It’s not that different throughout the world, really: it all starts with a smile. A look into the eyes, the kind of look you cannot ignore, the one that goes right through to your heart. The one that makes it beat a bit faster, maybe just a little, maybe just a flutter – but something is touched and you’re lost. You’ve fallen in love.
Add the rush and joy of the first few days or weeks, the excitement, the butterflies. And the dread of course, because after all, your flight is leaving in two days, your train departs the next morning, your bus ticket is waiting in your wallet, ready to send you off again to new adventures. And, possibly, new loves.
When I first started travelling the world I didn’t think much about the implications this would have for my love life. I was eighteen and I didn’t do much planning, love-wise (or other). It was one place now, the next place tomorrow, on repeat.
Of course, there was the occasional fling, there were even a few loves lost on the road, left behind, but what does it matter when a new destination, an exotic country, a different continent is waiting for you to replace your broken heart? The boy I left in the Balkans didn’t care much that I left anyways, the fling in Central America was not meant to be for more than two days, the cute Norwegian guy was never serious boyfriend-material to begin with.
But three years in, I started to long for something else, for something a little bit more stable, a person to share my experiences with, someone to be there by my side when I stretch out my thumb on some godforsaken road in the middle of the mountains, trying to hitch a ride back to civilisation. Someone to cuddle with when the nights in the Indian trains get too cold, someone to hold my hand when I spend the day hugging a toilet bowl (thank you, street food), someone to lean on when watching the sun rise over a temple in the middle of Asia.
It was never more than a slight itch at the back of my conscience, but still, the desire was there: settle down a bit, find someone to share my life with. My travels, too. The thing about the happiness and it only being real when shared wasn’t some crazy hallucination of a nearly starved-out guy in a van somewhere, after all – it’s the sad truth that came to a man who, close to the end of his life, realised his biggest regret when it was already too late to change it.
Then, two years ago, I had come back from abroad to spend a few weeks at home when I met this guy. He ticked everything off my list, and better yet: he knew of my being away all the time and still kept on writing and meeting me. We spent two months in a romantic haze, never thinking about that one day when I would take off again. Staying was never an option, I had a bachelor’s degree program waiting for me two countries over. We weren’t boyfriend-girlfriend at first, we were lovers, we decided. But that didn’t really work out, it meant more than that to us, and the night before I left, we made it official: we were in a relationship.
A real, solid relationship, something that is meant to last, something that’s more than just a little crush. Something serious. Naturally, I was scared – the first time we Skyped, I was more nervous than the first time I took a flight all by myself to travel 10 time-zones away. What would we say to each other, over the computer? What was there to talk about, how could we still be romantic? We talked, we laughed, he said he liked me. Like-liked me. We skyped again every day after that.
By now, we’ve made it through two years of this long-distance thing: he in Austria, me in France, he in the U.S., me in Kyrgyzstan, both of us meeting somewhere in the middle every six weeks or so. He visited me twice in Asia, I spent a month with him in California. We met up in Istanbul, we had a meeting in India, he waited for me while I went to discover Central America during my holidays instead of going home to meet him.
There’s a constant fight in me between staying and going. Some weeks, the settling down side is growing, weighs on me and makes me question my entire life. Other weeks, the urge for adventure and travel is bigger, drawing me to foreign countries and away from the one person I want to spend the rest of my life with. I’m somewhere between the battle lines, trying to negotiate: if I go to this country, will you come with me? If I stay here for a while, is it okay if I spend a few months away after that? Can we leave everything and run away together?
Travel is escapism, but now there is a person whom I don’t want to escape from. If anything, I want to escape with him.
Sometimes I wonder what it looks like from his perspective. He is older than me, more settled, has a career, a life at home – then why is his girlfriend always running? I pack up my bags and leave, not once, not twice, but always. Our relationship is broken down in stretches of time where we are together – and stretches where we are not. At times, it must feel like he is dating a phone: a wake-up call on Viber, a selfie on Snapchat, a beating heart on WhatsApp, saying good-night on Skype. His friends doubted if I even existed at all for those first few months – after all, they never saw me. I was away in – where? Kyrgyzstan? Is that even a country? Once he told me that staying hurts more than leaving. I am taking off to new adventures, to see the world, while I leave him behind in his everyday life, missing his girlfriend. My train rides to the airport became filled with tears. Leaving took on a bitter note for me, staying became harder and harder for him.
In the first year, he stayed behind, always, waiting patiently. By the second year, he travelled more, followed, led – I visited him when he was abroad for the first time. We started making plans for the future: we believe that we can have one, together. In the end, it’s a decision you make – the decision to work it out. It takes effort and determination, it takes long nights alone and coffee for one in the morning, it takes lonely sunset walks and longing messages, it takes wishes and dreams and a lot of trust, it takes feeling like you are missing a part of yourself. Call me a hopeless romantic, but if it’s for love, it’s worth all of that.
Our two-year anniversary is coming up, and we are going to celebrate it together. In real life, not the virtual one we share so often. For the next two years, we have a master plan – one that involves moving in together. In the same place, in the same city, in the same country. And travelling? I’ll still do that. We’ll do that, sometimes together, sometimes not. It’s all about finding a balance.
So beautifully written :) I enjoyed your story, thank you for letting us take a peek into such an interesting adventure :)
Beautiful post. Many more years to happiness and adventures - apart and together. :)
Ah, so young! I'm 20 years on and felt the same as you in my 20s. Being older, and once married, I no longer agree with that gentleman's regret that memories are better when shared--the seasoned woman I am thinks that is a sentiment to further fuel a woman's self doubt about being alone and not in a relationship. And it's rubbish.
The truth is, being alone is a luxury for a woman--make that a western woman--who has means and confidence in her surroundings and person to not fear for her physical safety or financial destitution. My most cherished memories are recent ones completely alone in nature, without the distraction of conversation or worry of intrusion. And that "Nature" was an enclosed park that charged a fee for entry, to keep out opportunistic riff raff.
Enjoy your romantic relationships for the duration you have and the terms they present to you, but never give up your wanderlust--that is who you are.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, you really made me think.
The thing is, I think that ultimately, both ways of life have their own beauty and at the same time, their own justification, or right to exist. That's something I only started to learn this past year: I was always gone, living in different countries, travelling the world, and I never wanted to change my ways only for the person I fall in love with. Actually, that's why I went to Kyrgyzstan for the last year - to prove myself that I still make decisions on my own and for my own benefit, not to fit to somebody else's (a man's, a woman's, a partner's) way of life. To start to stay in one place for a bit, to start making decisions as a couple, to start making compromises that make both partners happy, to experience things with someone else - that's a valuable lesson for me. Something completely new and a bit weird to start feeling, actually.
That being said - I don't plan on losing my wanderlust. If anything, I want to inspire it in my partner as well, whether we stay together or not.
Thanks for the reminder to never lose my true self in all of this.
Here's the thing. Change is constant, and life is full of changes. You have so much to look forward to and your life with this guys is going to be great. Hang in there a joy the day.
Vanessa! Babe, so beautifully written. You know I am in a situation your guy is in and my partner is in your situation. The tables just turned. But this all makes absolute sense <3
I am afraid, but I feel alone sometimes. But isn't life all but one balancing adventure? ;) Kudos
What a brilliant post. Thank you for sharing!
Vanessa,
I loved your post. I almost connect to every sentence of this. My case is bit more complicated and difficult. The wanderlust kicked in after my marriage. My husband is a settler kind of guy. I doubt if he was even able to understand what I go through in the initial days. I wanted to travel, he wanted to sit back and watch a cricket game. I was always packing, he was arranging the closet. After so many fights, tears, arguments we came to some kind of a conclusion. A balance, in which I can travel most of the occasions that I wanted. He would follow me whenever possible. I thought it was all impossible, but now I think I can manage it.
love from across the globe,
Salini
That was a very beautiful post. Thank you for sharing :) | www.ourpassportpages.com
Such a beautifully written post! A big congratulations to you two and I wish you happiness for the future. x
www.ashrealasitgets.blogspot.com
Love that story. Makes me believe that love exists again ;)
Awesome post, I'm happy for somebody long-distance work. Unfortunately, for me it didn't.
Very beautiful!
Lovely