“I finally figured out the only reason to be alive is to enjoy it.”
~ Rita Mae Brown
At 11:55pm on New Year’s Eve, I sit in a pizzeria near my hostel in Bogota, Colombia fiercely relishing the last crimson drops of the most delicious vino tinto I’ve had in months. A string of colored Christmas lights forms a series of W’s along the wall next to me while a festive rendition of “Feliz Navidad” invigorates the swirling mood outside the tranquil bubble surrounding my small wooden table.

In Bogota
The altitude (Bogota, in the Andean foothills, is 2,600 meters above sea level) has sent the potent nectar of the gods careening through my system at warp speed, causing toasty memories and thoughts to float to my mind’s surface.
In five minutes, I’ll have been traveling officially for nine full months.
Leaving California on April 1st for Barcelona seems like a hundred years ago. Like a hundred me’s ago. My personal evolution is churning. I feel it. I see with greater clarity, I hear with deeper empathy, I think with more acceptance, I feel with higher patience and understanding and passion and outrage and truth and love.
In the past month, my travels have delivered me from serene Sri Lanka to modern Taipei, Taiwan for Christmas, and then 36 hours, 5 airplanes, and 3 continents to vibrant Bogota for New Year’s Eve.

A display in the Taipei Airport
In the seaside towns of Galle and Mirissa Beach in Sri Lanka, I deliberately slowed down for two weeks. I needed to hit the travel pause button and catch my breath (and my budget). I let the natural metronome of crashing waves, palm-lined dirt streets glimmering with filtered daylight, fragrant curries, and heart-knotting sunsets sooth my pulse.

Mirissa Beach, Sri Lanka
I exhaled and allowed myself the bliss of writing, uninterrupted by sightseeing and tours, for days on end. In the evenings, I’d order a beer or tea and sit on the hotel porch or one of the crude thatch-roofed restaurants so close to the Indian Ocean that the high tide carried pink-tinged waves up the beach nearly to my sand-plastered toes.
I used this down time to think, to let my mind drift. Often it would drift over the past nine months of my travels, and into deeper territory. How my perceptions have changed about myself and the world; how I’m starting to view life.
The four months I spent in Asia have been extremely transformative for me. I’ve learned a lot about many of the continent’s religions (including Hinduism, Islam, Taoism, Sikhism, Zoroastranism), and found myself drawn by an invisible thread toward the philosophy of Buddhism.
I’ve never been religious, and I suspect I never will be, but the values of the Buddha ring so tremendously true for me.
Buddhism teaches acceptance, tolerance, equality, understanding, kindness and compassion. It’s about finding inner peace, enlightenment and happiness — not through money and stuff and things, but through the intangible; the mind.
“To enjoy good health, true happiness, and peace, one must first discipline one’s own mind.” ~ Buddha
The more I learn and study about this philosophy, the more I’m certain that I desire it as an irreversibly affixed mental appendage. I’ve started practicing mindfulness meditation, which calms and centers me and brings me back to the present instead of dwelling in the past or future. I think it will continue to help (as it already has) subdue my shadowy anxiety monster, my negative thoughts, and my dissatisfactions.
In the long run, even after I return to my normal existence in just three more months — I hope it (along with my travel experiences as a whole) will instill in me the wisdom to remember what is important in this life. This life is about working steadfastly (for as long as I must!) to find peace within myself.
The whole purpose of this life I have is to choose to be happy and enjoy it.

Galle Fort, Sri Lanka
At the stroke of midnight, I step outside the pizzeria into a lovely old plaza of Bogota’s Candelaria district, and stand still for a moment as firecrackers boom and bloom above the red clay tiled rooftops of brilliant-hued Spanish colonial-style buildings, one of which belongs to the local university.
Finally, grinning contentedly through wine-colored lips, I weave my way through the crowd of students and backpackers and rising shouts of “Feliz Ano!” and “Happy New Year!”in the direction of my hostel and waiting comfy bed.
It’s a new year to live — my resolution is to do just that, on my own terms.
Stay tuned for upcoming stories and photographs from incredible Colombia in South America!
Categories: My Wanderings: Month-in-Reviews, Uncategorized
Ohhh yes. We just have to live out this life to the best we can. Well said. Amazing pics on ur post. Incredible! 🙂
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A beautiful post! Best wishes for your year ahead!
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Thanks, Meg — same to you! 🙂
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Happy New Year to you too! 🙂 there’s so many of us who cannot embark on a similar journey…and your posts help us travel, bring us knowledge… Thank you for this! 🙂 wishing you all the best in your journey!
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Happy New Year to you as well, Jessica — and thank you, that means a lot 🙂
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We all travel differently, you seem to have found a perfect balance in living, enjoying, going deeper into your travels by recording visually and in words. And sharing. Fascinating 9 months, and wishing you many more to come. In the meantime, welcome to the shores of Buddhist philosophy on which even non-religious minds can find potent inspiraton 🙂
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Thank you, Bea 🙂 I’m discovering how important balance is in so many aspects of life — I think the shore of Buddhist philosophy is a very good place to be, I’m getting a lot of value from it.
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Many travel to come The Wallflower Wanderer! Happy New Year! 😀
Hope one day I will travel outside the Philippines like you did. Keep safe always! 😀
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Thanks so much, Alona! Happy New Year to you as well!! 🙂
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Yeah! More travel to come this 2017 for all of us a traveler.
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Excellent, deep, reflective and thoughtful post, you certainly seem to be relishing the time you have, all the very best!
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I really am relishing it 🙂 Thank you!
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So inspired by you and your beautiful writing.
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Aw, thank you, Deb!! Happy New Year! 🙂
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What a beautiful reflective post that I feel I can relate to on so many measures. I especially love what you say about Buddhism. I too am not religious but do find many aspects of Buddhism as a beautiful way to guide me through how I want to live my life. Meditation and living in the now is truly important to me as I often tend to dream of the next trip or dwell about the past once when every day life wears me down. Beautiful post. Happy New Year!
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I agree, I think the emphasis on being present is one of the best — though most difficult to master, I think — aspects about Buddhist philosophy. I’m looking forward to trying to master it, though. Happy New Year to you, too! 🙂
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Happy New Year! Great message for us all!
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Thank you, Donna — Happy New Year!! 🙂
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What an incredible journey you are on. Keep enjoying.
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Thank you, Miriam!! 🙂
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