Saturday, February 20, 2010

IN A NUTSHELL

Monday, February 15 @ 11:34

Kevin

We ride into Auckland on a wave of emotions. What awaits us in this, the biggest city in all of New Zealand, the most populated and bustling metropolis that we have seen in almost three months. We will find affordable accommodations? Will we be able to find a new owner for Fern? Will we be able to deal with the honking horns, the hustle, the bustle, the crowds? After all, this is where we come from, a big city.

Though we are the same people that left Miami a year and a half ago, our travels have changed is in very profound ways. We have re-established new tolerances for many things, such as comfort, diet and mobility. We have discovered a new found love of freedom and nature. We have learned to walk slower, mind the details and smile...often. We have, as expressed so many times before, recognized our passion for our family, friends and home. We have learned that life can be as simple or complex as you make it, that you must take chances and that the world is not a big, bad scary place.

Lacking the personal experience, I have to assume that our last three months of travel have given us a peek at what it might be like to be homeless. I know that now having the experience of showering in a public bathroom, sleeping in a parking lot or not showering at all for days, I can't help but have empathy for those who may have not chosen to live (travel) this way. It will humble you and it will make you appreciate even the most minute of conveniences, such as running water, an interior space you can stand in, or a cozy resting area, far from a highway. Conversely, there is an element of freedom in living on the fringes of Western conformity. It is even desirable to move about at your own will and chose what you want to do and when you want to do it. To take a long walk into the bush or meander along the shore.

Perhaps the most intoxicating and invigorating is the freedom to wander. To stray far from the beaten track. To take the gravel road, or climb over the hill. You never know what awaits you at the end or on the other side. The not knowing can be exhilarating and if embraced and not feared can lead to amazing rewards.

Travel has been a metaphor for life. There are a lot of lessons to be learned. The observant spirit can derive a whole new set of parameters. Perhaps the most important are to realize that you really are no different from even those brothers and sisters who sit naked in a jungle on the other side of the world. After all, you are each in a quest to find comfort and happiness. It helps to remember this when dealing with those much closer to you. Smile. To embrace your surroundings and take time to enjoy them. There is music in nature and if you stop to listen you will be rewarded with a beautiful symphony. Life is more and it takes less. You probably only need a fraction of what you think you do to survive. Giving is the best gift you can receive. Live slow. Smile.

We pull into one of the first suburbs of Auckland, Mangere, and find our good ole' friend Pak 'n' Save. We buy some food for dinner and breakfast and head to Amburly Park, a working farm on the fringes of the big city. We are able to camp there overnight. But first, we empty Fern completely and begin the nagging task of deconstruction. We repack our bags with our possessions, separate the trash, and prepare for the Sunday car fair. It takes us the majority of the day and after a late dinner and shower it is off to bed to make the alarms call at six in the morning. It is sure to be a long day. We wake up and it is still dark out and there is a fine mist hanging in the air. We don't talk much as we whip up a quick breakfast and head out the five gates that keep all the animals safe from the city traffic. We arrive at the Ellerslie Racecourse in time to get our sellers package, find a good spot, wipe down Fern and check out the competition. The morning starts slow and the weather is less than desirable for a car sale, but we stay hopeful and positive. In due time, people start to arrive and three individuals inquire about Fern and continue to circle around pondering their decisions, which we now know can be a bit taxing. Two of the potential buyers are local Kiwis and one is a traveler.

It isn't until a couple hours and test drives later that thirty year old California surfer, Kramer, returns to begin negotiating. I am honest with him and take him through all of the coughs and chokes. He opts for the paid vehicle inspection and we wait along side him biting nails and saying prayers. For an old girl, Fern fairs pretty well. The report shows she needs front brakes, a universal something or other and a tune up. The mechanic figures it would cost about $400 NZ dollars to have it all worked out. So, I tell Kramer we will split the cost of the repairs and take our half off the asking price. A deal is struck, the paperwork completed and our pockets are filled with crisp US dollars, which he happened to be traveling with. We wish him well, bid our girl a fond farewell and somewhat gloomily stroll into our double room, named “Queenstown”, at the Auckland International Backpackers.

How to explain the wave of emotions? There is not much you can do to prepare and not much past experience to draw on when it comes to the point where all you have worked for and focused on is about to end. It was, by all accounts, a sweeping success. Aside from two missing cameras, a few battles with the runs and a the loss of a beloved member of the family (We love you Aphrodite), we have done it. We have accomplished what we set out to do and exceeded even our most lofty of expectations. So, now what? How does one prepare to “re-enter the real world”? It will remain an unknown for now. Though we currently feel a whole in our hearts, like something is missing, akin to losing a loved one, we fight to stay hopeful and positive that the future will continue to hold great things. Unlike some travelers you meet, we are not running away from anything and love our home. We are very anxious to be reunited with loved ones and gratuitously spread hugs. We long for creature comforts and some form of normalcy. We will, however, do our best to hold on to the feelings we have been fortunate enough to experience in the last year and a half. We will work hard to stay in touch with new friends. We will not stop searching for adventure and excitement. We will foster the desire to explore. We will begin to see an old world in new ways. We will try to be better people and be better to people. We will crave freedom and appreciate familiarity. We will above all always try to be true to ourselves. As one door closes and a new one opens, we urge you all to continue to come along while we vagabond!



















THE END!

8 comments:

Josue said...

S#!T! This moment is as emotional for me in a different way...

For the last 17 months, it has been comforting to know that you two were out there, somewhere in this wild world, living and loving. I would frequently wait for blog updates, e-mails, or news from you from somewhere. I felt alive every time I heard about a new adventure or saw a new picture posted.

This trip has reminded me what I sometimes forget: Anything is possible when you let your heart lead! Thanks for the trip. I was there with you the whole journey. My soul was full and my smile was wide!

But, it widens more now. You two are coming back home. Blessed with a new perspective on home, family, friends, and life. Yep, I look forward to kicking it again, and hearing about the whole thing in person.

As a traveler, I know the hardest question to answer is, "So, how was it?" Well... your trip is the very answer to that question. Your trip said to me, "The world is beautiful! Jump into it!"

Thanks guys!!! See ya' at the airport tomorrow!

amailina said...

It's amazing how much you guys have experienced in your journey. As I said before, you guys have accomplished everyone's ultimate dream, "discover the world", and I can only agree with Josue about the fact that in some ways, we all have been blessed to share those traveling moments through your experiences, your incredible pictures and very detailed stories. You brought us joy, tears, laughter, and so much more emotions and lessons. You guys always had a positive attitude no matter what you were going through.
So thank you, thank you and thank you a thousand times for giving us a chance to be with you both.
As far as you guys being better people, how much better can you be. Both of you have always been loving and caring and very good to all of us (even to me and my millions of phone calls) helping ECOMB, volunteering in Hurricane times, supporting surfrider foundation, big brothers and sisters but also friends and family with their own marathons or personal challenges, always there for anyone that needs help. Not to mention those gathering your house with Idalis' famous cooking and Jack Johnson (which Michael and I miss a lot).
I think it's safe to say that you guys are and always have been extremely good people and that we miss you a lot. We are very anxious to see you and very excited to welcome you back tomorrow at the airport.
We love you guys
Amail and Mike

vagamom said...

As I read this , your "The End" post, I wondered, what words do you say as a reader. It is almost like finishing a good book that becomes more like a good friend. I always must go back and again read the jacket cover, forward, dedication, reviews, just to make the book last a little bit longer.
In this case however, the ending of the book is only the beginning!
Soon you both will return to us and to your starting point and while there is saddness their is also celebration! Somehow these past 17 months are the preparation for what is yet to come. They were lived with and for a purpose, perhaps for the things that you have learned and inspired others to learn. Perhaps to encourage others to be brave and follow their dreams and heart. Perhaps to remind us that the world really is a smaller place than we imagine and a grander place than we imagine. People are people wherever you go, loving and being loved, laughing and crying, struggling and triumphing.
As Josue said, this is a very emotional moment for vagalongers as well. This blog and the accounts of your adventures have filled our thoughts, too many days without a new post unbearable, some posts so long it took two visits to read through. But each one more loved than the one before it. And as Amail said, thank you for living your dream and allowing so many old and new friends and family to follow along as you did. Also, I am thankful for God's love and watchcare over you, so many times He moved you just out of harm's way, just at the right moment.
Now, our dream is coming true as you return...I am sure there will not be a dry eye at MIA.
See you soon. As always...LOVE, LOVE and more LOVE...Mom

Pop-a-Long said...

Well, I have to imagine that at this writing it is already our tomorrow and your present. You guys are living in what is yet to be our future. Today for us tommorow for you Sort of like back to the future. So now that you are returning to this side of the planet you will be traveling back to the present. "Wow" was that a mouthful! I'm sure as this saga of you lives comes to and end, you have gained plenty of knowledge of the world we live in, grown to respect the way other cultures live and survive, shared experiences with strangers and at the same time gained new friends across the planet, grown to love each other more based on the good news of New Years Day, freely given when your hearts, feelings, emotions, and desires, felt you needed to, received love and help form so many uncountable numbers of people you have come into contact with, grown to fall in love and respect so many areas of this great planet we call home, visited so many churches, mosques, temples, and who knows what other type of places of worship, to give thanks for what you have received, made your home and slept in tents, hostels, tree houses, caves, Fern, hotels, homes, on beaches, and other places I can't even remember what they are called, traveled by buses, cars, cabs, scooters, rickshaws, ferries, boats, bikes, planes, trains, Elephant, camels, donkeys, horses, kayaks, canoes, zip lines, or just plane old walked, basked in steamy cauldrons, cold rivers, lakes, ponds, salt seas, waterfalls, and a number of other oddities, discovered and have eaten who knows what, nursed each other to health when physical calamity struck, can't get over the bug in the ear incedent, traveled to the heights of the mountains and to the depths of the see. I have to admit at times I laughed, I cried, I was fearful, I was amused, I worried, I got angry,but you two just kept plugging along and met each circumstance as they happened. I know at these times you grew stronger in faith, wisdom, love, perception, decision making and a multitude of other concepts. Don't want to even imagine the feelings you are experiencing at this time of your lives. All in all I just want to say thanks for allowing me to come along and be part of this life long experience.

Love P0P-a-Long

Vagamom said...

Hooray! Our world travelers are coming home! There will be dancing in the streets. We've missed your smiling faces and sweet spirits. By the way, I'm all out of pens. Love you. Grandma :)

Unknown said...

So this is it!?!. I was so glad Keela, her new boyfriend Dillon and I could meet you at MIA. even egg fart Perkins!
This is what it's all about-inspiring young children-so thankfull they were mine.
See ya soon around town.
Peace and progress!

Lokemal said...

NOOOO!!!! your travel blog was like that great novel you picked up...hated to put down....and ran home to every night...AND CRIED WHEN IT FINISHED.

i thank you for the great adventure....and the photos!! i look forward to seeing you and idalis in miami beach :))

welcome home!!
rosemarie/rosie

Anonymous said...

I believe you are home by now..so I hope I run into you on the streets soon! Like others have said, thanks for taking me along on your adventure! Thank you for giving me something besides my tabloids to read! It IS like getting to the end of a good book....and not wanting it to end..so you just keep reading different pages..realizing that you did miss this or that..and eventually realizing you have finished it. So you close the cover..press down the top..(every notice how people do that?) and then put it somewhere (bookmark it) so you know always where it is so you can read it again! Thanks for taking the trip and letting me go with you. Hope to see you soon!