The Big D, Travel, and Me

The search for part-time work here in Minnesconsin has begun in earnest for me. Part of the search involved me going through every nook and cranny of this house to find my college transcripts, per a prospective employer’s request.

Ugh. I scoured through boxes and file cabinets all for naught. The job opening was taken down before I got a chance to request my transcripts from my alma mater.

What would be found in my college transcripts, because I remember and I’m not proud of it, is the “D” I got in Geography my freshman year.

It’s curious, I think, as a person who’s always been enthusiastic about travel, that this was my worst subject in college. I would have hoped that my interest in travel would have pushed me to do better in this course. Yet, my near-failure of this course may just be how I’m wired. I recently learned from my sister that she also stinks at Geography. We both also have no sense of direction. GPS was a Godsend for people like us.

Anyway, this all got me thinking more about travel. For so long I’ve been telling everyone I know and people I just met how much I want to visit Europe. England to begin with, as I’ve got a niece who lives there with her husband and kids and I know she’d love to show us the sites. She’s currently hosting her niece who flew in after graduating from high school in Minnesota (what kid wouldn’t love to have an auntie that cool?). Yet, at the moment, it doesn’t appear that travel to Europe is going to happen for us in the foreseeable future. However, there’s no doubt in my mind that it will happen at some point.

However, there are many locations within the U.S. that I’ve never seen before. Places Hubs hasn’t been to either. As domestic travel generally is less costly and requires less time off work, due to the distance differences, I think it’s time for us to consider where exactly we would want to go and what we’d want to see when we get there.

What places would you like to visit in the U.S. someday?

Off the top of my head, I can tell you that I would like to visit the following places in the U.S. (in no particular order):

  • Austin, TX (specifically to check out the art scene and Austin City Limits)
  • Cleveland, OH (Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, people!)
  • North Carolina. A friend and sorority sister from college lives there and it seems lovely.
  • New York City (to be in the audience of SNL, see Times Square, Broadway, and more)

I think it’s time for me to assemble that puzzle I bought earlier this summer of the U.S. map. That’ll inspire me even more, giving me more ideas of places I want to visit. There are 50 states, and I’ve only visited 18 of them.

And don’t let me forget my most asinine hifalutin outlandish lifelong travel dream of the two of us getting ourselves an RV and driving through all 50 states. At a sort of leisurely pace. Yes, outlandish. But what an adventure too, right? But. Age.

But I digress, as one does at 56, perhaps. Though probably it’s just me.

Yet, taking it down to an elemental level, we’ve still only lived here for a year. There’s a shitload of places we haven’t ever been to within just a 1-2 hour drive from home.

My goal is to start rectifying that.

Once I hit the publish button on this post, I will be starting a list. It will include all of the places around these parts which I’ve not yet visited. Then, one by one, I’ll visit them. Heck, maybe I’ll even find some images of these places and slap them on a vision board for reference.

Then I will work on that U.S. map puzzle and come up with a new list.

Here’s a fun little video about travel and adventure from my youth:

And the song that inspired the title of this blog post:

***Header image of Cascade Falls courtesy of https://www.startribune.com/daytrip-osceola-wis/322524331/#4

6 thoughts on “The Big D, Travel, and Me”

  1. This year’s homeschool theme is travel. We’re tackling the country two states at a time, and then will move on to the world. I told them that my U.S. geography education covered the state capitals and the song “Fifty Nifty United States” — I know very little about my own country. We’re doing it differently: learning about the state history, culture, and present; examining the state flag and seal as clues behind the ideology behind the state; learning about the state’s weather, wildlife, and landscape; and sampling a food or recipe important to each when feasible. Far more interesting than memorizing a list of states and capitals.

    So consider this, when thinking about that D: Maybe the problem was that lesson, or the approach of the person teaching it, didn’t work for you. Maybe your interest in geography doesn’t translate well to a traditional classroom format. Or maybe your teacher did a D job teaching you what they meant for you to learn.

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    1. Yeah, that could be it, the instructors fault. Guess it’s neither here nor there, as they say. I love what you’re doing for Geography for your kids. So much fun! I’m going to keep going with this Minnesconsin theme. I think it’ll be eye opening for me and hopefully interesting for my readers.

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  2. I don’t think traveling through all fifty states in an RV is outlandish, though we’re not RV kind of folks. I have visited all fifty states now, though, to be fair, some I can’t remember because they merely involved passing through in a car as a child. My wife and I hope to get to Europe for our 40th anniversary in three years.

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    1. After spending the summer last year living in our camper while we house hunted, I’d be hard-pressed to convince my Hubs to travel the country in an RV. He did not enjoy working and living in the camper for 3 months and can’t wait to sell it. I can’t blame him; perhaps once we retire we can do that. Or take multiple shorter trips to various places in the U.S. we want to see. Europe for your 40th sounds fantastic! Thanks for your comments, Pete.

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