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Getting back on track

 

“Man has such a predilection for systems and abstract deductions that he is ready to distort the truth intentionally, he is ready to deny the evidence of his senses only to justify his logic.”

 Fyodor Dostoyevsky

I like to think that I’m a rational being. I trust logic to keep me on track and I distrust emotion. I don’t know how or why I made that decision. It was long ago. I tell myself that this is the superior way to navigate life’s obstacles. “Logic trumps emotions,” I say. but lately I’ve been forced to stop and reconsider. My reasoning is sound but still something is wrong because despite my logic, determination and planning, I’m still lost in the weeds since returning from Peru last month.

emotionLogic tells me that I just need to pick up where I left off. I was following a plan until we left. I should be able to pick right up where I left off. If logic was the only consideration I’d be back at work creating content and a marketing plan for One Month Travel (my new website). Since I’m still struggling to get traction, it’s obvious that some other force is in play.

It all made sense when I put the plan together. The weeks before we left were dedicated to setting up the website basics and creating content. The trip itself would be fuel for the task, providing experience and inspiration and I would come back from Peru energized and ready to engage. That was the logic behind the plan. Returning from Peru, however, logic wasn’t enough. I can’t seem to get back on track. So what is going on? I think that it’s the emotional side of my nature that I have tried so hard to suppress.

It’s becoming clear to me that I’m a more complex person than I like to acknowledge. The reasonable, logical being I like to believe I am rests on an volatile base of emotion. While I dismiss emotion as erratic and dangerous, it doesn’t go away just because I don’t trust it. I may not recognize it’s influences but they continue to affect me none the less. The conscious mind may be willing but it’s not able to overcome the inertia of the unconscious where my emotions have been exiled.

Nearly a month after returning home, I’m still trying to get back in gear and start working my plan again. The logical part of my brain seems unable to fight forward against whatever is going on in the emotional side. I don’t know what to do to get moving. It’s not a logical problem and I never developed the skills to work with emotions. When I sit down to work, my mind wanders to something else. I am easily diverted to trivial pursuits instead of focusing on my plan. Time moves on and my projects don’t..

I’d like to make peace with and understand my emotional side but it is foreign to me. I don’t like it’s flighty nature and distrust it’s motives. I failed in my attempts to lock it up. I don’t know how to embrace it and I strongly fear the consequences of letting it have control. Still, it seems to have the upper hand however much I attempt to ignore it.

What do I do? At this point, I have no plan, just a goal. I don’t have logic to guide me and, as a result, .the future seems quite uncertain. If I let the past guide me I’ll just wait. Eventually logic will gain the upper hand at least marginally and I can return to my normal way of handling my life, suppressing the emotion and trusting in reason and logic.

There may be another path. What if I try to understand the emotional side of my mind? Logic tells me that the path is risky. It looks rocky and disappears in the fog up ahead. I have no idea where it goes and what I might experience along the way. “What would it be like” I wonder, “if emotion and reason could come together to help manage my life? That seems to be how other people live. Surely I can figure it out as well.” Of course, I don’t know the answer. It might not be better. I might really screw up. Most troubling of all, I don’t know what to do to make it happen.  I’m flying blind.

 

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Learning from Peru

Peru was our third one-month trip. By now, we were feeling pretty confident that we knew what we were doing. We expected it to follow a pattern similar to the other two even though it was a more complicated itinerary and a country with a significantly lower standard of living. We were wrong. All of our planning assumptions were based upon our experience in Europe and Argentina. Peru was quite different.

Sacred 068The biggest difference was food shopping. In our previous trips, we were always able to walk to a market with a wide range of food items from our apartment. We expected to find these markets in Peru and were surprised to learn that there are few supermarkets and very limited local food shopping opportunities. This significantly affected our trip.

On our first d day in Cuzco, we were told to take a cab to a shopping mall if we wanted to buy food items. We took the long cab ride and found a Walmart type store in a shopping center. There was a wide selection of food items but we then had to lug the bags back to the street, snag a taxi and travel home. It took time and effort to get food.

There are small locked shops on the streets where you rattle the door to get the attention of the shop owner who will collect items off the shelf when you ask but it is hard for a foreigner to know what it stocked and communicate your needs. Within walking distance of our apartment, there was one of the locked shops. It wasn’t much help. Buying food was a major activity requiring a taxi trip both ways.

If our apartment was isolated from food shopping, it was also isolated from the points of interest in Cuzco. Instead of walking out the front door and into the attractions of Cuzco, we had to call a cab and take a 15 minute ride. Cabs were cheap and convenient but the cab ride was still a barrier. We thought that an apartment with more amenities even with a taxi ride every time you wanted to go somewhere was better than a more basic apartment near the Plaza de Armas. Now we wonder.

There were unforgettable moments in Peru. The Sacred Valley and Machu Picchu are like no place on earth. We liked Cuzco and Lima but we expected a more NorteAmericano lifestyle and, as a result, suffered some frustration. Perhaps better research might have helped but we just didn’t know what we didn’t know. Sometimes the only way to learn something new is to experience it.

For now, we intend to focus on European destinations. Peru was a great experience but it was also an experiment to test our resilience and flexibility. Knowing what we know now, we would have planned the trip differently or maybe chosen a different destination. Still we have our Peru memories and photographs. It was an unforgettable trip, warts and all.

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