunts through
Canada (place of my birth so it doesn't count as international
traveling in my case). However, that's not to say I settled down and
lived a normal life during that time. I gave it an honest try a few
times, in my own way at least, but was ultimately destined to be a
vagabond it seemed.
The one college I'd applied to before
leaving for that summer in Europe was, of all places, the University
of Alaska, Fairbanks. When I got back to California, I remember
telling my Dad that I wanted to continue with my travels around the
U.S. This despite the fact I had no money left, summer was over and I
didn't even have a backpack at that point. But I'd been accepted to
the university in Alaska and, almost certainly for the best, my Dad
convinced me to go back to college. (I'd attended one semester the
previous fall at a local community college, got bored and had started
making my travel plans.)
Alaska was a trip and an adventure of
its own. Fairbanks is in the center of the state, bitter cold most of
the year (ever been in a deep freezer? It's that cold.). The
landscapes there are more stark than you might imagine, gently
rolling hills scattered with deciduous trees. But I could see the
hulking white peak of Mt. Denali just barely on clear days, south of
Fairbanks in Denali National Park, right from my dorm room. I made
friends with an astronomer and along with some other friends we would
go out into the nearby forest with his telescope in the
forty-below-zero temperatures and peer into the night sky (since it
was mostly dark during the winter, you might as well spend some time
looking at the stars). We would go running up and down the dorm
stairs for exercise. I'd also brought a pair of cross country skis
with me, so I would ski down to the cafeteria for meals, and into the
woods beyond campus. When things finally warmed up in the spring to
20 degrees Fahrenheit, people were walking around in shorts.
I got a job working as a housekeeper
for a hotel in Denali Park that summer. The following year I
transferred with a friend down to the university in Juneau, and then
went back to Denali again the next summer. That was 1992. After
finishing the spring semester, I took the ferry from Juneau up the
panhandle of Alaska to Haines. I then hitchhiked from there up
through Canada and to the main part of Alaska to start my job in
Denali.
Little did I know at the time that I
was following in the hitchhiking footsteps of Chris McCandless, from
the book and movie “Into the Wild”, who had hitched up the same
highway just a couple months before me. While he was fighting for his
very survival that summer just a few dozen miles away north of the
park, I was working in a hotel once again and spending the weekends
backpacking with friends. I hitchhiked many times from the same tiny
town where Chris would have been dropped off for the last time,
before hiking into the wilderness.
The rest of my travels during the 1990s
would require a book or two to relate properly (so I went ahead and
wrote them: “Following My Thumb” and “Kundalini and the Art of
Being”). At the end of the summer of '92 I moved back to
California, went to one semester of community college there and then
moved to Eugene, Oregon (where a friend from Alaska lived) with plans
to finish my college education at the University of Oregon. Plans
changed however (or rather I changed them, I guess I should concede),
and after a year-and-a-half I left Eugene on another hitchhiking
adventure that would turn into six years of living mostly on the
road.
I attended Rainbow Gathering festivals,
worked on farms, briefly visited a strange New Age cult, hitchhiked
through every Western state, slept on the side of the road more times
than I could possibly remember, backpacked alone in the wilderness,
went back to Alaska for another summer in Denali, camped in the
redwoods through part of a rainy winter, lived out of an old station
wagon that had been given to me and camped for months on the beaches
of Hawaii. It was while working on a farm in Hawaii that I met a guy
who had been to India, and inspired me to go there.
In October of 1999 I journeyed to India
for five months. I remember sitting on the plane, almost there,
thinking to myself, “Holy shit, I am about to step foot in India.
Am I even ready for this?” I'd experienced pretty bad culture shock
my first day in London almost a decade before. Yet I knew that India
was going to be a whole different dimension of unknown. And it was.
Delhi has changed a lot since 1999. At
the time there were no raised freeways within the city, that I recall
anyway. The drive from the airport into the center of the city was
all on surface streets, through scenes that felt like a surreal,
murky concoction of the Middle Ages crossed with the 1950s and Tomb
Raider. Cows were lying in the street, monkeys swung from trees
overhead, beggar children weaved through the sluggish river of
chaotic traffic imploring for a rupee or two, many of the
neighborhoods consisted of dirt huts and ramshackle shacks littered
with garbage, ox-drawn carts lumbered down the road along with 1950s
era white Ambassador vehicles. If there were any working traffic
signals, they were very few and far between.
I spent five months exploring the
fascinating, insane, heart-wrenching, deeply inspiring Hindustani
(Land of Hindus), from the Ganges River to the Taj Mahal, the deserts
of Rajasthan to the beaches of the Arabian Sea to the slums of
Mumbai. I returned back home to California once again, mind and soul
forever altered, and with no idea what I was doing next and no money
left to do it with. My Dad told me he would help cover the cost of
tuition if I decided to go back to college and get my degree. I took
him up on the offer.
Two years later I graduated from
Humboldt State University with a B.A. in Religious Studies. I moved
to Portland, Oregon and settled into a normal life in the city for
the next four years. Eventually the travel bug reered its inquisitive
head, and I started making plans for a return trip to India.
I landed in Chennai, South India at
11:30pm on December 31st, 2005, just in time to see New
Year's celebrations in the streets from the taxi on the way to my
hotel. That began the next phase of my world adventures, in which
over the next decade I would travel abroad every year, going on nine
extended international trips to nineteen countries, including five
times to India, four times to Thailand and three times to Nepal,
spending about 3 ½ years in total traveling abroad.
I funded my trips during much of that
time by working in Jasper National Park in Alberta, Canada (taking
advantage of my dual citizenship due to being born in Vancouver).
That was also where I bought my first digital camera, in fall of
2008, and also when I created my Youtube travel channel (with no
conception whatsoever at the time that it would turn into my future
career).
I started posting video clips onto
Youtube for no particular reason, other than it was the latest
internet thing and so I might as well mess around with it. It was a
long, slow, bumbling process of figuring out how to be somewhat
sucessful as a videographer. But eight years later I've posted more
than 1,400 videos to Youtube, with 5 million total video views and
more than 25,000 subscribers to my channel, and am now funding my
travels from the videos I make as I journey from one country to the
next.
I guess the moral of the story is to
follow your passion. Just be prepared for a long, strange and winding
road, because that seems to be the route that passions tend to take
you.
8 comments:
Hi,
This was really interesting to read. I enjoy your YouTube videos, so I thought I'd search to see if you have a blog, as I often prefer to read than watch videos, and it was interesting to learn about your background.
Nehal
Wow what a beautiful & inspiring story. Thanks for sharing your awesome adventures around the workd. You just motivated me to follow my passion in traveling. I agree with you to follow your passion & that's what I'm going to do.
Awesome Mate. I'm looking to Create own Retirement Roadmap and being an astute Researcher stumbled upon you through my research
Travels Via YouTube.
Perhaps you can Guide a 59 year Old man who has never been on a Plane and show him where and how to become a World Traveler?
Thanks for Living and Sharing your Dreams with others. COOl Stuff as always!
Love your YouTube videos
Thanks for sharing such interesting information.
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