Spontaneous Excursions

Around the time I turned 12 years old, my mother decided to go from being a full time mom, to a full time mom plus middle school Spanish teacher. This made sense given her social and compassionate nature, as well as her native language abilities. As a side note, for those of you that know and have seen me (a “gringa” as my dad puts it), this may come as a surprise but Spanish is the first language of both my parents—Dominican/Puerto Rican Spanish and Honduran Spanish. So, despite my fair skin and Mid Atlantic drawl, I grew up eating arroz con frijoles and yuca regularly, watching Sábado Gigante and dancing salsa and merengue when my parent’s Latin American guests came to town.

Let’s not digress… Around the same time my mother started working again, she got this crazy notion that it would be fun to not only teach Spanish, but to take 50 middle schoolers to Spain and France each year, with the help of only a handful of parents and the French teacher in her school. While other adults thought it nuts of her to take on such a responsibility, my mother continued to lead annual European pilgrimages and treated the trips as is they were sacred for over 15 years.  Lucky for me, she always got enough students to sign up, that the tour agency she used, always gave her a free ticket and hotel stays for a guest of choice—me for 3 years, my sister for 4 years and after that my father.

The first year I went to Europe (as an eighth grader), I thought I had gone to heaven. All of a sudden my world went from being a typical Virginia suburb (football, apple pie, and soccer moms) to what seemed like an infinite world of possibility and unknown delights (bull fights, tapas and European young men). While other tourists looked forward to visiting sights like the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre and Museo del Prado, I was more interested in seeing how people lived—grocery store produce sections, familial interactions, back alleyways and colored laundry hanging from door to door. My first 10 days abroad were more than magical; they were life changing. In fact, the day I returned home, I spent the remaining 355 days of the year looking forward to my next 10 day overseas adventure and made a vow to myself that I would move overseas the second I graduated from college (FYI: the city of choice—Osaka, Japan).

Today, nearly two decades after I took that first excursion abroad, I still feel the same excitement and anticipation I felt as a middle schooler every time I set foot on an airplane. Due to work and a wonderful first wedding anniversary, in the last two months I’ve been in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Fujairah, Muscat, Amsterdam, Washington DC, San Juan, Mayagüez, San Germán, Charlotte and my hometown Burke, Virginia. Needless to say, I think life is a lot of fun, especially now that travel is no longer a 355 day aspiration, but a way of existence!

What continues to amaze me day in and day out is that no matter whether in a tiny village in the mountains of the UAE, a Puerto Rican university town, or a cosmopolitan city like Washington, DC, I see SO much kindness, helpfulness, goodwill and kids on roller shoes everywhere I go! (The person that invented those beautes—pure Genius!) Despite what CNN likes to broadcast across its global networks, I still firmly believe that there is more good on this Earth than bad—by a long shot!


It is Independence Day in the United States and I just happen to be in my hometown celebrating.

To the freedom to explore the world and its people!

Next time, I’ll be jotting from Gulf,
A

P.S. The video above is a montage of recent excursions to Abu Dhabi, UAE and Muscat, Oman. Do I recommend that you visit?! You betcha!

P.P.S. The awesome soundtrack for the video is titled, “Salsa di Soy” (FabiuS Remix) by Boom Boom Beckett.

3 Responses so far »

  1. 1

    T said,

    Love the incongruous juxtaposition of Salsa di Soy with images from the Middle East!

  2. 2

    Gail Labman said,

    Pure joy and creativity! They are yours.

    I love knowing your background via Papa and Mama. I remember visiting with your parents and your mother’s wonderful trips to France and Spain each year.
    It is so neat to hear about those trips from your perspective. What a wonderul beginnning for you! I understand your passion!

    Today we hosted our family with flags flying and the grill grilling. It’s good to have son Michael living with us. He rem3mbers you. It’s good to have my whole family surround us with love and attention. We had a dessert ala flag design with red, white and blue ingredieints. Pretty good!

    Then came the fireworks from neighbors and the larger display at the local fairgrounds less than a mile from our house. We see them from our backyard and living room! Our living room has west view windows. The rest of the family went to county park across from fairgrounds to look from that vantage.

    You are so blessed. You have a wonderful world-view! And wonderful talents. Love reading and listening! Keep on keeping on! Blessings , Gail Labman

  3. 3

    Adriana said,

    I love the video! Keep on trekking! You always did love to visit other lands and learn about other people, which has helped you to develop a wonderful positive attitude of the world and a very open mind toward different cultures. Just as those school trips overseas helped you to better understand the world, I think that it is an important part of a young student’s education to learn about world culture first hand.

    I am really enjoying your visit!


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