Saturday, December 30, 2017

Day 1: Travel from California to Lima, Peru


Travel from California to Lima, Peru
Day 1
December 29, 2017 

I missed my alarm on the morning of my flight from LAX to Lima, Peru.  My phone was across the room, and with my headphones still plugged into it, only two tiny ants were awoken at 3:00 AM.  Fortunately, my ride to the Flyaway didn’t have this problem, too, and I left on time.  

A miracle happened at LAX.  First, I was mistakenly directed to a TSA security line with no one else in it.  Then, the TSA agents forgot to harass me about any of the contents of my bag.  I was in and out of security in five minutes.  I was confused: what was I going to do with all of this free time?  

Mexico City must have gotten word that my TSA experience went so well.  To transfer flights, they made me go through customs, exit the airport, and go through security again.  I would complement them on their airtight and redundant security network, but they have one fatal flaw with their security protocol: no one made me take my shoes off! 

Luck was on my side again for my flight to Lima.  I had a window seat on an empty aisle, which meant I slept well for most of the flight.  In Lima, I cleared customs quickly, sidestepped the barrage of taxi pigeons cooing for a fare, and linked up with my prearranged driver to a nearby hostel.  With such a late arrival, I wanted nothing more than a quick ride, a bed, and a shower.  

Outside of the airport, we were greeted by a traffic circle of death, the kind that has no rules and plays a drunken ballad of car horns in surround sound.  It was a couple miles to the hostel, and I caught a flavor of one busy road at night in Lima.  Traffic trudged along reluctantly.  A homeless man hung up some of his belongings on a tree sprouting from the concrete.  A young woman wearing high heels, black tights and a crop top stood on a corner by herself.  A mini bus had a rear wheel with a wobble.  A teenager stood on the outside of an open side door on a moving van.  A family of four jaywalked across gridlocked traffic.  Radial tires were on sale.  Coca Cola is apparently popular.

My first night in Lima was uneventful; I fell asleep promptly at the hostel shortly after my arrival. 

Friday, December 29, 2017

Home for the Holidays

Home for the Holidays
December 26 - 28
Pine Mountain, CA


A week after graduation, I moved out of my apartment in Fort Worth.  With a full load on my Tacoma, I drove the 700 miles to Nashville.  The timing of my move could have been better; it poured rain all day, which required full waterproofing of the bed of my truck and slow speeds on the highway.  By nightfall, visibility was so low that I was driving 40 mph on the highway with 18-wheelers passing me at 70 mph. I opted to park under a remote overpass and let the storm pass for the night.  In the morning, I finished my drive to Nashville, put all of my belongings in storage, dried off anything that got wet at the local laundromat, and flew home to Los Angeles.  

This is what my apartment looks like in a Tacoma.  The rear springs didn't like this. 

I spent Christmas Eve and Christmas day with my family in Southern California, which was much needed quality time with my family.  The day after Christmas, I somewhat began my travels by going up to Pine Mountain, a quiet mountain village an hour and a half north of Los Angeles, and the home town of my Grandmother for the last few decades.  In this town, everyone is on a first-name basis, complete strangers wave at you and smile, and fences, if they exist, are designed to keep dogs in rather than keep neighbors out.  It’s not uncommon to take a shortcut through a friend’s backyard on the way back home.  Already, my Grandmother’s quaint log cabin was a sanctuary from the concrete jungle to which I have become accustomed.  Upon arrival, she gave me a much needed tour of her home and town, both of which I have not seen for at least 15 years.  Even a quiet village like this one changes over time.  

Grandma's log cabin in the mountains (with obligatory Jeep).
Back at home, Grandma did several things to remind me she was my Grandmother.  She made a box of her signature Pizzelle cookies for a neighbor that recently moved in.  She made me a tuna salad sandwich flavored to taste like home.  She made baked pancakes (more formally named Dutch Babies) from scratch.  And she played her guitar to a song she wrote to the tune of The 12 Days of Christmas.  Grandma has been a lifelong musician, and makes music part of her everyday experience of a vivid and full life.  

Grandma, the lifelong lover of music, playing her guitar.
Grandma's home cooking: Pizzelle cookies, tuna salad, and Dutch babies.
A good friend of mine from Kenya reminded me that December 26th was the first day of Kwanzaa, and the focus of the day is on Umoja, or Unity.  It is a day to reflect on family, community and foundations, and is celebrated by gathering together friends, family, and even strangers.  Although our family does not celebrate Kwanzaa, that night, I joined Grandma at the Pine Mountain Clubhouse, where she and several friends (who are also musicians) have a room reserved every Tuesday evening.  At these sessions, dubbed “Tuesday on the Mountain,” everyone gathers to play Celtic tunes that have been passed down by hundreds of years of tradition.  Grandma’s instrument of choice is the hammered dulcimer, and there are many other percussionist and guitarists in the band.  Although four key members couldn’t make it that night (due to other holiday plans), it was still a spectacle to watch Grandma play music with friends she has known for decades.  There is a special social dynamic when people gather to play music together; the laughter is genuine.  

Grandma playing her hammered dulcimer at the weekly "Tuesday on the Mountain" music session.
On the evening of December 27th, four of Grandma’s friends, Terri, Mindy, Marian, and Gabby, met at her home for a writer’s workshop, where everyone shares stories and poems they have written.  I was asked to share one of mine, and we each went around the table picking a favorite for the night.  I was not surprised to find out that Grandma had managed to gather such a talented group of writers together in her small home town.  Each story carried a part of each person’s true self.  Not only were their stories and poems gripping, but each writer contributed to the betterment of each other’s talents, deepening the connection their community shares.  

Posing for photos with some of the Writer's Club.  From left to right: me, Stan, Grandma, Mindy, and Terri.
My visit concluded the next day.  I thanked Grandma for her hospitality and made my way back to my Mom’s place to make any final preparations before leaving the United States for the next two months.  

Wild deer spotted while walking through the neighborhood.
They even have valet parking up here.


Thursday, December 28, 2017

A New Journey on the Horizon



A New Journey on the Horizon
Travel Blog: January to August, 2018

My undergraduate career is over.  On Saturday, December 16th, I graduated from Texas Christian University with a degree in Mechanical Engineering.  While many of my peers will go on to working careers immediately, I have a fortunate luxury.  I will be starting graduate school at Vanderbilt University at the end of August 2018, which means I have a solid eight months between educational careers.  Those who know me well know what this means…

“The world is a book, and those who do not travel only read one page.”
–Augustine of Hippo

I am going to travel the world.  I want to be amazed by the places I see, the people I meet, and the experiences I have.  I want to enjoy life.  I want to learn how people around the world live their lives.  I want to stand in front of breathtaking panoramas that make me realize how finite and fleeting life is.  I want to be humbled.  I want to learn as much as I can from as many unlikely sources as I can find before I dedicate the rest of my life to researching and building bionic prostheses.  Needless to say, I am going to make the most out of my eight months of freedom.

My first stop is Peru.  I will leave on December 29th, and I will be in South America until February 22nd.  From there, I have a ticket to Spain, and I will spend three months in Europe and Africa.  Then, at the beginning of the summer (right after the worst part of tornado season in Texas), I am returning to the United States and spending the whole summer riding my motorcycle the long way around to Nashville, where I will ultimately end up and settle.  

This blog is my trumpet to the world I am leaving behind.  It is for my friends at TCU, my family in California, my Texas Family in Texas, and all my friends I have met in previous careers, previous travels, and previous lives.  It is to keep you informed of where I am, to reassure you that I am alive and well, and to inspire you to break out of your own comfort zone and pursue your dreams to travel the world as well.  Finally, it is for me.  I want to leave myself a reminder of the memories I created while traveling the world.