Travel and the Issue of Nostalgia

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Travel nostalgia

So things have been quiet here on the lil’ old blog.

The past few weeks have been incredibly overwhelming, and I haven’t been able to find any semblance of a spark of motivation within me to write. Or perhaps I should clarify, write something that’s not crap.

I would be lying if I said that my only excuse for not publishing anything was that I was too busy. For me, the issue goes much deeper. Since quitting my job and announcing that I am moving to New Zealand, my life has been one giant emotional upheaval. Don’t get me wrong, I am so incredibly excited about all these new changes in my life. Finally I feel like I am happy and following my dreams, doing the right thing after years of uncertainty. But considering the fact that I’m borderline OCD and have the tendency to overanalyze EVERYTHING, I can’t help but reflect upon what I am saying goodbye to.

Travel nostalgia

Travel nostalgia

You see, ever since I got back from Jordan, I have been dealing with the mysterious, complicated issue of nostalgia. Why I can’t be a normal person with normal feelings, I’ll never know. No matter how hard I try, I will always be incredibly emotional; feelings that are normal for everyone else are amplified tenfold within me. I can’t help it. Can’t I just be happy that I am moving to a place I’ve dreamed about for ten years and that’s that?

I think it all boils down to the fact that I feel torn in two about the life I have chosen for myself.

I love traveling more than anything in the world. Getting to discover new lands, following my dreams to far-flung destinations, experiencing cultural differences and standing in some of the most beautiful places I could ever dream about is beyond gratifying. For me, to travel is to live.

Travel nostalgia

But at the same time, I am looking for a home. Tired of packing my life into a backpack and carry-on bag, the other half of me hates this nomadic lifestyle I have carved out for myself and would love nothing more than to buy a house somewhere, a rock to begin building my life on. I hate that I don’t have a home anymore. I hate that I can’t buy furniture or towels or even books because I have nowhere to put them. I hate that I only get to see my best friends and family maybe once a year, if I’m lucky. I hate that I hate living out of a backpack. But if I were to change my lifestyle now, who is to say I would be happy settled in one place? See, talk about conflicted! Have you ever felt this way?

The way I see it (and what I tell myself when I get homesick at night for the home I don’t have) is that I am only 25 and I have my whole life ahead of me to settle. Right? Just a few more years of bopping around the world, I hope.

But back to nostalgia and the topic at hand.

Travel nostalgia

Do you ever travel somewhere, and it pulls on your heart so much that you think to yourself, oh yes, I could live here – I never want to leave!

Well, I must be a travel whore because I feel that ALL THE FREAKIN’ TIME! Like all the time, I’m not exaggerating. Logroño, Spain – check. Julian Alps, Slovenia – check. Western Massachusetts – check. Soho, NYC – check. Oxford, England – check. Anywhere in Switzerland – check. New Zealand, where I haven’t even been yet – double check! The list goes on and on. What the hell is wrong with me?

When I feel strongly about a place, I get so attached to the point where I get massively sad when it’s time for me to leave. Since I made the decision to up and move for a year to New Zealand, I’ve been overcome with feelings of nostalgia for all the places I’m leaving behind. It started in New York City.

Travel nostalgia

Travel nostalgia

I hadn’t been to the city for almost 2 years, after splitting up with my ex to travel, so going back brought back a whole lot of memories, good and bad. New York was a city I hoped to live in one day, that I was even planning to move back to when shit hit the fan a few summers past. Needless to say it was weird and difficult going back.

But the hardest part was leaving New York City to head up to Western Massachusetts where I went to college, and probably the only area of the country I could really envision myself settling down in one day. As soon as I got off the highway to visit old friends, I was hit over the head with a feeling of homesickness. I spent as much time as I could visiting old friends and old haunts, but when the time came to head down the road to my alma mater in South Hadley, I couldn’t do it.

Travel nostalgia

It was raining cats and dogs, and I was sitting in my jeep after grabbing a coffee at one of my favorite cafes in Amherst. Surrounded by anxious college kids prepping for finals, I sat and worked for a bit before I was scheduled to head over to Mount Holyoke. Dripping wet in the front seat, I literally couldn’t bring myself to make the drive over. I was overcome with nostalgia and longing for my old life. Like an total nutcase, I started to cry like the emotional mess I was. Luckily, since it was finals week, this behavior didn’t look too out of place.

College was equal parts amazingness and equal parts hell for me, but I know without Mount Holyoke, I wouldn’t be the person I am today. I have incredible memories of my four years in the Valley, and with this sudden, dramatic change in my life, I wasn’t ready to go back to the one place that truly felt like home to me. Not when I couldn’t stay.

Travel nostalgia

In fact, I realized quite a few things that afternoon. One of them being that I avoid returning to places I truly love. Over the years, I have been exceptionally good about NOT going back to places I’ve spent significant time. I only have been back to Cordoba and Salamanca, Spain once or twice, and left as fast I could. And I lived in both places for a year. Any normal person would be thrilled to go back, right? Instead I run the other way.

While I was sitting in the rain in my car in an overpriced parking lot, I had an epiphany (yes, I did just write that).

I think the reason I have so much trouble going back to places where I have such wonderful memories is that they are just never the same for me. Why?

Travel nostalgia

Travel nostalgia

Because more often than not, the people I shared those experiences with aren’t there anymore. Or they have moved on, while I am still stuck in the past: “hey guys remember that one time we…..”

Yeah, I’m that person. Shoot me now.

For me, the destination is only half of the reason I fall in love so easily. The other half are the people I get to experience it with. When I went back to Salamanca for the first time a year after I left, no one who I shared that time with was still there. It made my return very bittersweet. Like as if I was walking a ghost town, filled with strangers. It didn’t feel like “my city” anymore.

Travel nostalgia

Travel nostalgia

Deep down I knew how sad I would be if I went to Mount Holyoke knowing that all my college friends weren’t there with me. Maybe that’s why I am always looking forward at new places to see instead of wanting to go back to places I’ve been and loved. It’s like I’m running away from it. Sweet Jesus, that can’t be healthy.

But is that to say if I were to move back to Massachusetts, Córdoba, Salamanca or Logroño, would I be happy? Can perfect experiences be repeated? Or would I just be holding onto a memory and be that annoying person who’s always reminiscing about the good ol’ days?

Travel nostalgia

Can you relate to this? Please tell me I am not the only one who feels this way! Do you avoid going back to places you’ve lived and loved? Have you ever gotten a case of the travel nostalgia? Do you have any tips for me to get over this? Or am I just a pretentious dbag with no right to talk about this topic at all since I am not even 30 yet? Pipe up!

Wowza, I really didn’t intend for my return to blogging to be quite so dramatic and philosophized. I’ll make up for it and let my next post be about when I fell off a camel in Jordan.

Travel nostalgia

Travel nostalgia

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129 Comments on “Travel and the Issue of Nostalgia

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  1. Liz,

    I completely understand your feelings. I have the same feeling toward Salamanca. As much as I want to return, I know it can’t be for any substantial length of time because I’ll compare it to the time I spent there a few years ago.

    1. I know, right? My memories of Salamanca are incredible, and the few times I have been back were almost a disappointment in comparison :/

    2. woah, so glad to hear I am not the only one with Salamanca nostalgia!! Such an amazing time in my life! When were you there?

  2. Liz! If it wasn’t for your witty way of writing, I could have sworn I wrote this post. In other words, I know exactly how you feel. I’ve been told that I am also pretty emotional (mostly by my boyfriend, whatev), but I don’t think of us that way. Unlike many others, we form strong bonds with the people and places we leave behind. When I was 17-21, I was in a traveling performing group called The Young Americans. Forty of us would go out on a tour for three months and create these spectacular memories. I thought they’d last a lifetime, but when reminiscing about one of those tours, I often found that I was the only one who cared to remember.

    You mention you often find yourself at odds with yourself. I know the feeling. You have this wanderlust and yet, you have this feeling deep in your heart that wants to find its niche. While most people are planting roots in one place, I think you are planting seeds wherever you go. When the moment is right, you’ll go back to one of those seeds and that is where home will be. Remember, “the grass is greener where you water it”. After a while, you’ll know when and where to lay down your “backpack”.

    Two weeks ago, I found myself in Nebraska for Jake and Brianne’s wedding. A group of us from Logroño were there and all we talked about was how much we missed Logroño. So don’t worry my dear, you are NOT the only one. 🙂

    1. Agree wholeheartedly. I am so bummed I missed out on Brianne and Jake’s wedding, it would have been a nice reunion (and I might have cried!) I am legitimately pissed that we didn’t hang out last year btw 🙂

  3. I am just 18 and my main goal in this age is to see as many new places as I want to. Nevertheless, I am Albanian and I moved from Albanian when I was quite young and as I revisited it last year, I realized it wasn’t what I remembered. I think you are overthinking to much, and literally forget about that whole settling in. You will have that place you call home but maybe the reason why you don’t have it yet is because you have yet to discover it. I would say go to New Zealand and enjoy your time there. Don’t have a due date, and when the time comes, maybe revisit those same cities you’ve lived for a long time. Maybe all of a sudden you will find yourself home, all you need to do is stop fearing life. I’m young and not as experienced in life as you but you are a role model to me. Good luck and simply do what your heart says.

  4. Girl, you always hit the nail on the head. While I loved my year of living in Florence, Italy, I too hated the fact that I couldn’t buy normal stuff since I wouldn’t be able to fit it in my suitcase as I moved to another apartment. I missed it so much, in fact, that I went to Ikea once and spent 130 euros on stuff to make my room feel more homey, even though I was going to be moving back to the US in only three months, probably to never see it all again! I too feel stuck between the nomadic and settled lifestyle, although I just got married so it’s about to get pretty settled for me! But there are ways to conquer this– my husband and I will be living in London, so its pretty easy to get ANYWHERE from there… I plan on working from home, so I can work from anywhere in the world, and he gets a good amount of vacation time.

    But my point is I miss my days in Florence, being able to just hop on a train and go anywhere, or book a cheap flight and experience a whole new culture. So you’re not the only one. Thanks again for writing something I can totally relate to!

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