You are on page 1of 3

Date a Boy Who Travels by Lena Desmond Posted: 05/17/2013 1:45 pm http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lena-desmond/date-a-boy-who-travels_b_3293815.html Date a boy who travels.

Date a boy who treasures experience over toys, a hand-wo ven bracelet over a Rolex. Date the boy who scoffs when he hears the words, "vac ation," "all-inclusive" or "resort." Date a boy who travels because he's not bli nded by a single goal but enlivened by many. You might find him in an airport or at a book store browsing the travel guides - although he "only uses them for reference." You'll know it's him because when you peek at his computer screen his background will be a scenic splendor of rolling hills, mountains or prayer flags. His Face book friend count will be over-the-roof and his wall will be plastered with the broken English 'miss-you' of friends he met along the way. When he travels he ma kes lifelong friends in an hour. And although contact with these friends is spor adic and may be far-between his bonds are unmessable and if he wanted he could c ouch surf the world... again. Buy him a beer. Maybe the same brand that he wears on the singlet under his plai d shirt, unable to truly let go. Once a traveller gets home people rarely listen to his stories. So listen to him. Allow him to paint a picture that brings you into his world. He might talk fast and miss small details because he's so excite d to be heard. Bask in his enthusiasm. Want it for yourself. He'll squeak like an excited toddler when his latest issue of National Geographi c arrives in the mail. Then he'll grow quiet, engrossed, until he finishes his a nalysis of every photo, every adventure. In his mind he'll insert himself in the se pictures. He'll pass the issue on to you and grill you about your dreams and competitively ask about the craziest thing you've ever done. Tell him. And know that he'll probably win. And if by chance you win, know that his next lot in lif e will be to out do you. But then he'll say, "Maybe we can do it together." Date the boy who talks of distant places and whose hands have explored the stone relics of ancient civilizations and whose mind has imagined those hands carving , chiseling, painting the wonders of the world. And when he talks it's as if he' s reliving it with you. You can almost hear his heart racing. You can almost fee l the adrenaline ramped up by the moment. You feel it passing through his synaps is, a feast to his eyes entering through those tiny oracles of experience that w e call pupils, digesting rapidly through his veins, manifesting into his nervous system, transforming and altering his worldview like a reverse trauma and final ly passing but forever changing the colors of his sight. (Unless he's Karl Pilki ngton.) You will want this too. Date a boy who's lived out of a backpack because he lives happily with less. A b oy who's travelled has seen poverty and dined with those who live in small shant ies with no running water, and yet welcome strangers with greater hospitality th an the rich. And because he's seen this he's seen how a life without luxury can mean a life fueled by relationships and family rather than a life that fuels fan cy cars and ego. He's experienced different ways of being, respects alternative religions and he looks at the world with the eyes of a five-year-old, curious an d hungry. Your dad will be happy too because he's good with money and knows how to budget. This boy relishes home; the comfort of a duvet, the safety stirred in a mom-cook ed meal, the easy conversation of childhood friends and the immaculate glory of the flush-toilet. Although fiercely independent, he has had time to reflect on h

imself and his relationships. Despite his wanderlust he knows and appreciates hi s ties to home. He has had a chance to miss and be missed. Because of this he al so knows a thing or two about goodbyes. He knows the overwhelming uncertainty of leaving the comforts of home, the indefinite see-you-laters at the departure ga tes and yet he fearlessly goes into the unknown because he knows the feeling of return. And that the I've-missed-you-hug is the best type of hug in the whole wo rld. He also knows that goodbyes are just prolonged see-you-laters and that 'hel lo' is only as far away as the nearest internet cafe. Don't hold onto this boy. Let this boy go and go with him. If you haven't travel led, he will open your eyes to a world beyond the news and popular perception. H e will open your dreams to possibility and reality. He will calm your nerves whe n you're about to miss a flight or when your rental blows a flat because he know s the journey is the adventure. He will make light of the unsavory noises you ma ke when you -- and you will -- get food poisoning. He will make you laugh throug h the discomfort all while dabbing your forehead with a cold cloth and nursing y ou with bottled water. He will make you feel like you're home. When you see something beautiful he will hold your hand in silence, in awe the h istory of where his feet stand and the fact that you're with him. He will live in every moment with you because this is how he lives his life. He understands that happiness is no more than a string of moments that displace neu trality and he is determined to tie as many of these strings together as he can. He also understands your need to live for yourself and that you have a bucket l ist of your own. Understand his. Understand that your goals may at some points d iffer but that independence is the cornerstone of a healthy relationship when it 's mutually respected. You may lose him for a bit but he will always come home b earing a new story and a souvenir he picked up because it reminded him of you, l ike it was made for you and because he missed you. You might be compelled to do the same. Make sure that independence is on your bucket list and make sure it's checked. Independence will keep your relationship fresh and exciting and when yo u're together again it will forge a bond of unbreakable trust. He'll propose when you've breached your comfort-zone, whether it is a fear like skydiving or swimming with sharks or sitting next to the smelly person on an ove rcrowded bus. It won't be with a diamond ring but with a token from a native cul ture or inspired by nature, like the penguin and the pebble. You will get married somewhere unassumed, surrounded by a select few in a moment constructed to celebrate venturing into the unknown together again. Marry the b oy who's travelled and together you will make the whole world your home. Your ho neymoon will not be forgotten to a buffet dinner and all-you-can-drink beach bar s, but will be remembered in the triumphant photographs at the top of Kilimanjar o and memorialized in the rewarding ache of muscles at the end of a long days hi ke. When you're ready you will have children that have the names of the characters y ou met on your journeys, the foreign names of people who dug a special place in your heart if only for a few days. Perhaps you will live in another country and your children will learn of language and customs that open their minds from the very start, leaving no room for prejudice. He will introduce them to the life of Hemingway, the journey of Santiago, and empower them to live even bigger than b oth of you. Marry a ne, the ity. He ch them boy who travels and he'll teach your children the beauty of a single sto history of the Incas and he will instill in them the bravery of possibil will explain to them that masking opportunity there is fear. He will tea to concur it.

And when you're old you'll sit with your grandchildren poring over your photo al bums and chest of worldly treasures while they too insert themselves into your p hotographs, sparked by the beauty of the world and inspired by your life in it. Find a boy who travels because you deserve a life of adventure and possibility. You deserve to live light and embrace simplicity. You deserve to look at life th rough the eyes of youth and with your arms wide open. Because this is where you will find joy. And better, you will find joy together. And if you can't find him , travel. Go. Embrace it. Explore the world for yourself because dreams are the stuff reality is made from. Inspired by the work of Charles Warnke (You Should Date An Illiterate Girl) and Rosemarie Urquico (Date A Girl Who Reads). Originally published on Where Are My Heels.

You might also like