And Then Everything Changed: Do I Love Long-Term Travel?

Sunset in Oban, Scotland
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I got mixed reactions when I told my friends and family that I was going to Europe on my own for 2 months.

Reactions ranged from “You're going to have such an amazing time” to “You're going to die.” I was inclined to agree more with the first group, of course — I had no doubt the trip would be amazing (and it was). But I didn't necessarily have any predictions then about what would happen after the trip.

No one ever thinks about that niggly little “after” part.

Oban, Scotland

I've never traveled for more than a couple of weeks at a time before, so 2 months initially seemed like an eternity to me. Before this trip, I was convinced that I was built for shorter stints abroad; I never looked at long-term, round-the-world travelers with envy or longing because I was convinced that the nomadic lifestyle was not for me. I didn't even know if I was cut out for solo travel, to be honest.

So I assumed that, at the end of 8 weeks alone on the road, I'd be more than ready to return home to my comfy mattress, cable TV, closet full of clothes, and friends and family in northeast Ohio.

But over the course of those 8 weeks, something changed.

Budapest, Hungary
Me on Day 1 of my trip in Budapest.

I'm not sure when or where or how exactly it happened. But, somewhere along the way, my attitudes about long-term solo travel changed. Somehow, I fell in love with it. I fell more in love with travel, if that's possible.

This summer, I did a lot of things I thought I didn't like. I spent many nights in shared hostel and hotel rooms with people I didn't know. I put up with snoring roommates. I got used to going to bed sweaty every night because there was no air conditioning and it was 90 degrees outside. I wore a sunhat. I gave up on wearing make-up. I bought train tickets on my own in a country where I didn't speak the language. I carried an actual backpack. I wore the same (sometimes dirty) clothes for 2 months. I stopped making plans. I got lost, found my way, and got lost again. I quit worrying about what would happen “later.”

I was living in the moment, and loving life. 

Isle of Skye, Scotland
Loving life in Scotland

It was in Scotland, I think, that it finally hit me that something was different. It was past 1 a.m., and I was half-wearing a kilt over my clothes and dancing on a table in a hostel bar near Loch Ness. I hadn't had a drop of alcohol, but instead was drunk on something else — the energy, the people, maybe just the feeling of being alive.

An Australian girl in my tour group looked up at me in between songs and just said, “You're a legend. You're not even drunk but you're having so much fun.” And I was. I was having more fun than I'd had in a long time.

It scared me a bit at first. This wasn't me, I thought. At least, it wasn't the me I recognized or thought I knew. And yet it was a me that I liked. A me that, somewhere between Istanbul and Glasgow, had come alive, become more adventurous, and fallen head over heels for long-term travel.

Parga, Greece
Parga, Greece

When it came time for me to board my flight home a week later, I did so nearly in tears. Yes, there had been some ups and downs throughout the 8 weeks, but I genuinely didn't want the summer to end. I wasn't ready to go home.

As I sat aboard that flight, editing photos and drafting up the beginnings to some new blog posts, I was also subconsciously doing something else — I was already plotting in my head how and when I could get back out on the road. I was scrabbling desperately to hold onto my travel high, not ready to let it slip away.

People say that it's not a place that changes you. And it's true. I could have gone anywhere for 2 months, and probably felt the same way. Instead of the place alone, I think it's a mixture of the place, the people, and the chance to be completely at your own mercy that allows you to change yourself.

Travel Quote

I didn't think I had a lot of changing left to do before this trip; I assumed that I'd gotten all of that out of my system years ago.

And yet, here I am, back in Ohio, feeling different and questioning everything.

There's a Tolkien quote that I think is appropriate here:

“How do you pick up the threads of an old life? How do you go on, when in your heart you begin to understand there is no going back?”

The context of the quote is not quite right (and it's a bit melodramatic), but the sentiment, I think, is spot-on. I may have only been away for 8 weeks, but in some ways it does feel like I'm now trying to return to an “old life.” A life I'm not sure I fit into anymore.

It's both sad and exciting at the same time. It's sad because it means I've had to make some tough decisions and say at least one difficult goodbye. But it's exciting because I know now — for certain — that there are better things to come.

Travel Quote

Before this trip, I knew I wanted to travel. But I don't think I knew just how much I wanted it. Now that I know, though, it's going to be full-steam ahead.

I'm taking the events of this summer as a sign from The Universe. A sign that THIS is what I'm meant to be doing.

And you'd better believe that I'm listening.


Have YOU ever had a life-changing, eye-opening travel experience?

"It's a dangerous business, going out your door. You step onto the road, and, if you don't keep your feet, there's no telling where you might get swept off to." - JRR Tolkien

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104 Comments on “And Then Everything Changed: Do I Love Long-Term Travel?

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  1. Love that C.S. Lewis quote, Amanda. I’m excited to see how the future unfolds for you. Exciting times!

      Thanks, Bethany! I’m really excited to see what’s in store next, too!

    Good post and I understand completely what you mean. I left to teach for a year in Japan. That was nine years ago and I still haven’t been back to the US. I’m starting to think that I might never stop moving. And judging by a lot of the other comments, we’re not alone.

      We are definitely not alone. Which is reassuring – means we’re not crazy. 😉

    A spectacularly great read. Now that you’ve had a sign from the Universe, you can maybe come help me find more of it 😉

      Hahaha, I see what you did there… 😉

      Glad you liked the post! Hopefully our travels someday have us crossing paths!

    so glad you found what you wanna do in life! some people deal with this issue for years and are miserable for their whole life, not knowing what makes them truly happy. now, once you figured it all out, you can focus on pursuing your dreams – and travels are surely a great way to live your life to its max! 🙂 I figured it all out back in 2005 when I was solo backpacking for a month through Europe so I guess this kind of trips are the best for understanding the meaning of life 🙂

      I always feel bad for people who never have the chance to figure out what they’re passionate about. I’ve known for the past few years that I was passionate about travel, but this summer absolutely confirmed it for me. It’s definitely a great feeling!

        once you cross an unviseable line with travelling you just wanna travel more and more and more 🙂
        guess we can consider ourselves lucky that we figure out our passion so early when others have to deal with this issue for years, sometimes never knowing the answer…

    I can’t wait to see where you get to next! I made that decision a few years ago and now travel is part of my life. I work abroad, I live abroad, I do anything I can to sustain myself abroad. (Besides prostitution of course haha). So Life is great when you follow your passions and the world will lead you the way!

      I’m convinced that if I want it bad enough, things will work out in the end. 🙂 You and others like you are proof that it IS possible!

    I took my first “real” trip in 2010 (solo to France for a week). As we took off down the runway to come home, I shed a few tears because I didn’t want to come back. At least not yet. I’m still not sure if it’s because I didn’t want to return to the “real” world or if I really enjoyed, as you said it, “the chance to be completely at your own mercy”. Perhaps it was both. But I, like you, started planning my future trips. I’m now trying to get a location-independent business going so that maybe, just maybe, I can be nomadic part time. Cause that’s the only way – short of winning the lottery – that I foresee the funds and flexibility to travel as much as I’d like. Can’t wait to hear about what’s next for you!

      Finding a career that would allow me to be location-independent would be so ideal for me, too. Hopefully we both can make it happen!

    Aww, that’s so exciting! I love reading that discovered an even greater passion for travel. 😀

      I was already really passionate about fitting traveling into my life. Now I may just want to MAKE travel my life. 🙂

    Wow, I can relate so much to this!

    Work hard and I’m sure those dreams of yours will come true sooner rather than later! 🙂

      I have a feeling a lot of travel bloggers will be able to relate to this. 😉

      A part of me is really glad that I finally “get it.” And the other part is desperately trying to figure out how to make it all happen!

    I can definitely relate to my experience, when i read your post everything resonated to me. I have basically been spending the whole year living abroad, and have to come back, at least temporarily, to my home country in December. This perspective makes me deeply sad, and I almost think of this as a “decline” in my life, which I find unbearable. Before this adventure, I had doubts about my ability to live far from home for such a long time, but I just thought “lets do it”, and I would never have thought it would be so hard to come back. Now, I just wish I could freely stay abroad forever and Im considering the idea of leaving my home country for good 🙂

      You never expect it to be difficult to come home – but sometimes that’s the hardest part! Good luck making your wish a reality!

    I had the same feeling after I lived in China for a year. I realized pretty quickly into it that being abroad turned me into a totally different person, one that loved travel and loved life, and I knew I wouldn’t be happy living in the States for a long time after, if ever. So two weeks after graduating uni I left the US for good and haven’t looked back. If you know what you want, then go for it! Yes there are sacrifices involved, but the people at home who truly care about you will understand. And you’ll never be happier.

      It’s so strange how being abroad really frees you up to be whoever you want to be. I definitely want to hold on to that freedom – and the new sense of self that I have!

    8 weeks versus 13 months – but you’d been prepping for and planning your travel for a long time, so I think you can honestly borrow Frodo’s lines.

    Good luck with the changes you’re making in your life – and congratulations on your epiphanies. Life is not a dress rehearsal! Take big bites!

      Yes, I think Frodo’s lines are apt. At least, they FEEL apt, so I suppose that’s all that really matters.

      And you are so right about life not being a dress rehearsal! I definitely plan to take huge bites, gulps, leaps – whatever!

        I realized after commenting that you’ve not been at all specific about *what* is next. A year of work/study in Australia and/or NZ? Diving in Bali?

        Inquiring minds want to know! 🙂

          I’ll let you know once I figure it out! 😉 Haha.

          I have a couple of things in the works, and I’d love to pick up some new long-term freelancing gigs that would allow me the freedom to avoid getting a “real” job for a while. But we’ll see.

          Doing a working holiday in NZ is most definitely in the plans for within the next couple of years, though. 🙂

            I have friends work/touristing in NZ right now, and another friend who quit her job and is on her way to Bali to learn to scuba dive before embarking on her adventures.

            What an awesome place this world is!

    This post makes me so happy. Finding out the thing you are most passionate is the thing you should be doing. *happy dance*

      Aww, thanks, Jade! It makes me pretty happy, too. 🙂

    I love this: “I wore a sunhat.”

    Glad to read about how this trip affected you. I’m sure the more you travel, the more you just might learn about yourself!

      Haha, I am NOT a hat person, so that one was a big deal!

      And yes, I have always been of the opinion that travel is the greatest learning experience a person can have!

    I had a similar experience last week when I came home from a 2 week holiday in Spain. I taught English for a week, met some amazing people and ended up going on a mini road trip around Spain. I found myself. I could finally be myself in a foreign country that didn’t supress me. I could be happy, spontaneous and free. I am not planning long term travel, I long to be that happy again.

      That’s awesome that you had such a great, eye-opening experience in such a short time, Stephanie! Hopefully you can hold on to that feeling of freedom.

        I am trying my best to hold on to the feeling of freedom, I think i’m addicted now! I’m looking at Germany or Italy for my next trip and travelling for the forseeable future next year in Asia and Australia!

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