Showing posts with label packing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label packing. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2011

EXODUS

Nancy


16/2/11
And here we sit, teary-eyed, light-headed, and heavy-hearted. It seems we've survived yet another cyclone; at least, our room has. It's inundated with socks and undies and toiletries and shirts and dress shirts and sneakers and shorts...You get the idea. Torrential packing, friends. It looks like our wardrobe's vomited all over the carpet.

And what's left to do now, with two days left?

In short, everything. Because our room continues to give birth to more and more hidden junk. It crops up everywhere, demanding we find it a good home. And we need to cancel the internet plan. And dispose of the 70,000-strong army of used tissues, bunkered under the couch (which, I'm proud to announce, has left the premises). Then we have to squeeze in time to pathetically weep on each other's shoulders. And o, how grateful I am that there are two of us, not least because this exercise would prove physically difficult alone.

And we don't know how it's all crept up on us so rudely, and our applications to extend the number of hours in the day have been repeatedly rejected. And, and, and, and...

We must hurry--Saturday is the day of our EXODUS!

-Nancy Howie

Creative Commons License
The Quest Quotient by Nancy Howie and Steff Werman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at thequestquotient2011.blogspot.com.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Only the Beginning

Nancy:

You know, reader(s) [assuming more than just our immediate family ever get to read this blog], it has been said that a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. It so happens that this was said sometime between 604 and 531 BC (about when my parents were born. Kidding, Mum and Dad), before they had Dodge Ram conversion campers and the like. So for us, the single step was a metaphorical one. Unfortunately, the metaphorical first step is far more arduous than the literal.

The Single Step
Oh, deceptive simplicity! The first step involved:
1. A four-hour application process, involving an unnavigable government website and having to take new photos, because my passport photos did not reveal my shoulders (treacherous infidels as they are).
2. Arriving at the US Consulate for an appointment, where I was stripped of everything but the clothing on my back (and legs. And arms. And feet.) and the application itself. I stood in line for two hours, nervously anticipating the gruelling interview to follow, fearing rejection! The other detainees and I bonded, laughed (quietly, nervous about awakening the wrath of the department officials. Especially when they'd taken digital copies of our prints. Twice.). We speculated as to what this intense and difficult process would lead up to. Then we attended the two-minute interview, received the stamp of approval, and were shooed out the door. Just like that! Ye gods.

And so the voyage begins. I know, we're still in the country, and we don't leave until February, but it's a beginning! And if Lao-tzu is anyone to go by, we gotta start somewhere, n'est-ce pas?

"Only the curious will learn and only the resolute overcome the obstacles to learning. The quest quotient has always excited me more than the intelligence quotient."
-Eugene S. Wilson


Steff:


On account of my lack of visa issues (being a US citizen), my trip preparation thus far has consisted of feverish researching, daydreaming, and imagining, which is proving to be a lovely antidote to my 9 to 5 minimum-wage job.

Escapist voyages include:
-Contacting WWOOF farms
-Obsessively studying permaculture
-Travelling virtually to our planned destinations
-Loitering in camping stores between the cookers and the hiking boots
-Writing lists (things to bring, people to see, things to see, people to bring, stuff to learn, inspiring ideas, not to forget underwear)

How the hell I'll manage to clean our room and pack my life into a backpack remains to be seen...
Peace!

Creative Commons License
The Quest Quotient by Nancy Howie and Steff Werman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at thequestquotient2011.blogspot.com.