Filtering by Tag: freedom

On the Road to Nowhere: The Chase of that Eternal Summer

“To live is so startling. It leaves but little room for other occupations.” -  Emily Dickinson

***

“I don’t want to break anyone’s heart,” she assured him as she tiptoed her way into a love story.   

“Oh! What a wonderful thing it is to have one’s heart broken. As long as it gets opened when it is broken” he said.

Then he added, “The best thing that could happen to a heart is to have it broken open by guess what: love and suffering.”

***

The third week of January, I arrived in Tasmania, or ‘Tassie’ as I got to call it. A term of endearment for an Australian island located off the southeastern coast of the country. If the compass continues to point south, the next piece of land  to be reached is Antarctica, if west, Argentina. 

‘Tasmania - Explore The Possibilities’ are the words embedded at the bottom of each license plate and her first piece of advice to me; words that were delivered the second I stepped out of the airport gates having arrived from New Zealand into the heat of the Tasmanian summer.

I could’ve went east, west, north or south. I had no plans for the next coming months or intentions of coming up with one. Tasmania however, seemed to have some things lined up for me. 

“How long have you been in Australia?” I often was asked by the locals.

“I’m going on two months. But I haven’t been to the mainland. I’m going on two months. In Tassie only.”

“Two months here!?!”

“What have you been doing!?!” 

“Exploring. Exploring the possibilities,” was my answer referring to the words inscribed on the vehicles’ plates.

I spent two months in Tasmania. Two months doing exactly what she encouraged me to do from our first balmy encounter.

hobart, first light. 

After spending a week in Hobart, the capital of Tasmania, I set off to Bruny Island. The island is reached after pedaling thirty-seven kilometers - or twenty-two miles - south to the port town of Kettering, then taking a ferry. It would had taken me two hours to get to the port. It took me nearly three days to get there. 

During my stay in Tassie, I continued to hear about how beautiful Bruny Island is. I only heard about it because I never saw it. I never made it there.

My travels to Bruny Island can be summed up with the words Emerson once wrote: “Life is a journey, not a destination.”

Setting off to Bruny, after getting lost on my way out of Hobart and having taken the steepest route available, I made it to a campground by sundown. That evening, I learned a few things about bows and arrows. Something that for years I’ve been curious about.

I have no desire to hunt for animals in the wild. But I do have a strong desire to understand the huntress in me; a primal behavior that in the past has had me hunting on the wrong prey: men and something I used to call love. Most times both intertwined. All times creating havoc in my life. 

These days, I seem, and prefer, to be hunting wild islands, hills and craft beer. Most times all intertwined. All times creating havoc in my life. Or during the next morning at the very least.

After my first night of sleeping in the Tasmanian bush and falling asleep to the hops of the wallabies, I woke up to the scent of desert sage.

The same scent that filled the inside of my tent in times when I went back to the desert after moving away from it. Nights that were spent under the stars. Nights in which she tenderly held my body as I pressed it against her.  

The same scent that accompanied me as I ran the desert trails during evening runs.   

The same scent that for about fifteen minutes inexplicably filled the air of my first morning in the bush.

I searched for sage. I couldn’t find it.   

Yes. This is where I need to be.  

Certainly so. I was heading exactly towards where I needed to.  

I was heading in the direction to nowhere.

The following day, and shortly after an afternoon downpour, I pitched the tent again.

That evening, I met two wise women, both in their early thirties and both traveling independently. They have been hitching rides around the world for three years. They met on the road two years ago, and have become close friends since.  They continue to travel each on their own, and when possible they meet somewhere in the world. This time, they met in Tasmania. The day after, one was Nepal bound, the other one was headed to the mainland.

They asked me to join them for dinner.  

Dinner turned into an evening long conversation which started with them sharing their experience of a Rainbow Family gathering they had attended days before.

I listened.

Soon and somehow, the conversation veered off.

I listened even closer.  

Pay attention Frances, pay attention. 

The conversation took a plunge right into the topics that for weeks, I’d been restless about. Matters I initially thought I had sorted out, yet they were creating much confusion in my head as of late - long term travels, budget, becoming a better human, life projects. Purpose. The underlying reasons about why we choose to leave, why we choose to return and when the right time to return is - if there is such a thing.  

“Always ask yourself the reason why you started. Always go back to that reason. Let that be your guide in life when you question why you chose the path you are on,” they concluded.  

The discussion finally opened up to fear. A fear I’d been battling with and turned into a powerful source of anxiety.  

But fear of what? Fear of whom? 

That night, I fell asleep to the ebb and flow of the ocean.

I woke up to a searing sun, shortly after, falling ill on the road as I made my way to the ferry.  I reached out to a farming family who opens their home to traveling cyclists and they took me in for the night. I spent the rest of the day on their farm, resting and recovering inside a canvas tent from what seemed to have been a migraine.

I’m purging. This is not a migraine. I’m purging.  

I fell asleep as I observed the wildlife go on about life while I pondered my own.

Morning came. I clipped on the panniers to my bicycle, expressed my appreciation and goodbyes to my hosts and instead of continuing to Bruny Island, I cycled back to Hobart.

Under the rain.   

This road has taken me to where I needed to go.

I was granted from the world what I was in need of.  It was time to return to where I came from.

I strive for depth instead of width as it relates to my intimate relationships. 

Soon after I landed in New Zealand, I started seeking depth as much as I could. Whenever possible, extending my stay in places I connected with instead of bagging cities and town after town. 

the beautiful nicoleta boii in all of her splendor.

My travels in Tassie allowed me to practice that. Depth. Not width.

After some time in Hobart, a bus dropped me off somewhere on the Tasman Peninsula and I was back in the bush.   

I cycled the peninsula where I followed most of the convict trail. Tassie, because of its ruggedness was used as a natural jail, much of the island was a British Empire penal colony during the 1800’s. 

The convicts were sent on a long journey from Britain by ship. The British trusted that the Tasmanian wilderness would deter prisoners from escaping. The stories crafted within the prison walls were ones of abuse, neglect and psychological torture.    

“There is no worse punishment than robbing one’s freedom. Or one’s mind.” Unknown.

Some of them did escape. One of them even disguised himself as a kangaroo and tried hopping his way into freedom.

the beautiful nicoleta boii and her companion. tasman peninsula. 

After cycling and hiking around the peninsula, I headed to Maria Island, another convict settlement that was built on a small island located off the eastern coast of Tasmania.

Maria Island is a natural wildlife sanctuary. The island receives many visitors but most of its residents are wombats, pademelons, kangaroos, wallabies, parrots and Tasmanian devils. The rest of Tasmania is populated by these in addition to poisonous snakes, spiders, platypus, quolls, echidnas, black swans, black cockatoos, currawongs, lizards and many others I didn’t get to see. Many times I wondered what else would be hidden in the island.

If one were to turn Tassie upside down, what would come out?

If I were to turn myself inside out, what would I see?

baby wombat in mother's pouch. maria island. 

After hiking part of Maria Island, I continued my travels along the eastern coast heading north. I cycled and hiked the Freycinet Peninsula and walked out knowing much about ‘how not to pitch your tent before a wind storm.’

The road then took me to Bicheno, where I foraged wild berries from the beach, ate fish and chips - a ‘break the budget’ treat - and cut several inches off my hair.

From Bicheno, I cycled away as a woman with less curls, and towards a life of singlehood after seeing my own love story come to an end.

Two ways of lessening the load one can say.  

With a final push towards St. Helens, a stay at the stunning Bay of Fires and the weekend filled with dips into the cold waters of the ocean, vast glowing skies, chocolate, books, a sand storm that almost blew my tent away and the companionship of two souls that brought calmness into my shaken soul, I wrapped up a month of cycling and tenting along the isolated eastern coastline of Tasmania.

bay of fires. 

Traveling by bicycle can be seen as slow. It is so slow; it is in fact just a little faster than walking. The other morning two runners passed me by as I rode my loaded bicycle. That made me smile.  

 

During this time, I observed the tide of the sea. It slowly comes, it slowly goes.  It advances, it conforms, it retreats. Over and over again. As many times as it needs to.  

Although I travel slowly, so much has been lived, thought, and felt since I left home, during my travels in New Zealand and Tasmania.

It was time to retreat.  I decided it was time to go slower.

So I went for a walk. A long little walk.  

Within a week, I was on a track in the middle of the Tasmanian western wilderness wearing hiking boots, a willing heart and carrying twenty kilos in my pack. A disproportionate amount of those kilos were chocolate. Carrying that much weight on my back never felt so good. 

overland track. day one. cradle mountain. 

This walk brought my time on the island to an end.

After so much pedaling, walking and several encounters with snakes, a few battles with possums in the middle of the night in an effort to defend my borrowed territory, or at least my rice, my tuna, my chocolate, and prevent the imminent hole in my tent, after a standoff with a forester kangaroo while riding my bicycle on a gravel road, and a hide-and-seek session with a spider the size of my right palm (not the left), I had an encounter with a heart. 

Ah! It was then when I learned that this heart of mine had been cracked by no one else other than myself.

During that encounter, I also met with a dug-out wound. An old and deep down the heart wound that when it rots it stenches contaminating the air I breathe.

And the way I love.

My days in Tassie were not all idyllic nor all filled with downhill routes, peaceful sleeps, and marsupials.  

There was the night when I arrived to the tent and found the tarp half gone and its contents soaked because the wind blew so strong and the rain seeped in.    

Or that day where I had to decide which one to do: one) to pedal two) to vomit three) to do both.  

There was another time when at two o’clock in the morning, three of us got up and held my tent against the wind hoping my shelter would not break. 

There were many other evenings with no connection back home.

And then, there was that one hot afternoon after leaving Bicheno when the connection back home was lost. Lost for good.  

There were even many more attempts of connecting into my being. Failing every time.  

There were days in which deep isolation and fear tremored the yarns of this soul.

Those days were hard. Those days schooled me and some of those instances today, do make me smile.

Then, there were the many other days.

The very early mornings when I rushed out of my tent to the beach and waited for the sun to be seen on the horizon.

Many other days in which I celebrated with a shower, the possibility of washing my soiled clothes and brushing my teeth with running water. 

There were the many instances when countless reasons to call this off were found, and there was the one instance, when the one reason why I didn’t was thought of, and why I still haven’t. 

There were times when I peeked through the door of my tent and saw a wombat with her young tucked into her pouch making a patch of grass their evening meal. Or the night I caught a Tasmanian devil scurrying away.  

There was the rain that poured cleansing away the tears from my face. The tears that come with the pain of growing up, of expanding, of rooting in. Of choosing to be aware, of choosing to feel instead of choosing to numb in.

The tears that come with living a dream.  And the ones that come from surrendering to love. 

Some days were spent in the company of two people that unbeknownst to them, held me during a period of confusion as I attempted to figure out the mess I made out of my heart.

lisa and stefan, two noble souls and kindred hearts i met in hobart. they cycled in se asia, tasmania and currently enjoying beautiful new zealand. bay of fires.

There were many evenings where the budget only allowed for a simple dish of rice and tinned fish. 

And in that simplicity joy was found.

Many moments were filled with the kindness of individuals who allowed me in their homes, provided me food, a safe space to spend the night and their friendship.

There was a day when I was given enough food so I could stay additional days in the wild and summit the peak of a mountain. I could’ve stayed another week with all the food I was offered.

There were the mornings when upon rising by the beach, I was offered an espresso with milk. Or the cold morning that shortly after waking up in the rainforest, a cup of hot tea was delivered to the door of my tent.

And there was that late afternoon when I bathed in the lake after a hot day.

And the late morning when atop a waterfall, I soaked my naked body in the cold waters of the river and I watched as it washed the filth away from my skin.  

There were the many hugs received.  

Hard days are good teachers.

For those days, there is chocolate, friends and craft beer. And the shot of whisky that was poured out of a Nalgene bottle.

overland track. day six. two latinas in the wild. ana, a colombian living in australia and finishing her phd. finding a woman in the wild on her own is a rarity. much more, a woman in the wild on her own, who carries her own pack and her own darn fine whisky. And shares it with others. 

But the other days teach me even more. Those are the days that teach me that of which I want to learn of.

They teach me love.

“Beautiful, it’s because moments like these, an experience like this, that your heart gets opened. And we grow. That’s how we learn to love...”

The words I once heard over the phone.   

“If you want inner peace find it in solitude, not speed, and if you would find yourself, look to the land from which you came and to which you go.” - Steward Udall

On the track, other than the hut conversations during the mornings and evenings, and the occasional hiker passing me by, most of the time I was on my own.

Walking. Sitting. Feeling. Alone.   

Yet in the wild, I’m never alone. In the wild, I’ve never been scared.

“Are you alone? Aren’t you scared?” are two questions that as a woman traveling solo I’m often asked.

Yes, I travel alone. Yes, there are times when I’m also scared.

But I’m not scared of bears and mountain lions. I’m not scared of snakes or spiders.

I’m not scared of getting hurt out there and not being able to take care of myself.

I’m not scared of any of that. I’m scared of others things.

I fear I will let my thoughts prevent me from doing what my soul needs to do.

I fear I will keep comfortable and safe.

I fear I will not allow my light be shared with others.

I fear the day in which I would walk into a rainforest and won’t notice the tall ancient pencil pines soaking in the rays of the sun or painting the skies that hover above blue.  

I fear I won’t take the pack off my back and sit. And be.

I fear I won’t be kind to others. Or fair with others.  

I fear a day in which I stop falling in love.  Falling in love with myself.  

I fear living out of a closed heart.

I fear being harassed on the road because I have breasts and a vagina.

I fear not having the courage to make an art of blasting my own path even though at times it may not feel like the certain thing to do.

I fear not pursuing romantic love once more even though I failed at it again.

I fear my judgement of others. For that is a mere reflection of judgement onto myself.

I fear I may miss the cairn that others that have gone before me have left. I fear missing it simply because I failed to pay attention.

I fear the day I stop being a part of the silence of the wild.

I fear the day I won’t listen to the stories the wind carries, even on the days when there is no wind blowing nor stories to be heard.   

And I fear the day when fear becomes a reality.

As little as I’ve learned, I know my fear is too my illusion.

And the only illusion worth pursuing, the only illusion worthy of being real is love.  

Only love. 

overland track. cradle mountain / lake st clair national park

overland track. day 8. mount ida at sundown as shot from lake st. clair.

By the time I finished my walk, summer had already ended in Tasmania. The brisk autumn air was felt on my skin as I walked the last eleven kilometers of my trek.

That track I walked on, was the last stretch of that road.  

The road in which I explored the unrelenting fear that many nights robbed my sleep and controlled me.

It was on that road where I reconsidered my upcoming travels to Asia and an unfinished project I think of daily. It was on that road where I decided what to do with both.

On the same road, I finally admitted my defeat as my relationship with a man I was learning to love concluded and with that, the vanished hope of a much dreamed-of hug upon my return to the desert, a return to that place I call home. 

In retrospect, my initial travels in Tasmania were only the beginning of the road that eventually took me there.   

Over the course of two months, that road took me from the Tasman Peninsula to the southeast, then over to the rugged northeastern coastline and then west to the center of the wild of this Australian island.  

An island that can be described as enchanted. Where only desolate oceans filled with cold waters exists, where the green of the rainforest glows at night, where one can be with a mountain and be the only one atop, where strange looking creatures roam outside the tent while one sleeps and the calls of the parrots and the kookaburras wake one up just in time to be one with the first light.

Just to be. Just to feel.  

It was during my exploration of that road, somehow, somewhere, I discovered where I needed to be.

I needed to be nowhere.

And it was on that road, on that island, where I found a new spring even though it was autumn when I left. A spring that slowly is leading me into another summer and soon will guide me somewhere into the land of the rising sun.

And on that road, on that road that took me nowhere, I somehow, somewhere, found my way home.

“When you go out there you don’t get away from it all, you get back to all of it. You come home to what’s important. You come home to yourself.” - Peter Dombrovskis, Tasmanian Wilderness Photographer.

mount acropolis as shot before reaching its summit. cradle mountain / lake st. clair national park.

overland track. day nine. finish of the trek. lake st. clair national park.

 

 

The Resolution of the Doing. The Evolution of the Not.

“We saw you earlier on the road. We noticed you’re traveling by bike. You must need a lot of energy,” she giggled.

 “Here, this is for you.”

 She came to my campsite and handed me a bar of Swiss chocolate. Milk chocolate with hazelnuts.

I was hungry and there wasn’t any food in my bag. Evening was setting. The sun was falling into the arms of the horizon as it does every evening.  I’d been riding through the west coast of the south island that afternoon.

Highway six which starts north and goes all the way down south along the west. Traffic is minimal. There are hardly any people in this area. So I only have to keep an eye on the milk tankers and on the few tourists that every so often continue to drive on the other side of the road.

The population of New Zealand is 4.6 million. 1.38 million of those souls are tagged to the south island.  Although a developed country, internet in the south island is not as common as espresso, cheap beer on tap, ginger and stunning landscapes. Internet or supermarkets that is. 

Having no food in my bag and having no supermarkets that I could pedal to, the chocolate bar was indeed a gift.

A gift of love from a stranger. Serena from Switzerland.

Days before I was offered another gift from another stranger which seemed like no stranger at all and more like an old friend who I haven’t seen in years: Eva.

A kind soul in the body of a thirty six year old woman who left her corporate post in Germany.  

I met Eva the day after I arrived in Punakaiki – (say it fast: Poon-nah-kah-key).

Eva had been traveling for almost a year.  After leaving home, and before coming to New Zealand, she spent time in Switzerland and India. She should be in Hawaii now and then she will prepare for a return home in March.

“We’re so obsessed with doing and doing.”

“The other day I stopped to see this beautiful view,” she said.

“There was a man, getting out of the car, click, click, click with the camera. Then he gets back in his car.”

“So right before he left, I went to him.”

“I had to say something” she told me.

I asked her what she said. 

““What are you doing!?! You’re not seeing what’s in front of you.” Then he said that he was going to look at the view by looking at this pictures later, “

“I couldn’t believe that. I just couldn’t,” she waved her arms in the air.

“We just want to do and do and do and do. And we don’t appreciate what’s in front of us because we are too busy doing,”

“When I went to India I was overwhelmed because people were telling me “you have to see this and that and this and that. You have to go here and there,” and I was anxious. So I decided I didn’t have to do any of that,”

The afternoon I met Eva, I was struggling with exactly that. The not doing enough.

I had come to a very far away place and I wasn’t doing enough. I wasn’t hiking. I wasn’t taking pictures. I wasn’t seeing the places that I had heard of. I was traveling by bike and I wasn’t doing all the things that people who come to New Zealand on holiday do.

I wasn’t doing.   And because I wasn’t doing, this idea of coming to New Zealand on a bicycle was simply stupid.

Traveling by bicycle offers that experience which is different to what I’ve done in my prior travels: get on the bus, off the bus, drop your bag at the hostel, go do ‘fill in the blank’, eat and sleep. Repeat the next day.

Before I left the United States and unbeknownst to me, I was far too busy to even notice the anxiety contained within body.

It wasn’t until I started pedaling that I realized the stress my mind had been under.

It wasn’t until I started pedaling when that I realized the need for doing things I had.

Barely four months ago, I’d start my days at five o’clock in the morning. I’d check email and the meetings I had scheduled that day. 

“Yay. I have only six meetings today and not twenty.”

Nine o’clock would make its way onto the clock and I’d look at my phone every five minutes, at my calendar every twenty to keep track of the fifteen meetings I had to attend in an eight hour work day. That didn’t account for the desk bound work that piled up. Work that many evenings, I ended up taking home. To then work some more on Saturdays at eleven at night, to work some more on Sunday afternoons from the coffee shop.

Repeat five times a week. Repeat fifty times a year.

Repeat forty times in a lifetime.

IN THE ONE AND ONLY LIFETIME.

‘How we spend our days is how we spend our lives.’

“What are we doing to ourselves?” I asked Eva.

She sighed.

“How many hours have you worked today?” I would ask the manager from this hostel I stayed in.

“I’m not counting them. I rather not,”

The next evening, I would ask her the same thing. And the next one too.

“Don’t do that to yourself,” I would advise every evening.

Stop with that bullshit Frances, you’re the one who quit your job.

Yes. That’s me.

It was a lot easier to organize an escape, to mine blast away the path of comfort and knowingness, to eradicate anything that could pull me back so I had nothing to return to when things got hard on the road, when I wanted to go back and the excuses for returning rained on me as much as it rained on highway six.  

It was easier to do all of this than to figure out how to make this busy-job-thing and this living-with-depth thing work like a tandem parachute. Week after week trying to only discover that the expert in this tandem arrangement, the one who pulled on the parachute was Job and everything else, meaning Life, was strapped to Job.  So when the weight on the tandem became burdensome, Job detached from Life, pulled out the parachute and watched Life fall from the skies slap landing on the ground from 15, 000 feet.

My job kept me safe, it kept me sheltered. And I got comfortable.

And because I was too comfortable I got scared.

My job kept me busy. Very busy. A busyness that became louder and louder the more time passed by. Not because I did more but because its echo shouted back at me every Sunday evening as I prepare my mind for another week.

Then Friday evenings ticked themselves onto the calendar and I was drained. Physically, mentally and emotionally wasted.  

And because I was so drained, I didn’t notice how consumed I was. I didn’t have the mental and emotional output to invest into doing what I wanted. Or perhaps, what I was in need of: depth.

It was not the job I had, it wasn’t the corporation I worked for. It was my mind. It was how my brain was wired. It was me.

Life was good however. As of the last few years, I’ve worked hard in putting mechanisms and controls in place that allow me to live a life in which physical, mental, emotional and spiritual hazards are minimized. That is an eloquent way to say: I never take shit from anyone.

And because life was good, it made it even more difficult to pull the plug.

'How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.'

Those were the lines of Annie Dillard and the words that popped in my head every Saturday morning as I contemplated this life I was given and how I was living it.

Yet, the times I posed Annie Dillard’s words as a question, I wasn’t so sure I was comfortable hearing the answer.

Days were good but busy. Too busy.

I didn’t want to be shallowly busy. I needed to be deeply busy. I needed depth, not width.

I didn’t want the noise of a vain, comfortable and busy life.

So when I told my manager I was leaving, she said:

“Life isn’t a dress rehearsal. Go do what you need to.”

Life slows down when you travel by bicycle.

There are three things I have to do each day I’m on the road: 1) pedal 2) eat 3) find a place to sleep.

The other days when I’m not on the road, slowly, very slowly, I give myself permission to do what I’m not used to: nothing.

And when I do do something, I do things I wasn’t able to do three months ago.

I wake up to the songs of the birds.

I wake up and watch the sunrise from a hill or from a lake.

I slowly drink my café con leche. I can actually taste it now.

I spend countless of hours at coffee shops. I traded spreadsheets for coffee, for writing, for reading.  

I hike on a Monday morning.

I run on a Tuesday late afternoon.

I take my bike on a day trip without having to wait for the weekend.

When I’m sick, I offer my body the nourishment it needs so it can heal.

Sometimes the best treatment is time and gentleness.

The days when I pedal, I have time to notice how the scent of the land changes. How the ferns seem different; how the greens are of different shades. How the moisture of the air changes.   

Every day, I have time to notice other landscapes.  

I have time to explore my anxieties.

I have time to sit with my fears.

I have time to learn and unlearn.

I have time to think.

I have time to feel.

I have time to create.

I have time to watch me grow.

I have time to become.

I have time to figure out who this better human is and how she is showing up in life. For herself and for others. 

I have time to just be.

And I know this thing that I’m doing won’t last forever and at some point, I have to return to the world of comforts, politics, elusive securities, and do’s and do’s and do’s.

But for now, I have committed a year of my life to travel by bicycle.

Just one year of this 70 + year if I’m lucky lifetime.  That’s 1.43% of my life.

I have committed a year of my life to learn how to sit still.

I have committed a year of my life to listen. 

I have committed a year of my life to being away so that I can come back.

A man by the name of Terry Pratchett said:

“Why do you go away? So that you can come back. So that you can see the place you came from with new eyes and extra colors. And the people there see you differently, too. Coming back to where you started is not the same as never leaving.”

Two thousand fifteen is now written as one of those four letter years: epic.

As epic as two thousand twelve and two thousand thirteen were. Those were years of unrest, exploration, discovery. Pivotal years in which expansion and growth came disguised as suffering, confusion; all of it all taking me to the place I needed – not wanted to - to be.

My two thousand fifteen was more of a year of paying attention, of mere observation. Times of allowing these fears to be and of learning how to be at ease and find joy in what's uncomfortable. It was a year when the questions were asked.

The year in which amongst all this doing, something snapped. What seems now to have fallen out of place at first, however, is now falling back into its place. This time into its proper place.

A year of ‘it is now or never’.

And over 'never', I chose 'now'.

It was the year in which this vow, this fast I committed to more than three years was broken with a special being.

A handsome man who was placed on my path and who appears to have the wisdom of understanding this complex soul and treating this heart with much love and compassion.

As the clock approached midnight, I thought about all the doers and the dreamers and the souls who take a stand for something.

As I stood in the middle of the crowd in Queenstown, New Zealand, 8,000 miles west from the place I call home, I silently toasted to this:  to having the courage of asking yourself the very tough questions and when the answers seem to create pain and unrest, to find the resolve to change them.

Two thousand sixteen will be the year of the planned return. That year in which I will ask the question again:

Frances, are you spending your days in the same way you are wanting to spend your life?

Frances + Eva, Punakaiki, November 2015 


Godzilla Rides a Bicycle

"There are two hills, big hills, and then after is all downhill from the last one. When I see Nelson from the last hill, I'm glad to be there. And that's me, driving..."

"But you will be fine..." she reassured me trying to convince herself.

And off I went to the coastal town of Nelson. And yes, there were two big hills and some scary descents.

I thank the skies - sometimes that is - for my not so sane brain. If the sanity wires would had gotten plug in, up there, coming down, I’d still be up there.

The last hill coming down was a reminder of my gorgeous Colorado and its million dollar highway, the 550. The scenery, the tight turns and no guardrails. Add trucks coming down with their highest gears on carrying petrol, wooden logs, cattle, and a Latina on her loaded bicycle.

It was a ride that got me to rethink all of it.

Yet again. So let me back up. Lets go back to my very first ride which was ...

A week ago. A week ago was when I first got on my loaded bicycle. I rode it in the hostel I was staying in Wellington. On the hostel's hallway. I didn't make it far. I wasn’t able to keep the balance. Then, the bicycle fell on the floor and I couldn't lift the thing.

Truth is about to hurt…

A box was already enroute to Grand Junction, Colorado. From New Zealand.

Another box was then enroute to a man I've have somewhat grown used to calling ‘my boyfriend’.

 “I'm sending you one of my journals," I texted him.

 "I won't open the box until you come back home.” he texted back.

 If there is solid proof of a trusting relationship, try sending your three-year-soul-deconstruction-journal to your boyfriend of sixty plus days. If he reads it and if he still sticks around, he is a brave one.

But what I meant to tell him was that he could open it and read it. And that I hope his medical insurance provides trauma therapy.

I brought too much, fuck me. I fucking did it again. I brought too much. I still have too much.

Stupidity turned to anger. My bicycle landed on my left leg as I put the bicycle back into my room hoping it would disappear. I headed out to town with a bruised knee. I came back to the hostel with a belly filled of Persian pie and the brain filled with the million dollar question: how the fuck am I going to ride this thing?

And she was still there, perched against the bed. Beautiful Nicoleta Boii, the bicycle of my dreams, looking like a dinosaur with two wheels. I hoped for someone to take it but then I forgot not even Godzilla could have pedaled away on the thing.

Sunday morning came quickly and it was time for me to start pedaling down to the ferry that will take me to the south island.

Instead, I went out for a run and then for some espresso.

And Kiwis do know how to make a nice espresso. 

"May I have a fifty ounce flat white, please? I'm having a mental breakdown..."

But it was a bit too late. The brain wires had already shifted. The dragons were causing havoc in the dungeon upstairs.

I was in for some scary shit. Some shit I have not deal with in a long time.

I soon was slashing the dragons that come to visit every so seldom. The dragons I have learned to tame over the past few years. As tame as they have been, they don't lose their chance to poke their bloody fiery eyes through the creases of the cages they keep to.

And I'm not a bit surprised they want to make their appearance this early in my travels.

It's their land and a much known territory: she is alone, she is far away from home, she is terrified and she is yet again crafting the self in the lands of the unknowns.

Self-doubt is stealth. She is a lofty motherfucker. But I like to think I’m older and wiser.

 “OK, what’s up?” he asked over the phone.  

 And in between tears and sobs, the meltdown I haven’t had in months as I prepared to leave behind my corporate life in Denver came rushing in.

 “I have no idea what I’m doing. I’m in fucking New Zealand. I’m scared shitless.”

 Wow. You finally let it out.  

Ah. Nothing like telling the truth to yourself and to the man that somehow has figured out how to lift the spirits of this wild woman up.

My chat with him was followed by an email from a person that seems to know my brain better than I do.

“Frances,

You can ride that bike, even though it's heavy. Start in a lower gear, not too low, 3rd or 4th, is best.

It's time for you to put your big panties on, you are no longer dealing with the pussy, corrupt, corporate, collegiate environment of good impression.

This is the Universe you are crafting with now. Be brave and ask for help. And stop letting your inflated pussy ego infecting you with doubt.

Get on that fucking bike and ride, you wuss of a woman!

Love…”

This man knows how to pull me out when I can’t do it on my own.

Three hours later, I made an appearance into the garden of my first hosts in the country: Val and Don. A wife and husband pair in their late 60’s, now retired and both into cycling. And big into setting clueless wannabes straight.

Val, a wild spirited artist who likes green and other vibrant colors. Don, a wood artist who can make miracles with his hands.

Not long after my grand and heavy entrance, they noticed the obvious.

“You have too much!” she said.

I shrugged my shoulders and said:

“I already mailed stuff back home,”

“Well, it seems like you still have your hair dryer in there.”

I smiled.

She then said:

“How about you leave Tuesday? Tomorrow, we empty your bags and we’ll figure out what to bring and not. The things you don't take, you leave them here, you do your travels and when you come back in three months, you pick them up. By then, you can figure what you need or don't.”

So we did.

With Val and Don I left another journal, one too many pens, one too many shoes, one too many too many, one too many just in case I get eaten by a bear in New Zealand, just in case a meteor crashes in New Zealand, just in case I encounter the chupacabras. In New Zealand. You just never know…

And one too many twenty pounds later, she said to me:

“You know what the difference between us is?” Then she added “You brought a bikini to swim in…”

 “I don't bring bikinis. I swim in my underwear or I just swim naked.”

 New Zealand: Beware! The bikini stayed behind.

 Later in the afternoon, I repacked all my panniers.

 The morning after, after having enjoyed an evening with Val, Don and their family’s company over dinner, bubbles, tea and dunking biscuits, I was ready to set off.

I did my first real test run. Something I should have done back home.

I ran back to Val’s.

“I can pedal. I can ride my bike!” I said to Val who was sketching while sitting in the sun room.

She looked up and said: “Well, that's a bloody miracle!”

 After good byes, off I went. 

 And the hills didn't take long to appear.

As Val put it: “You don't come to New Zealand if you don't want to do hills.”

And as I understand it today:

I don’t come to New Zealand, on a bicycle, unless I want to learn one thing.

Or thirty eight…

 

 francesfranco at hotmail dot com . current location: north america . previously: new zealand + australia + japan