best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 13

Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia

Truthfully, Iโ€™m not the best traveler in the world.

I know this because Iโ€™ve traveled a lot and Iโ€™ve met people who are great at it. Real naturals. Iโ€™ve met travelers who are so physically sturdy they could drink a shoebox of water from a Calcutta gutter and never get sick. People who can pick up new languages where others of us might only pick up infectious diseases. People who know how to stand down a threatening border guard or cajole an uncooperative bureaucrat at the visa office. People who are the right height and complexion that they kind of look halfway normal wherever they goโ€”in Turkey they just might be Turks, in Mexico they are suddenly Mexican, in Spain they could be mistaken for a Basque, in Northern Africa they can sometimes pass for Arab . . .

I donโ€™t have these qualities. First off, I donโ€™t blend. Tall and blond and pink-complexioned, I am less a chameleon than a flamingo. Everywhere I go but Dusseldorf, I stand out garishly. When I was in China, women used to come up to me on the street and point me out to their children as though I were some escaped zoo animal. And their childrenโ€”who had never seen anything quite like this pink-faced yellow-headed phantom personโ€”would often burst into tears at the sight of me. I really hated that about China.

Iโ€™m bad (or, rather, lazy) at researching a place before I travel, tending just to show up and see what happens. When you travel this way, what typically โ€œhappensโ€ is that you end up spending a lot of time standing in the middle of the train station feeling confused, or dropping way too much money on hotels because you donโ€™t know better. My shaky sense of direction and geography means I have explored six continents in my life with only the vaguest idea of where I am at any given time. Aside from my cockeyed internal compass, I also have a shortage of personal coolness, which can be a liability in travel. I have never learned how to arrange my face into that blank expression of competent invisibility that

is so useful when traveling in dangerous, foreign places. You knowโ€”that super-relaxed, totally-in-charge expression which makes you look like you belong there, anywhere, everywhere, even in the middle of a riot in Jakarta. Oh, no. When I donโ€™t know what Iโ€™m doing, I look like I donโ€™t know what Iโ€™m doing. When Iโ€™m excited or nervous, I look excited or nervous. And when I am lost, which is frequently, I look lost. My face is a transparent transmitter of my every thought. As David once put it, โ€œYou have the opposite of poker face. You have, like . . . miniature golf face.โ€

And, oh, the woes that traveling has inflicted on my digestive tract! I donโ€™t really want to open that (forgive the expression)ย can of worms,ย but suffice it to say Iโ€™ve experienced every extreme of digestive emergency. In Lebanon I became so explosively ill one night that I could only imagine Iโ€™d somehow contracted a Middle Eastern version of the Ebola virus. In Hungary, I suffered from an entirely different kind of bowel affliction, which changed forever the way I feel about the term โ€œSoviet Bloc.โ€ But I have other bodily weaknesses, too. My back gave out on my first day traveling in Africa, I was the only member of my party to emerge from the jungles of Venezuela with infected spider bites, and I ask youโ€”I beg of you!โ€”who gets sunburned inย Stockholm?

Still, despite all this, traveling is the great true love of my life. I have always felt, ever since I was sixteen years old and first went to Russia with my saved-up babysitting money, that to travel is worth any cost or sacrifice. I am loyal and constant in my love for travel, as I have not always been loyal and constant in my other loves. I feel about travel the way a happy new mother feels about her impossible, colicky, restless newborn babyโ€”I just donโ€™tย careย what it puts me through. Because I adore it. Because itโ€™s mine. Because it looks exactly like me. It can barf all over me if it wants toโ€”I just donโ€™t care.

Anyway, for a flamingo, Iโ€™m not completely helpless out there in the world. I have my own set of survival techniques. I am patient. I know how to pack light. Iโ€™m a fearless eater. But my one mighty travel talent is that I can make friends withย anybody.ย I can make friends with the dead. I once made friends with a war criminal in Serbia, and he invited me to go on a mountain holiday with his family. Not that Iโ€™m proud to list Serbian mass murderers amongst my nearest and dearest (I had to befriend him for a story, and also so he wouldnโ€™t punch me), but Iโ€™m just sayingโ€”I

can do it. If there isnโ€™t anyone else around to talk to, I could probably make friends with a four-foot-tall pile of Sheetrock. This is why Iโ€™m not afraid to travel to the most remote places in the world, not if there are human beings there to meet. People asked me before I left for Italy, โ€œDo you have friends in Rome?โ€ and I would just shake my head no, thinking to myself,ย But I will.

Mostly, you meet your friends when traveling by accident, like by sitting next to them on a train, or in a restaurant, or in a holding cell. But these are chance encounters, and you should never rely entirely on chance. For a more systematic approach, there is still the grand old system of the โ€œletter of introductionโ€ (today more likely to be an e-mail), presenting you formally to the acquaintance of an acquaintance. This is a terrific way to meet people, if youโ€™re shameless enough to make the cold call and invite yourself over for dinner. So before I left for Italy, I asked everyone I knew in America ifย theyย had any friends in Rome, and Iโ€™m happy to report that I have been sent abroad with a substantial list of Italian contacts.

Among all the nominees on my Potential New Italian Friends List, I am most intrigued to meet a fellow named . . . brace yourself . . . Luca Spaghetti. Luca Spaghetti is a good friend of my buddy Patrick McDevitt, whom I know from my college days. And that is honestly his name, I swear to God, Iโ€™m not making it up. Itโ€™s too crazy. I meanโ€”just think of it. Imagine going through life with a name likeย Patrick McDevitt?

Anyhow, I plan to get in touch with Luca Spaghetti just as soon as possible.

You'll Also Like