National Jennygraphic – London Oct 30, 2014
Another adventure.
Since my first plane trip to
Vancouver by myself in the early 2000s, I have relished being a solo traveller.
My parents never really
travelled – partially because we couldn’t afford it and my dad was more of a
homebody than anything else. Capricorn.
Our only family trip was in
1988 to Buffalo when we still had the Ford Club Wagon aka “the pedophile-style
van.”
But that JetsGo flight
(remember them?) to B.C. changed my life. Even though it was a domestic trip,
it sparked my thirst for travel and the adventure that comes with it.
I am incredibly lucky. I have
been to many countries and seen many things. I have lived an exciting,
challenging life up until now, and love the person I am because of it.
There’s something about
arriving at an airport with bags packed that makes my heart skip a beat.
But things feel different
this time around.
My photographer friend Ernest
once said something to me that I finally understand. “I love travelling by
myself, but now wherever I go, I want (my wife) Milena with me.”
Has finding “the one” changed
me?
It was really difficult
leaving Mike at security check this morning. I was not expecting tears to come
flowing out as he hugged me tightly and then we parted ways.
Still, I continued on,
knowing that he’d be joining me in three weeks.
This time, I’m travelling
with a different purpose.
Many people have been asking,
“Why are you going to London?”
I have mainly answered, “To
write a book.”
But maybe the more honest
answer is “Because I’m young and can do so now. So, why not? I may not have the
means to do so in a few years.”
And part of me wonders if you
even need a reason to go somewhere.
Travel is a luxury, I understand, but the more I do it, the smaller this vast
planet seems.
Because seems
like a reasonable answer to me.
One day, I want to step on an
airplane sans luggage. Just like in Johnny Depp drug smuggling movies. Holding
only a passport, a non-Costanza wallet in my back pocket.
I have never lived anywhere
else other than Ontario.
It’s time.
It’s time.
I know it’s only a month, but
it’s important to me in my mind to be somewhere else, at least for a little
while. It’s not an escape from my life, it’s an addition to it.
I don’t need to be a tourist
here. I just need to be.
As I was boarding the plane,
I met an older couple who struck up a conversation with me.
I didn’t catch his name, but
Susan was hers.
She asked me what I was doing
in London and I gave her the “book” answer.
I told her part of it would
be about my family’s routes – immigrants from China and Hong Kong end up in
Northern Ontario and marrying in Timmins through a matchmaker.
I said I was from Englehart.
“Do you know where that is?”
I asked.
“Of course,” she replied. “I’m from New Liskeard.”
“Of course,” she replied. “I’m from New Liskeard.”
And instantly, we bonded.
I described the small town of
1,000-ish and she told me she remembered our family restaurant we ran in
Englehart, the Englehart Bar and Grill.
And with that five-minute
connection, I remembered in a rush why I love solo travel.
The bonds – no matter how
brief – you can create with strangers.
“I find people from the North
more resilient than people from Toronto,” Susan said. “We are more self-reliant.”
And with that, she took her
seat in the back cabin, while I found seat 20H – “keeping my powder dry” for more
adventures as soon as we touch down at Heathrow.
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