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Road Trips

Travel Connects to The Past, Present, and Future

Black Arizona landforms against a vibrant, flaming sunset

Travel connects us, not only to people in present day, but all thorugout time. I realized this while road tripping in 2016. On my quest to complete my “All 50 States” tour, I pulled over along a desolate highway. The sunset views against Arizona’s Painted Desert deserved so much more than a passing glance as I drove through. I got out of my car and stood amidst absolute, complete silence and watched nature take place.

I’d never seen anything like it. Iridescence cascaded from the heavens into earth like a visual coloratura across the sky.  The creator painted momentary murals on rock formations. Fallen, petrified trees from the late Triassic period, — 225 million years ago —- interspersed throughout the barren landscapes soon gave way to majestic silhouettes accented by stars that seemed to applaud the performance.

There I stood. This little country girl a long way from home, standing somewhere between, “the bright blessed day and dark sacred night” that inspired Armstrong’s rejoicing in, “What a Wonderful World.”

Wonderful world, indeed.

God was just showing off.

At that moment, a long-buried movie quote rose to the surface of my mind:

 “In the desert, when the sun comes up, I couldn’t tell where heaven stopped, and Earth began. It was so beautiful.”

I finally understood. When I watched that movie back in 1995 and all the dozens of times since I liked the quote. I grasped the concept. But for the first time, while standing next to my hoopty, all alone in a desolate desert… I understood. I too struggled to distinguish Heaven from Earth.

Engulfed in awe of this masterpiece, my heart overflowed with gratitude that the composer saw fit to share this moment with me. Surrounded by both vast nothingness and the density of significance at once, all the people I love came to mind. I wanted them to have a moment like this. I wished my loved ones could witness a moment like this. I craved for everyone to feel all of this.  And perhaps they had.

As I edit this post six years after original publication, I recall the same scene, when Jenny tells Forrest that she wishes she could have been there with him. He responds, “You were.” 

Just like Forrest, in the most beautiful moments of life, my heart and mind go to those I love; they are with me.

And maybe that’s a phenomenon of travelers. Of observers. Of dreamers or artists.  When surrounded by beauty we are connected by generations of love. Travel connects us to other travelers. Travel connects us to ideas. To dreams. And to beauty.

desert sunrise with beautiful artistic hues of pinks, purples, and blues.
I hope everyone get to know how these colors feel in their lifetime.

Historian Perspective

As a historian, I view the world through a historical lens. Whereas an engineer may look at something and ask how? I ask why and look for clues left by previous generations to learn the story.  I travel to cover as much ground as possible. So I intentionally increase the probability that I trace the steps of my predecessors.  I try to have many unique experiences so when others experience the same, it bridges a gap of understanding in a way that couldn’t be explained by words and pictures.

For example, I grew up in a military family. Saturday mornings often started with a G.I. Party (the military community knows this is not an exciting event). Getting ready for school came with the expectation that it only takes three minutes to run “The Three S’s” (sh!t shower and, shave). After 22 years growing up in that environment, it wasn’t until I experienced military training I learned for myself. It is indeed possible to get ready in three minutes (which is 90 seconds more than what’s actually needed). 

That experience helps me relate to every warfighter in every land — froom every timeperiod.  It helped me understand and connect my veteran parents, grandfathers, uncles, cousins in a way that I didn’t before. I could empathize with soldiers embracing the suck in Brandywine. I had more data to consider the thoughts and emotions of officers battling their former West Point classmates. Because of my experiences, I recognize the same mentality of young soldiers defacing markers in Colonial Park Cemetery, Savannah. Shared experiences, especially those like travel, connect us to those past and present.

Travel Is a Vehical to Connects Us To The Past

Travel is one of the experiences that increase connection. Visiting Charleston filled me with an enormous sense of connection to the past. Although I don’t know for sure, the statistics make it highly probable that someone from my family’s heritage walked the same cobblestone streets centuries before. Living in Boston gave me insight on why as a young graduate student, Martin Luther King lived in Roxbury, so far from Boston University. And why many Black students and young professionals make the same choice today).

Visiting the homes and frequented localities of those from the past gives a snapshot of the surroundings, how they lived, and what influenced their thoughts. It helps to understand how they worked through some of their decisions and thought processes.  Even after reading Little Women multiple times and watching both versions of the movie, it wasn’t until I visited the March family home, Orchard House, in Concord, Mass, that I felt that I really got to know the family and understood the context of their lives. 

Tracing the steps of James Baldwin, Richard Wright, and Lois Mailou Jones in Paris’ Latin Quarter helped me to understand their muses. I know, from visiting the Kennedy Library, that Jacqueline took a cruise to Paris with friends during college. It was the best year of her life. And I can only imagine why based on my trips abroad in college, my trips to Paris, and the best year of my life which happened while abroad in Latin America.

Travel Connects to the Future

I don’t know details of travel or frequented localities for most of my family.  I’d like to able to know and connect with my family in the same way I do with historical or fictional figures; but so much of my family’s history went undocumented.

Today, I do have some say over the breadcrumbs I leave for my future family. I can be intentional about the paths I leave behind. I can travel to search out a diversity of experiences. That way I can find some commonality with people I encounter today and yesteryear. But also in the future.

So, I travel. I do things. I leave clues for those to come.   Perhaps, when my progeny find themselves randomly out in the middle of the desert, witnessing nature in all its glory, and they’re longing for someone to share it with, they’ll know they had an adventurous grandma/auntie who went everywhere and saw everything and felt the same way. Travel connects us to people — past present and futre.

Other stories on how Travel Connects us, check out these stories:

5 Reasons to Love Multi-Generational Travel • GloBelle Affairs

In Destinations, North America, United States on
August 10, 2014

Sea To Shining Sea Tour: The Prequel

Hey y’all!

After three years and 26 countries abroad, it’s time I brought my wanderlust back to the United States. But that’s not to say my adventure stops here. I’m back with a few weeks on my hands and kind of, got the spontaneous idea that I should undertake the epic adventure of a cross country road trip from one ocean to the other. This spiraled into the goal of seeing all 50 states.   Then got dialed back to the more attainable goal of seeing all 50 before My 30th birthday instead of all in one fail swoop.  I was inspired by Forest Gump’s epic run, Louis & Clarke’s trail, Oprah’s cross-country road trip with Gail, and a “how to see all 50 states” map. Then I altered everyone else’s trails for my own. Folks that I talk to still seem a little confused as to why I’d want to undergo such a pilgrimage. Here’s a bit more on what I’m hoping to get out of this journey.

1.  This is my re-Americafication. I want to Re-emerse myself in all that is glorious about my homeland.

2. I’ve always wanted to see it all. In elementary school I dreamed of visiting all 50 states. At 18, I put it on my bucket list of things to do before I died. Why not complete it before I turn 30?
3. I’ve seen so much in other countries and so little of my own.  I was talking to a German collegue who said he’d seen the Grand Canyon but not Germany’s most popular tourist attraction, Neuschwanstein. Well, I was the reverse. The American who’d seen Neuschwanstein but not the Grand Canyon. I’ve seen he great pagoda but never times square.  I’ve seen several American Military Cemeteries in France but never Arlington.  On these little, trivial but fun, social media quizzes that ask how much of the world you’ve seen, sights in America are always the ones to lower my score.   
4. When I describe America or Americans, I’m really describing the south or southerners.  I often think, “We don’t do/have this in America.” Correction! We just don’t roll like that in the south. And apparently, there’s more to America than The South.
5. I always thougt I’d focus on seeing the world while I was young and able bodied and save America for when I got too old to fly or had too many kids for it to be advantageous to fly to europe.  But there’s no time like the present to check off the o’l bucket list.  My mom thought I should wait until she retired so she could go with me…but who knows when my schedule will allow adventure like this again. Seize the day! This is one instance where I believe in the whole, don’t put off til tomorrow what you can do today, bit.
Forrest Gump’s Run
http://www.centives.net/S/2012/forrest-gumps-running-route/

And here’s my plan:
Since I’ve already been to all the Southern states, in the essense of saving time behind the wheel, they took less priority. One way rental fees will cost a fortune good thing all my lodging will be with the friends I have sprinkled across this grande nation. 

I’m crazy excited! On this tour,  I’ll travel to see things and learn things more than doing things.  I have a feeling this won’t be the last. On my next adventure across the states I’ll focus more on being active and doing things. I expecting plenty of time to reflection and my perspective to be forever altered. I’ll keep you posted! 
xxx,
Belle