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Posted By Tynan
Life Nomadic is far from over, but today I’m in the US, back in Austin. We’ve been away from Austin for seven months and have circled the globe entirely. We’re already planning more trips, but armed with experience, we don’t plan on being on the road for such long stretches in the future.
For me the trip was an epic journey, one that I will remember in great detail for the rest of my life. We could have very easily stayed in Austin and had very little change in my life, but we didn’t.
Instead we walked on the canal in Panama. We sat with friends under the cherry blossom trees in Tokyo. We looked out from the tallest building in the world in Taipei. We drove ATVs through the dunes of Qatar. In France we walked through rooms of bones in an unauthorized jaunt through the Paris Catacombs. We ran with the bulls in Spain and lived to tell the story.
We stayed in Taiwan’s only six star hotel and we slept on cardboard boxes in a freezing cold cave in Japan. We rode in the world class Queen Mary 2 across the Atlantic and we bailed water out of a handmade canoe in a remote bay in Panama. We went through the longest tunnel in the world in a Japanese bullet train and sat on the roof of a rickety falling apart train in Cambodia.
We visited friends living abroad, made a lot of new friends in many cities, and were visited by family and friends from the US. People in five different countries gave us beds to sleep in.
We learned phrases in a dozen languages and each developed a respectable level of proficiency in Spanish, French, Chinese, and Japanese.
All of these things are just scratching the surface of the experiences we had. And although they are some of the most grand sounding, the real joy came from walking down streets that I didn’t know existed a month prior with the familiarity of my own neighborhood.
Saying that I’m thankful to have gone on this trip would be a gross understatement of the way I felt every time I looked out at a new wonder of the world and whispered to myself, “what a life!”
I’m grateful to have been able to afford the trip, for everything throughout history that has shaped the incredible places we went, for the technology that kept us comfortable and productive, and for having a friend like Todd to share the adventure with.
All that’s left now is to top it next year… (well… and to catch up on stories from this trip that we haven’t posted yet)
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3 Comments, Comment or Ping
Mark
Absolutely inspiring. I’ve been following your blog since the beginning and have lived vicariously through all of your experiences… fantastic.
If you guys have time (yeah, right!), I’d love to see a final summary post of what you’ve learned about travelling for others considering trying it (final review of equipment you liked, places to stay, how to find cheap airfare and other travel hacks).
Thanks for sharing your travels with us and I look forward to Round 2.
Aug 1st, 2008
Shane Conder
Congrats on the return home!
I’m sure I don’t just speak for myself when I say that I’ll be awaiting not only the further stories from your last 7 months but anxiously waiting for new and great stories from your next jaunt around the world.
Thanks for sharing your experiences … it’s definitely helps give me the travel bug.
Aug 1st, 2008
Keith
As a truck driver I have seen much of the US and Canada. I travel for work and fun and dream of going overseas. I just stumbled onto your page and now i’ll have to spend more time reading your stories.
After all of this time away does Austin look very different to you?
Every time I go home it seems like there is a new highrise going up in downtown.
Enjoy your travels,
Hook em Horns!!
Keith
Austin, TX
Oct 22nd, 2008
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