203 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
203 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
title: >-
|
|
Mr. Worldwide, Pt. 0: Bailtrain to Bailtown
|
|
description: >-
|
|
Wherein I quit my job and prepare to leave the country
|
|
series: mr-worldwide
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
## Denver
|
|
|
|
In mid-2015 I moved to Denver, CO while continuing to work remotely at the
|
|
company I had helped to found back in Gainesville, FL. Florida had been my home
|
|
for my entire life, up until that point, and it felt like a change was needed.
|
|
Denver was certainly a change, and ultimately I think it was one in the right
|
|
direction, but it turned out to not be enough.
|
|
|
|
{% include image.html dir="mr-worldwide" file="denver-2017.jpg" width=1696 %}
|
|
|
|
While in Denver I'd rented a tiny studio apartment, which over the
|
|
course of two years I'd learned to live in. Living large is pretty easy; for
|
|
some reason we (generally) find it more difficult to throw something away than
|
|
to exert the effort to make space for it in our lives. It takes a non-trivial
|
|
amount of trial-and-error to figure out a smaller lifestyle with fewer things.
|
|
So minimalism is something I started to practice, and continue to practice, in
|
|
the literal sense of the word, often failing at it. But I find the challenge to
|
|
be worth it.
|
|
|
|
I'd always separated my work-place from my living-place, mentally. Eventually I
|
|
realized that just because the two places were physically separate doesn't mean
|
|
they aren't a part of the same thing. At the most basic level I work in order to
|
|
afford basic necessities, like food and clothing and shelter. I have a dedicated
|
|
home because it's the most efficient way to keep myself fit and healthy and
|
|
clean, because it allows me to having my own ammenities and routines which work
|
|
best for me.
|
|
|
|
But the more I work, the more I burn out and need to recuperate at home. The
|
|
more time spent at home, the more things accumulate there and the more upkeep of
|
|
the home is needed, which in turn requires money which requires work. The one
|
|
leads to the other, and so they are really part of the same thing. I neither
|
|
want to work nor spend a lot of time at home, but that's what my life had turned
|
|
into. It was unbearable, and I had to change it.
|
|
|
|
## Mr. Worldwide
|
|
|
|
In early 2016 I took a trip to Japan with some friends. It was the first time
|
|
I'd been out of the US (sans a family trip to Nova Scotia when I was like 9 or
|
|
something). Going to Japan might as well have been a trip to an alien planet,
|
|
and yet it was also familiar. I learned that no matter how different our
|
|
cultures are, the individuals of the world aren't that different at all. By the
|
|
end of that trip I felt as at-home in Japan as I did in Denver, if not more so,
|
|
because of how much time I was able to spend exploring (rather than being cooped
|
|
up working).
|
|
|
|
{% include image.html
|
|
dir="mr-worldwide" file="kyoto-2017.jpg" width=5257
|
|
descr="Kyoto at sunset, 2017" %}
|
|
|
|
By the end of 2016 I knew I wanted to travel and see as much as possible, while
|
|
working as little as possible in the meantime (except on my own ideas, as they
|
|
came up and I felt like working on them). I began trimming down my life, with
|
|
the aim of only having as many things as would fit into a backpack. It probably
|
|
seemed to everyone like I was preparing to become a homeless person. In a way I
|
|
kind of was.
|
|
|
|
My plan wasn't that I would never work again, or never live in a home again.
|
|
Vagrancy isn't a sustainable way for me to live. But finding a life which didn't
|
|
involve spending all my energy working while also not being homeless is surely
|
|
possible, I knew, though maybe I wouldn't find it in the US. I began saving as
|
|
much money as possible, and began thinking about where I might find that life.
|
|
|
|
Europe seemed as good a place to start the search as any.
|
|
|
|
## Leaving Denver
|
|
|
|
By the end of 2017 I was ready to go. I had saved nearly $20k, had put in notice
|
|
that I'd be leaving my job at the end of the year, and had given notice to my
|
|
landlord of the same. My friends in Denver saw me off, and my friend Ibrahim
|
|
gave me a small notebook to take notes in as I traveled, with some helpful
|
|
phrases that might aid me along the way
|
|
|
|
{% include image.html
|
|
dir="mr-worldwide" file="notebook.jpg" width=3036
|
|
descr="Ibrahim made sure I was covered if I ever found myself in a tight spot"
|
|
%}
|
|
|
|
I drove all my things back to my parents' house in Miami just before Christmas,
|
|
and enjoyed Christmas and New Year's with them. In mid-January I grabbed my
|
|
single backpack, said goodbye to my parents, and headed to the airport. It had
|
|
worked out to be cheaper to fly back to Denver before flying to Europe, so I
|
|
spent another day there saying hello/goodbye to everyone again, collecting some
|
|
recommendations of places to go while I was there, and continued on to Europe.
|
|
|
|
## The Loadout
|
|
|
|
(Wherein I give a summary of what I had with me throughout the trip, with
|
|
affiliate links sprinkled in, cause money. You can skip this section if you
|
|
don't really care).
|
|
|
|
I'd already had a [40L backpacking bag](zulu) which had done me well enough on a
|
|
couple trips already, so I decided to try and only use that. Other ~~homeless~~
|
|
backpackers tend to go a little bigger, but they risk not being able to fit
|
|
their bags in luggage overhead on planes. I also ended up needing a smaller day
|
|
bag almost immediately, since being out and about all day necessitates bringing
|
|
some things with you. The big bag/day bag combo is a classic amongst ~~the
|
|
homeless~~ backpackers.
|
|
|
|
{% include image.html
|
|
dir="mr-worldwide" file="loadout-packed.jpg" width=4048
|
|
descr="All packed up, one for overhead and the other for under the seat"
|
|
inline=true
|
|
%}
|
|
|
|
{% include image.html
|
|
dir="mr-worldwide" file="loadout-unpacked.jpg" width=4048
|
|
descr="(Almost) everything, unpacked"
|
|
inline=true
|
|
%}
|
|
|
|
Most space in the bag is taken by clothes. Which clothes I actually had along
|
|
changed as the weather changed and I gained and lost things. But my general
|
|
clothing strategy consisted of a few key points:
|
|
|
|
* All things need to be re-wearable, 2 to 3 days at least. This is more
|
|
difficult for under layers, but wool is ideal as it's durable, warm, and it
|
|
quickly-dries (which means the fungi/bacteria, which would otherwise cause
|
|
smell, quickly-die). Wool socks were easy to find on sale for $5 a pair at the
|
|
end of winter. Wool undershirts (smart wool or merino) are findable on eBay
|
|
with some difficulty. [Uniqlo][uniqlo] makes good undershirts to fill in
|
|
when wool undershirts are too expensive. [ExOfficio][exofficio] is worth the
|
|
money in the underwear department. A pair of leggings is also super worth it
|
|
for the cold.
|
|
|
|
* For pants I went with three pairs; one beat-up pair, one casual, and one a bit
|
|
nicer, and a few wool shirts/sweaters. Later in the trip, as summer rolled
|
|
around, I'd pick up some shorts as well. My couple of wool shirts/sweaters
|
|
were trivial to find on eBay.
|
|
|
|
* For shoes I went with a pair of flip-flops and a pair of [waterproof
|
|
boots][timbs] (also from eBay). The boots I chose for being able to be used in
|
|
basically any occasion where flip-flops wouldn't do (marathons excepted).
|
|
|
|
* I really can't stress enough how great wool is. That said, I would have died
|
|
without [this jacket][jacket], which was well worth the relatively tiny amount
|
|
of space it took up. Same can be said for my [linen towel][towel], which
|
|
struck a perfect balance between packability and being a towel.
|
|
|
|
* Other random things which were must-haves: rubber bands (for tying up
|
|
clothes), sewing kit, external phone battery, tape, super glue, umbrella, and
|
|
a small package of baby wipes.
|
|
|
|
* I also insisted on bringing a laughably small and old netbook with me, cause
|
|
I get cranky if I can't code now and then.
|
|
|
|
Even before deciding on doing this trip I had begun purging all my old clothes
|
|
in favor of a much smaller set of more durable, though perhaps more expensive,
|
|
ones. So a lot of these clothes carried over from that, and all that I just
|
|
described is really my current wardrobe.
|
|
|
|
[zulu]: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B015SBLO28/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=mediocregophe-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B015SBLO28&linkId=84ffbb4c20cf4dfcee00485312c1d5c3
|
|
[uniqlo]: https://www.uniqlo.com/us/en/men/undershirts
|
|
[exofficio]: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001M0MN0C/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=mediocregophe-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B001M0MN0C&linkId=a1a2a1fac9c23c44c0633d0e7170fb98
|
|
[timbs]: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B019CVV1AK?ie=UTF8&tag=mediocregophe-20&camp=1789&linkCode=xm2&creativeASIN=B019CVW406&th=1
|
|
[jacket]: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B013HAXSLC/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=mediocregophe-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B013HAXSLC&linkId=44efbeb32af7cc0f303180ec70da207e
|
|
[towel]: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00WBC17N4/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=mediocregophe-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B00WBC17N4&linkId=dec48e5d729a51790abad2286f08fe34
|
|
|
|
## (Lack of) Planning
|
|
|
|
The trip was deliberately not planned out. I knew I would show up in Munich,
|
|
because I have a friend who lives there as well as a distant relative. But
|
|
past that I figured "show up and look around" would suffice. My motto for the
|
|
trip would eventually become "plans are just lists of things which won't
|
|
happen". From start to finish the only plans I had figured out at any moment was
|
|
a general trajectory and my next destination. Rarely was my next place to sleep
|
|
booked more than a week ahead of time, or my next bus or train ticket bought
|
|
more than a day before.
|
|
|
|
It could not have worked any other way. For a short trip it might be viable to
|
|
have an itinerary with a list of destinations/sights which will be visited and
|
|
all the traveling needed in between, but the strictness of an itinerary always
|
|
adds tension. Rather than spend some pre-allotted time at each sight, adding a
|
|
feeling of being on a timer no matter where you are, I would rather just meander
|
|
around and spend as much time as feels right at each place. There's zero chance
|
|
of seeing all there is to see, no matter how much is planned, so might as well
|
|
see each thing in as much depth and detail as you feel like.
|
|
|
|
And looking back, I don't think I _did_ miss all that much. Each city has its
|
|
notable sights, and you can know by looking around and talking to other people
|
|
which ones are right for you. Start with those, if there's time do the others,
|
|
but you won't feel like you've missed anything if you don't get to them.
|
|
|
|
Much later in my trip someone would ask me and another backpacker (who'd been
|
|
traveling even longer than me) if we had advice for him. The other backpacker
|
|
immediately replied "Just keep your head on a swivel". As in, just look around
|
|
you, keep your eyes open, you'll see all you want and need to. My grandma gave
|
|
me similar advice before I left, when I asked her what I should do in Spain (her
|
|
home country): "Oh, you don'thave to do anything. You see something you like,
|
|
you go there. You see something else, you go there instead. There is nothing you
|
|
have to do".
|
|
|
|
## Bailing
|
|
|
|
In the next post I will actually leave and begin my _adventure_.
|