Monday, 15 January 2024

The Road Less Travelled

Linking with #SkyWatch
I'm not really fit to talk about this topic. I may have taken a little longer to get there, but I did eventually get married and have kids. I worked a run of the mill corporate job for 15 years or so. I became a stay-at-home mum after my second child was born. All my roads have been pretty conservative norms by society's standards. 

However, I have noticed that a number of my friends have switched from high powered,high income jobs to lower paid, not for profit work in their 50s. So perhaps the road travelled by most of us, or the pathways of 'success' are not as fulfilling as we're lead to believe? These people are deciding they need 'more', but it isn't more money that they're chasing.

I struggled to write this post. I don't feel I choose the road less travelled very often. So I put it to friends. They came back with stories of adventures in remote places, like meeting an old lady on the TransSiberian Railway, a smuggler who was fascinated by them, the tourists, because they seemed exotic. One woman reminisced about the time she hitchhiked across the Nullabour with her dog. Another told a tale of getting lost trekking to Base Camp on Everest and spending the night in a shepherd's corral with his goats. the tales where curiosity is rewarded or when getting lost brings a gift of unforgettable experience. There were many tales of adventurous youth, choosing to go off the well trodden path, both in the travels or working on cruise ships for years.

Then came the stories of missed flights, getting on the wrong plane to arrive in an entirely different destination than intended and one friend changed her flight because she didn't want to have to get up and go to JFK so early. Her original trip was on flight 173 on December 28, 1978 which crashed when it ran out of fuel while trying to fix an issue with the landing gear. These decisions that change everything, or throw you into unanticipated experience.

Which got me thinking. Sometimes the road less travelled is accidental. Our lives are a million different choices, often imperceptible, made daily. Any of those decisions, no matter how small, might steer us onto a road less travelled for awhile. You may remember when booking a trip to Norway, I didn't really pay attention to the map and booked us to Svalbard, the northern most settlement on the planet, for a family holiday in the Polar Night. I realised when we were the only tourists on the plane, the only people with children in a sea of FIFO workers and even the airport staff were asking us what we were doing there that perhaps this wasn't the most thought out plan of mine. This lead to our encounter with a polar bear and a wild near death experience, saved by an amazingly quick thinking and brave dog sled guide!

A friend who lived her whole life travelling the planet, since she was 5 and then from 17 working in many countries and in the travel industry, was forced to give up her own travel agency when COVID hit. She got a job at the ATO and to my surprise, she loves it. So which is her road less travelled? The nomadic life she lead in the first 45 years of her life, or the 9-5 government gig she's revelling in now?  Maybe there are many roads and it's only our world view that makes them see more alluring and remote?


Maybe we don't always choose the road less travelled but when we look back, we find out we ended up on it anyway, and that willingness to take a chance or having the curiosity to explore, to throw ourselves in wholeheartedly and back our decisions, as the Robert Frost poem ends "has made all the difference".

Linking with #WaterThursday for the first and last shots




18 comments:

  1. Hello Lydia,
    I enjoyed your story, your friends had some adventures they will never forget. I am glad both hubby and I are retired, so we can travel more and see as much as we can before the traveling has to stop. I say do whatever makes you happy, work or travel adventures. Take care, enjoy your day and the week ahead.

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  2. A great post Lydia, made all the more so because of your honesty in finding it difficult to write. But I did enjoy it and hearing the stories of your friends, and agree sometimes it is accidental, the reason why we choose a path over another or make a certain decision. Thanks for joining in with us.

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  3. Definitely my views too Lydia. I don't think I'm naturally very adventurous and on the 2 occasions where I took the road less traveled, it was not through choice. I must read your Svalbard post - I would love to go there, the bleakness appeals to me. It would be a great experience to see a polar bear, although not quite as up close and personal as your encounter!

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    1. Svalbard is stunning. It's the most fascinating place. We talk about it all the time and both my husband and I are in fb groups where we see other people's photos of it. I'd love to go back in summer for the walruses and to get to the Russian coal mining (abandoned) town. Just looks amazing in the true sense of the word.

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  4. I agree - the road less travelled is really more like the road you didn't mean to take, or the thing that accidentally happened when you were on the way to where youv vthought you were going. Great post.

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    1. That's a good idea for a post. The thing that happened while you were on your way to where you thought you were going...

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  5. A thought-provoking post, Lydia. I enjoy reading about your 'accidental' trip to Svalbard. Thank you for your weekend coffee share.

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  6. Hi Lydia, I loved reading your post and the stories about your friends road less travelled. I didn't realise I was doing it at the time, but felt like a change when my marriage broke down. I was 52 at the time and settled. I found myself in a city where I knew nobody but 17 years on I have a lovely life here with a wonderful new partner. It wasn't planned but it all worked itself out.

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    1. Things often do 'work themselves out' when we're busy trying to sort out stuff....and that's a good story in itself. Thanks for sharing

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  7. Lydia, your post really resonates with me because I, too, feel like my life is a little humdrum compared to so many others. And, yet, it feels like the best life for me. You've been to Svalbard? Oh, I hear about it on YouTube all the time when watching my Norwegian boyfriends. It's on my dream wish list. But, who knows? Maybe, I will make it there.

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

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  8. A terrific piece with a thought-provoking final sentence.

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  9. Wonderful post, very well written. I certainly think often of the "what ifs" in life, and the older I get, the more I recogize how fragile life is.

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  10. Yes, what a well written post. And it got me thinking about my personal experiences. Thanks.

    Worth a Thousand Words

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  11. Life takes us to strange places. I spent over 40 years in a corporate career in various roles and I liked it okay and did fairly well but the corporate involves lots of compromises. I'm retired now and am on the board of a non-profit environment organization and it has opened my eyes tremendously.

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    1. This seems to be a pattern. I think it's a very good thing tho, and well done to you for keeping busy by giving back!

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  12. I can see the same corridor into a leading line in all the photos

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