5 Reasons You Should Just Give Up And Stay Home
November 25, 2012 in blog, Inspiration
I’ve been talking a lot lately to folks who are pushing hard towards their dreams.
They’re working the equivalent of two full time jobs to break free from the one they’re sick of to change their whole lives. They’re courageous folks. But then, she goes out for drinks with a sister who ends up getting a whole bar full of dummies to mock her dream. And his family spends the holiday calling them absolutely crazy for bending over backwards to give their kids the world, literally.
But you know what I’ve decided? They’re right. All the naysayers. They’re right.
Living your dreams is dumb.
It’s unrealistic. It’s ridiculous. Why would anyone in their right minds give up the status quo? It’s so easy. So comfortable. It makes so much sense.
Here are five reasons you should give up all of those dreams of long term travel and just stay home.
1. You’ll sleep better
If there’s one thing that long term travel is, it’s one long parade of sleepless nights:
The first night anywhere is a tough sell. Add that to mosquito ridden jungle nights with that infernal drone outside your hammock, and the sweltering nights in concrete rooms with bars on the windows but no screens, and the parade of couches and floors that we’re so very grateful to collapse on and, well, you get the idea.
Just stay home in your soft feather bed. Sure, you won’t have the fantastic beach picture, or that story about howler monkeys and jaguars screaming around you in the darkness, but you’ll also probably live longer and you’ll definitely be better rested.
Don’t believe me? This night in Mexico; prime example.
2. You’ll be more comfortable
Who in their right mind gives up a warm house with a full kitchen, a bathtub, an easy drive to the grocery store and a flat screen T.V. for backpacks, long bus rides plagued by diarrhea, ocean crossings spent leaning over the rail, green with sea-sickness or pushing a bicycle with broken spokes for miles until she finds a repair shop.
Who indeed?
All of the critics are right. It’s nuts. It’s too hard. It’s smarter and safer to stay home. Of course if I have to die of something I’d rather it be adventure than boredom, but that’s just me. Listen to the blow-hards in the bar who’ve done exactly *nothing* with their lives and follow the status quo, their lead is clearly the one to follow, over your heart’s
Crossing the Mediterranean redefined uncomfortable.
3. You can pretend “they” don’t exist
If you stay home you can happily pretend that the whole scope of human experience and expression is wrapped up in your particular section of the Bible belt.
You can comfortably assume that poverty is defined (and taken care of) by the welfare office of your particular state. You can avoid the unpleasantness of naked children with flies dotting their inner eyes. You can happily believe that “our way” is the “right way” and that everyone, everywhere else clearly just needs to be set aright by being exposed to our clearer way of thinking, or believing, or governance.
If you stay home, you can pretend that “they,” whoever they are, don’t exist; or if they do exist, you can continue in your fantasy that you understand them perfectly. You’ll never have to be brought to your knees by a pile of skulls, or experience the fear of swimming in a dangerous political demonstration, or ask a few seminal questions about the wisdom of the drug war from the point of an AK 47.
Just stay home, it will be easier to continue in your delusion. Because when those walls are broken down, and you have to come face to face with “them,” you have to come face to face with yourself.
4. You won’t know what you’re missing
The best part of giving up your dream and just staying home might be that you’ll never know what you’re missing.
If you haven’t ever cycled into the yard of complete strangers only to find that they’re chosen family for a lifetime, you’ll never know that wonder. If you’ve never heard your six year old utter the words, “I’ve been waiting for this my whole life,” as he stares up at the Eiffel Tower, then you won’t know how much you want that moment to happen again, and again. If you’ve never stepped onto a brand new continent and felt the rush of the world expanding exponentially, you won’t miss it.
Listen to that harpy who tells you that you’re ruining your life by reinventing yourself. She’s right. There’s nothing on the other side that is better than living life between walmart, the office and the Elk’s lodge on Saturday nights, nothing you know you’re missing anyway.
It’s a serious downside to living your dreams, you know exactly what you’re missing. Instead of staying home, we redefined it.
5. You’ll be happier
Seriously, if you stay home, you’ll be happier.
Once the travel bug bites, once you let it get a grip on your heart, you’re going to yearn like you’ve never yearned before. For places you’ve been, for places you haven’t been, for the home you left, for people you miss, it’s one big black hole of discontent.
You’ll buy a mango in Wisconsin and whine that it’s not as good as the one you picked from a tree you were camped under in Puerto Arrista. You’ll be sitting on a perfectly perfect beach on the Andaman Sea and be ungrateful enough to wish you could get a decent glass of southern sweet tea. You’ll be that jerk who can’t get through a dinner conversation without saying something about, “When we were in Africa…” Your kids will come to blows with “normal” kids in the park over the veracity of their camel stories. You can trust me on that.
Stay home.
Find joy in what you’ve always known. Create community. Build a legacy in one spot for generations of your family. It’s a beautiful way to live life, and you won’t suffer with continual delirious night dreams of gibbon song and that lobster dish Lana served the night you left the island off the coast of Belize.
Hahaha! Love it. Ignorance truly is bliss 😉
VERY inspiring post!
When we were stateside, my kids complained about the inferiority of American yogurt. Germany has ruined us for dairy! And there is no better gelato than that little place outside the cathedral in Florence.
Then there were the discussions with our kids about drugs and homelessness, thanks to the beggars in London and Paris, and the olfactory walking tour in Leiden, Holland. You’re right, we should’ve just stayed home;)
And now…Europe isn’t enough for us. We have to visit the Middle East, because things are too ‘Western’ here, and I want to expose the kids to a culture that is different from what they’ve known. Maybe I should cancel & just watch movies on my appleTV?
Who KNOWS what living abroad is doing to my children?! Will snorkeling in the Red Sea and touring a Wadi on camelback ruin them forever?
Thanks for this post, Jenn. I loved it! 🙂 And somehow, I think my kids will not only survive, but they will be better adults because of their travels.
Keri… ha. Indeed. Apple TV. 😉
Fantastic and very resonant for me at the moment – thanks 🙂
Ah yes. This is perfect and so timely. We just spent our American Thanksgiving listening to all of the reasons how we are:
1) endangering our children
2) making gift giving really inconvenient
3) offensive and irresponsible in selling/donating our stuff
4) ruining our lives and our “security.”
5) naive
And let me tell you, they were very compelling reasons. I think we may just scrap the whole plan and stay home. 🙂
Too late I have the bug 🙁 or you can say I have both bugs now, travel and staying home. the constant struggle between the two. So all I can do is try to have a life that combines both, a home base for a while and travel for a while. Not sure at this point I can give up home completely or travel full time. I will let you know how that goes.
happy travels
Diana
I really love your writing and I love following your wonderful adventure. I hope that is piece pushes out doubts of people for whom this is their dream. I would like to comment though that people who don’t travel well that maybe be their dreams to, to stay at home, have a job and have children. If you say ‘have done no thing with their lives , aren’t you putting down their hopes and dreams. Everyones lifestyle is valid and important if it truly brings them happiness
The scary thing is, so many people actually believe this rubbish! We’re outta here, don’t care what anybody else thinks. I wish I’d been there to stick up for that girl in the bar.
What a great post!
Victoria… Not at all. I’m not putting down anyone’s dream. One of my very best friends is essentially a “non traveler” it is her stated dream (and we wax poetic about it all the time, actually) to build a sustainable farm, put roots deep in the community, be one of those older women who spur on younger women through the hard times of early motherhood, which is best done in person by babysitting, bringing meals and showing up to clean a toilet. She’s got vision like no one I know on that front. I gave a nod to her in that last paragraph. I really DO think it is a beautiful, useful, fantastic way to live… IF that is YOUR DREAM. What I’m railing against here, is NOT living your dream because of what other people think… in my friend’s case, there are people who think she should “get out there, do more for herself, work at something more than “just motherhood” etc…” EVERY dream is equally valid and my biggest dream is that everyone I love would be doing what inspires them and not care a bit about the bozos in the bar who tear them down over it… but the reality is that people DO tear one another down, more people will push you AWAY from living your dream than will build you up in it. We should all do the thing that brings us happiness. You’re absolutely right… I’d never belittle that… one of my dreams: to build a little house on my parents’ property, tend gardens and vineyards, and build “home” in the deepest sense so that I can give back to them in their elder years a tithe of what they gave to me as a child and build that place as a gift to my grandchildren one day… we’ll embark on that project in just a couple of short years… I agree with you 100%.
Diana… indeed… the great thing is… I don’t think you HAVE to give up either. There are ways to live both dreams, we know people doing it. The thing is to LIVE those DREAMS, no matter what it looks like to everyone else. 🙂