Europe Road Trip 2015 Vignette
Statistics:
Days traveled: 39
Miles traveled: 8750 km (5437 miles)
Countries visited: 10 (Germany, Luxembourg, Belgium,
Netherlands, France, Spain, Monaco, Italy, Switzerland, Lichtenstein)
Cities visited: 35 (including small towns, villages)
UNESCO World Heritage Sites visited: counting, will sum up
at the end of my weekly diaries posts
Money spent: $20,000
The story:
Our amazing Western Europe road trip has come to its
end. It was a grand adventure and the
longest I’ve ever been on the road non-stop. We traveled fast, didn’t spend
more than a few days at one location and constant change of scenery never let
us off the bait. Since we were Europe “virgins”, well my boyfriend was a virgin
and I sort of tried some things (Germany, France) but never went all the way J, we were smitten by
the beauty, the history and the architecture.
I call our trip “Introduction to Europe 101”, as we didn’t
explore places extensively, but rather tried to catch the crème de la crème of
European wonders. I got asked many times
if such a long journey made me tired and bored and if things started looking
dull by the end of the trip. The answer is no. The more I saw, the more I
longed to see and explore. Traveling is like a drug. Once you are hooked, it’s
hard to quit. By the time we had to go home, I was already dreaming of our next
destinations.
What I’ve learned:
As a Russian expat living in the States for over a decade, I should confess the concepts of cultural identity and patriotism have been haunting me for
years. Who are we – expats leaving our roots behind and adapting to new ways,
new traditions, new mentalities? As I currently
can’t control my frequent bouncing of English and Russian languages, I respectively
couldn’t decide which country speaks to me more. And here comes travel – one
thing that blurs the edges to further extremes. Did I love Europe? Absolutely!
Could I live there? Without question. I guess the answer for me is simple. I
value freedom and new experiences to such an extent that saying I dos to one
country becomes merely impossible. My
birthplace will always be dear to my heart and I gravitate towards it or anything resemblant greatly. My current residence suits my
needs, brings me comfort and in many ways correlates to my new shaped
mentality. However, today I can say with certainty that I am no country patriot.
I do not believe in any nation being superior to the other and any country
being better than the other. Just as people – they are all different and
unique, fascinating in some realms and unattractive in others. Balance is the
key.