How the Pandemic Changed My Perspective on Life

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How the Pandemic Changed My Perspective on Life


One morning, I stood on the seashore, absorbing the nice and cozy winter solar after a refreshing swim. Every few moments, a wave would roll in and draw back the sand from beneath my ft, irrespective of how tightly I attempted to carry on to it. Gradually, I conceded to the waves and stopped resisting.

I believe that feeling type of sums up life in the course of the pandemic. I suppose we every tried to take care of some phantasm of management over our lives, travels, work and different plans, however finally had no selection however to let go.

As a long run traveller and journey author, it has been two mentally and financially difficult years. Yet I’m immensely grateful that my household and buddies are in good well being, and people who did succumb to Covid-19 have recovered. I do know not everybody has been so fortunate. If you’ve suffered, or misplaced a cherished one, I hope you’ll discover the energy to get by this tough time. My coronary heart is with you.

In the midst of this storm, I’ve been studying to readjust my sails. As I attempted to remain afloat, some bittersweet realizations dawned on me. Lessons that I maybe neglected in the course of the previous decade of a (digitally) nomadic existence:

I’m probably not a world citizen

My concept of “home” as a digital nomad was by no means a spot, however a sense.

For a very long time, I’ve fooled myself into considering that I’m a world citizen. I could be outfitted with a weak passport, however in my thoughts, I belonged as a lot in Tbilisi and New York, as say Mumbai. When I dreamt of “home”, I conjured up photos of Thai meals, Urdu poetry, conversations with Iranian buddies and my writing spot overlooking three volcanoes in Guatemala

But when the pandemic hit, most nations closed their borders to outsiders, shattering my phantasm.

Turns out, I’m simply who my navy blue Indian passport says I’m – the citizen of a creating nation with a mess of challenges that I can’t escape from. Of course, I share that standing with 1.3 billion individuals, and really feel very conscious of my privilege.

But the stark distinction between my freewheeling thoughts and the constraint of bodily borders has nonetheless been a sobering realization. 

Also learn: What’s the Future of Travel Blogging When Nobody’s Travelling

Despite all of the sh*t India throws at you, it’s one unimaginable nation

In June 2020, when home flights lastly resumed after a 3-month nationwide lockdown, my companion and I reunited in Goa, the one state that may enable us entry with panchayat permissions, Covid testing and institutional quarantine. I had no concept then, that we’d nonetheless be right here (on and off) 18 months later – the longest I’ve spent in a single place since I embraced a nomadic life in 2013!

But even in spite of everything these months – and having visited each monsoon for the previous a few years – I’m STILL discovering Goa!

This time, in an try and keep away from being within the neighborhood of individuals, we ended up discovering majestic, anonymous, sign-less waterfalls. Hiked in landscapes that would have been plucked out of the African bush. Witnessed majestic sunrises and sunsets. Kayaked in riverine backwaters, recognizing fierce-looking crocodiles amidst the mangroves. Connected with native zero waste suppliers, natural farmers and residential cooks to enhance our (principally missing) culinary expertise. And serendipitously discovered fragments of Goa’s previous which have principally been eroded with time.

Living long run in India, with its myriad challenges of erratic water, electrical energy and web provide, and exhausting to grasp native politics, has not been straightforward. But {that a} tiny state like Goa can proceed to shock me in spite of everything this time is an affidavit to only how unimaginable India really is.

Also learn: How to Embrace Sustainable Tourism in India

Don’t name me a journey “influencer”, please!

Dear Instagram, your algorithm is ruining journey!

I’ve usually heard seasoned photographers and writers complain how the web and smartphones have bastardized their professions. On the opposite hand, I’ve lengthy considered myself as a digital being. My weblog helped me carve out my area of interest on the earth and allowed me to make a residing on the go, whereas social media helped me discover my wings.

But the exploding Instagram influencer phenomenon has modified that feeling.

Over the previous few months, I’ve seen hordes of journey Instagrammers and Youtubers cross by Goa. Once whereas climbing alongside the coast, I noticed one thing jarringly colourful in a cave far beneath. I zoomed in with my digital camera to identify a girl in a shiny purple robe and a person in a go well with, posing in entrance of a pictures crew capturing this “candid” second. Stroll alongside any fashionable or ‘offbeat’ seashore at sundown and also you’ll discover loads of Insta-hubbies contorting themselves in unusual methods to seize bikini-clad girls in somewhat unusual poses. Drive previous the notorious Parra street with palm bushes and paddies on both facet, made fashionable by the Bollywood film ’Dear Zindagi’, and also you’ll discover visitors obstructions attributable to dudes with slick hair and clean-shaven chests, posing in the midst of the street!

Don’t get me flawed. I’ve nothing towards attire, bikinis or slick hair, however that these staged pictures will flow into on Instagram with deep quotes on Goa’s susegade life or how travelling can change you, ruffles my feathers.

One of my targets for 2022 is to shed the “influencer” label I carry by advantage of having a readership on Instagram, as a result of there’s nothing I now detest extra.

Also learn: Why Long Term Travel is More Like Real Life and Less Like Instagram

Time is one large steady fabric

Time actually goes on and on, and the seasons all the time change. (Autumn in Kashmir).

I vividly keep in mind the night India went into its first 21-day lockdown. I used to be visiting my people in Dehradun and three weeks gave the impression of an infinite stretch of time, contemplating I not often stayed longer than every week on a single go to. But within the panic and chaos that ensued, the traveller in me took over and satisfied me: this too shall cross.

This is the mantra I’ve adopted many occasions up to now decade, particularly in difficult occasions – in my early journey days when my financial institution stability would usually hover round triple digits. During painfully lengthy and uncomfortable journeys. When I landed up alone someplace so distant and daunting that the butterflies in my tummy would simply not cease flittering.

In one in every of my favourite Murakami books, A Wild Sheep Chase, he writes, “Time really is one big continuous cloth, no? We habitually cut out pieces of time to fit us, so we tend to fool ourselves into thinking that time is our size, but it really goes on and on.”

As we shuffled from one lockdown to a different, after which right into a state of semi-unlock limbo, I attempted to chop out items of time for kayaking, poetry and baking, hoping to make life extra palatable. But in actuality, it flowed on and on, and right here we’re, at first of 2022. What a triumph!

Also learn: How to Indulge Your Wanderlust at Home During the Pandemic

I’m a little bit of an outsider all over the place

An outsider, all the time making an attempt to look in.

During the height of the Hindu–Muslim disharmony earlier than partition, my nice grandparents discovered themselves compelled to pack their belongings in a single day, abandon their house in what’s now Pakistan, and transfer to Amritsar. Then on the peak of the Sikh agitation within the late 80s, my dad and mom and grandparents but once more packed up their lives in Punjab and moved to Dehradun. I used to be within the womb then…

When individuals ask me the place I’m from, Dehradun – the place I used to be born and introduced up – is the simple reply. But in actuality, I really feel like fairly an outsider in my house state of Uttarakhand, as I do in Punjab, and as I presumably would in Pakistan – if my passport ever allowed me to journey there.

Punjabi blood flows by my veins. I write and dream in English. I really feel an inexplicable connection to Iran. My coronary heart yearns for the concept of India. And I suppose, by all my travels, bits and items of me are scattered in lots of components of our bodily world.

In the phrases of the poet Nida Fazli, whose work has been a supply of immense solace in the course of the pandemic:

Waqt ke saath hai mitti ka safar sadiyon se

Kisko malum, kahan ke hain, kidhar ke hum hain

(The soil has been journeying with time for a lot of centuries

Who is aware of, the place we’re from, or the place we belong…)

What’s life been like for you in the course of the pandemic? What would you prefer to learn extra about on my weblog in 2022?

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