Entries Tagged as 'Career'

>> In case you didn’t know, it’s 2013 >>

24Jan

I hate saying it, but I felt kind of apathetic about the New Year.  I didn’t even hear the countdown to midnight though I was in the center of it all in Chiang Mai – one moment I knew it was getting close to 12:00 and the next moment fireworks were going off – but I DIDN’T HEAR THE COUNTDOWN.  Does it count if you don’t hear the countdown?  It didn’t feel like it…

New Year's Eve 2013, Chiang Mai

Here it is, already the end of January, and I still couldn’t tell you a set plan, resolution or direction for 2013.  I don’t need things completely laid out, but it would be nice to have a little more clarity on what I will be spending this year doing.

I didn’t start Paper Planes to be another travel guide posting about the best spots and must-see attractions and can’t-be-missed activities.  I’m not always on the move and often don’t care too much about getting off the beaten path.

There are plenty of other blogs, resources, guide books, review sites, booking sites and travelers out there that have probably already said it all and can do it much better than I.  I’ve traveled a decent a bit, in a range of ways (and comfort), and have a good sense about things, but I’m not attempting to be your go-to guide for all things travel.  Personally, I hate all the hyperbole and don’t have the time to to study things to the point where I can offer a ‘guide’.  I usually don’t plan and research my trips extensively and therefore sometimes the posts on here may be a little haphazard as well – but real.

While I love sharing about traveling and living abroad, I also feel like this whole bloggy thing is an experiment in helping me figure out which direction(s) to go in my life and connect with others who are in similar situations.  I love learning about different people, cultures and lifestyles – but I also appreciate hearing about people just like me who I can identify, empathize and learn with.  It’s always reassuring to know someone else is having the same doubts, questions, problems, triumphs and experiences as you…especially when you’re trying to grow up and get your life in order (which I’m starting to realize is a never ending process).

What do I want to do?  Where do I want to be?  What do I want my life to be like?  What do I have control over and what do I have to accept?  These questions will stick with you throughout your life, but I think they’re especially prevalent in your 20s when, for the first time since kindergarten, you don’t have a set path laid out in front of you.  That takes some time getting used to and figuring out.

I left home because I didn’t want to wake up 2, 5, 10 years down the line and realize I was in the exact same spot I had been in after college.

Street art in Penang, Malaysia

You don’t need to leave home to find yourself, but for me that’s how I wanted to try going about things.  If I thought I could grow and create the wide range of experiences I’ve had while living abroad at home, I would be in the States now.  But I’m here.  And trying to work things out on my own terms.

I guess what I’m trying to say is that past few weeks have been spent thinking a lot about what I am doing, why I am blogging and what I want to be working toward…and I’m finally ready to refocus my intentions and get this year started.

Hopefully with a trip to the beach sometime in the near future…this is a travel blog after all.

 

If you’re in the same boat as me, you may want to check out these other travelers and writers who are also figuring out life one place at a time:

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>> Why I’m Not Going Home Yet >>

09Nov

When I first came to Thailand I thought I might be gone for about a year – teach a little bit and travel around SE Asia, then head to Australia and New Zealand, and ideally make my way home via Europe.  That was in May 2011.

Instead, I haven’t even managed to get out of SE Asia (wait, does India count?).  And I still want to see all those other places.

Chiang Mai Mailbox

I even have a mailbox

What it comes down to though isn’t about checking places off my list or adding stamps to my passport.  The real reason is that, even though I have now lived in Chiang Mai for more than a year, I still do/see/learn/eat/realize/experience something new everyday.

Everyday.

And that’s what’s keeping me here, for now.  Yes, you can learn, do or see something new everyday at home, but it’s more difficult.  You do the commute to and from work without actually being aware of what you’re doing.  You get used to your surroundings/routines/habits/expectations.  And that’s not a bad thing – it just makes it more difficult to recognize the new and experience something different.

I know the time will come when I want more stability, predictability and a home that feels like I’ll be staying there for a while.  But for now, I love the fact that I can still walk down the street and notice something new, learn something about where I am or appreciate something so little as realizing there’s a papaya tree in my back yard.  It’s the little things that make me stop and think or stick in my mind more than the big ones like, say, going on holiday to a new island or zip lining for the first time.

Ziplining in Chiang Mai

I hope that by the time I do go home or settle down in a place, I will be able to remember not to get too caught up in the familiar and still actively seek out or notice new things all around me.

What keeps you traveling?  Or how do you find new things to excite you at home?

Thai banner

 

 

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>> Why, hello >>

04Nov

I did it.

plane over bangkok

I started my own blog.

I have mixed feelings about this, and blogs in general to be quite honest, but here I am.

If you’ve been following me at Wanderlust and Lipstick, you already know that I’m originally from Seattle but have been living and traveling around Southeast for the past year and a half.  To learn more about why I made that move check this out, but otherwise, let’s move forward.

Being in my mid-twenties – and part of the difficult-to-please Generation Y – I’m working on figuring out where it is I’m supposed

to be and what it is that I’m supposed to do with my life.  While I was fortunate to have a good job and life back in the PNW, I knew I wanted to see something different and learn from other places and people.  I never want to wake up one day 5, 10, 20 years down the line, look around at my life and wonder, ‘This is it?  How did I end up here?’.  So, instead, I’m Eat, Pray, Love-ing it before the divorce and midlife crisis.

Since my first plane trip at two-weeks old, I’ve traveled throughout America, Europe, India and Southeast Asia, living and working in Seattle, London and Chiang Mai.  Over the past year and a half I’ve survived teaching English as a foreign language, seen new friends come and go, been in in a Chinese movie, backpacked for two months on my own and one with a guy I barely knew, fought with massive Thai cockroaches, been in a motorbike crash, gotten used to fish- and seaweed-flavored snacks, learned to drink beer with ice in it, felt completely alone and also massively taken care of, can eat chilies like a pro met some incredibly generous people,  learned am learning Thai, wondered at ancient temples and everyday shrines and managed to create a little life and community of my own in Northern Thailand.

So, there you have it.  Thanks for coming.  Check back here often for travel tips, , successes and mistakes as I try to figure out what makes me tick and where to travel to next.  Also, as I deal with managing this blog and all the technical stuff, please be patient with me – it’s my first time.

Wooden Walkway in Laos

Take a look around to learn more about me and Paper Planes here or how to contact/like/pin/follow/all around stalk me here.

“Live, travel, adventure, bless and don’t be sorry.”  — Jack Kerouac

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