TAKING A TRIP AROUND THE WORLD WAS AT THE VERY TOP OF TRACA’S bucket list long before I met her and it became a recurring topic of conversation in our marriage over the years. We dreamed about it from time to time, mapped out routes, imagined the adventure. For my part, I was mostly playing along with this fantasy, not really thinking we’d ever go, but Traca never let it die. Even when there was no practical way a big trip made any sense at all, when we were busy with young children or in debt up to our eyeballs, she loved to toss the idea of world travel onto the floor like a magic carpet and see if it took us anywhere. It’s just part of her makeup. Foreign cultures and unknown languages and passport stamps and airport terminals fire her imagination like nothing else. It’s not so much wanderlust. It’s more like fernweh, another German word, which means “an ache for the distance.” That’s Traca. She aches to go and explore … she yearns to experience the world … as if she is pulled by a gravity I simply do not feel.
It’s not that I’m against travel. I love it. I guess I’m just more practical than she is. While Traca would happily spend the last of our meager savings on a spectacular two-week trek in Peru, I tend to analyze a specific trip and calculate whether the cost of plane tickets, hotels, and restaurants and the sheer hassles involved would make a good investment for a family on a budget.
We did manage to spend a wonderful, impractical year in a Portuguese fishing village back in 2000 when our kids were seven and five—but a complete circle of our enormous planet? That was different. The timing just wasn’t right, or it was too expensive, or I wanted to focus on my career, or it would be better when the kids were older, or we’d do it later. In fact, I probably could have stalled like that forever (because it’s never really the right time to take a trip around the world), until one day, as if the universe were advocating in Traca’s behalf, three words popped into my head, and even I couldn’t resist the idea any longer.
I wasn’t thinking of anything particular at the time the three words occurred to me. I wasn’t really thinking at all. I was just sitting on an airplane, looking out the window, marveling at the Windex-blue water of the Caribbean. I had a ginger ale in front of me and a tan on my face, and I was feeling better, more centered, than I’d felt in a very long time. Maybe ever.
This bliss—for lack of a better word—was the result of a weeklong yoga retreat Traca and I had just completed, and it came as a total surprise to me. When she proposed the idea, I had zero interest in a yoga vacation, even a tropical one. Traca was the yoga instructor and daily practitioner in the family. Time spent in a rigid ashram environment might seem like heaven on earth to her, but to me it sounded like a descent into backbend hell, and an expensive one at that.
Still, I had been pretty stressed out. Professionally, my work as creative director at a few local TV stations in Maine felt uninspired, and my eyes were almost constantly red from too much computer time. I felt listless, unmotivated, going through the motions of life—which was a fairly accurate description of my marriage at the time, too. After sixteen years of raising children, Traca and I were more like chaperones than lovers, treading water in the deep end of the parenting pool, just passing the time. We got along well enough. We were committed to our kids. There was no cheating or plate throwing, but there wasn’t a lot of passion, either. While I buried myself in work and focused on my career, Traca got deep into yoga and meditation and shamanism and Reiki therapy. We were drifting and we both knew it, but there were so many other things preoccupying us. I always assumed we’d reconnect when the kids went off on their own; it would just mean three more years of treading water, which I knew would pass quickly.
As for the yoga vacation, I didn’t expect it to fix any or all of these problems, but since it was the only thing Traca wanted for her birthday that year, I signed us both up. I packed my swimsuit and my stretchy pants, resolved to leave my cynicism and my judgment at home, and flew to Paradise Island in the Bahamas for a little downward-facing dog and, hopefully, some time on the beach.
My first impression of the ashram, other than the palm trees and the warm sun, was “These people do not look very friendly.” I said this out loud to Traca, which I could tell instantly annoyed her, but it was true. Everywhere I went on the ashram property, residents and instructors followed me with their eyes as if I were a shoplifter. When I passed people on the lush, overgrown paths, said hello, and tried to be friendly, many of them looked right through me or looked away. It didn’t make any sense. Where were the enlightened smiling faces and the “Thanks for spending so much money with us” hospitality? Feeling judged and defensive, I decided to forget about everyone else and just focus on myself. For better or worse, I committed wholeheartedly to the regimented ashram routine.
So I woke up while it was still dark, walked silently down the beach with the other guests, sat in meditation as the sun came up, then did my best to chant the hour-long Sanskrit song that began and ended every ashram day. For most of this epic chant, I had no idea what I was saying—but I did recognize the famous Hare Krishna lines that devotees used to sing in airports back in the seventies. I remember spotting a group of these chanters while on a family vacation as a kid. It was as if my two brothers and I had found a nest of rare, hilarious birds, and we couldn’t help laughing at them as they banged on their tambourines, twirled in their robes, and whipped their thin, solitary braids around on their otherwise bald heads.
Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare …
The first time I said these words at the ashram, I was sitting in a group of chanters, all of them swaying and vibing on the rhythmic chant energy. Sandwiched between Father Granola and Sister Moonstar Rainbow Brite, I looked up to try to catch Traca’s eye. She was sitting across from me, head down, with her own sway and vibe going on. Then, as if she knew I needed her, she lifted her head and looked right at me. For a beat, we just looked. Then she smiled and shrugged, which for some reason sent me into a fit of laughter. If my brothers could have seen me at that moment, I knew they’d be laughing, too.
After morning chant, two hours of yoga awaited. I did my best, but sadly, I was like the Tin Man, with welded hips and steel bars for legs. (And not much heart, either, now that I think of it.) Most classes, I was a million miles from the perfect pose the rubber-limbed yogis would demonstrate, but I was there. I was trying.
“Now hold your foot to your breast like a baby,” a rail-thin instructor said one afternoon, sitting cross-legged on the floor in front of me. To demonstrate, he lifted one foot effortlessly to his chest, rocking back and forth. “And feed your baby gently,” he said, now breastfeeding his own foot. “And kiss your baby,” he said, drawing his foot to his puckering mouth.
As I sat on my mat, having trouble just keeping my back straight without support, I managed to lift my foot a full eight inches off the ground. But it was not going any higher, not without tearing a few ligaments.
Naturally, the instructor was just getting started. “And finally, rest your baby behind your head like this and lift your other baby to your chest.” I watched him sitting there with one ankle tucked behind his neck, the other suckling at his bosom, and I thought: I would need to fall off a building to end up in a pose like that.
“What’d you think?” Traca asked me at the end of the class. She was smiling, firing on all cylinders, clearly in her element.
“I think my babies are going to go hungry,” I said.
But I didn’t give up. Day by day, I ate the mega-healthy meals (just brunch and dinner), attended every yoga class (four hours per day), received a small ovation when I did my first unassisted headstand, chanted with all the sincerity I could muster, even tapped a tambourine during one evening program.
Then a funny thing happened. In just seven days, all the people at the ashram went from unfriendly to friendly. “The people here are so nice,” I said to Traca with a laugh, knowing that the change had happened within me. For the first time in years, I felt light and joyful, my mind was still and clear, and I saw Traca—really saw her—not simply as a mother and a homemaker but as the beautiful woman I had fallen in love with so many years ago. The coldness that had permeated our marriage for too long was breaking up. We held hands. We kissed. It was an epiphany, really. As though I’d been sitting in the dark for years and suddenly someone had pulled open the shades.
“You are feeling better?” a swami asked me as I was leaving.
I said that I was. Much better.
“I can tell,” she said with a big smile. “Your eyes are shining.”
With this peaceful easy feeling, I boarded a plane headed back to Portland, Maine, with a stop in Atlanta. Traca took the aisle, I took the window. Below, the bright blue water matched the clarity I was feeling when the three words appeared in my mind like a non sequitur from God. Though I wasn’t looking for them at the time or fishing for them in any way, they felt urgent—if not a sign, then at least an inspired nudge. Three simple words:
Year of Service.
It’s a strange feeling, getting an answer to a question you did not know you were asking, but I knew exactly what the words meant, and—in spite of my newfound calm—they both thrilled me and freaked me out. I also had the superstitious notion, right away, that if I spoke these words out loud, they would take on a life of their own, that Traca would chomp down on them like a pit bull and never let them go. Even I couldn’t resist the idea they suggested, and I began planning in my head almost immediately.
Up until that point, my biggest resistance to the idea of a trip around the world had always been the cost. I read a book once called One Year Off by David Elliot Cohen in which the author packed up his wife and three small children (and an au pair!) and hit sixteen countries over the course of thirteen months. While I loved the author’s “leave it all behind” attitude and his close encounters with hippos and holy men, my biggest impression was: This must have cost a bloody fortune! In one eleven-day period, the Cohens went on a five-day safari at Chobe National Park in Botswana, a three-day safari at the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, and a white-water rafting trip below Victoria Falls. As if that wasn’t enough, they then flew to South Africa for another three-day safari at a place called Makalali in Kruger National Park! I won’t even begin to speculate on how much this week and a half must have set the family back; even with the best possible bargain hunting, I’m sure it was a lot. And while I have no problem with the Cohens spending whatever they wanted to spend on their adventure, I just knew that this kind of lavish traveling was not going to be our story.
But a Year of Service …
I’d read about the idea in a magazine. “Voluntourism,” it’s called; vacations with a purpose. All over the world, people are combining travel with service and creating much more meaningful experiences. In exchange for some work and usually a placement fee, volunteers get food and a bed to sleep in. If we planned it carefully, I reasoned, it probably wouldn’t cost very much at all. We’d need airfare, but after that we’d just need to find organizations that needed volunteers. We wouldn’t just be sightseeing. We’d be helping. Instead of impersonal hotels and budget restaurants, we’d be in communities where we were needed, making connections to local people, eating with them, living with them. Some people report having their lives forever altered by a single week of overseas service. So what could a whole year do?
The more I thought about it, the more excited I got. What an amazing gift to give our kids! Like most every other teenager in America, our daughter, Jackson, was totally addicted to Facebook and her cell phone. What if we could unplug her for a full year? Wouldn’t that be worth almost any price? And our sixteen-year-old son, Logan, would be gone from home soon. What if we could show him the world together before he headed off into it alone? How would the trajectory of his young life be changed after such a trip? How would all our lives be changed?
I looked at Traca and she smiled. I looked back out the window. In my mouth the three words rolled around like marbles.
Year of Service … Year of Service …
In Atlanta, I was biting my tongue, not speaking, afraid the words would tumble out if I so much as yawned. I carried them down the moving sidewalks, past the magazine racks, up to our gate. Did I even want this? A whole year of service? I was excited, but I was scared. What was I scared of? Nothing had actually happened yet. The words weren’t a burning bush or anything. I had a career. I had kids in high school to think about, college coming up. I wasn’t some flaky Hare Krishna.
Year of Service … Year of Service …
And then … we were talking about it. We were eating some lunch, waiting for our connecting flight, and I just started saying it all. I opened my mouth and the marbles rolled all over the table.