• Central America,  Guatemala

    Yoga Teacher Graduation

    “We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done.”   — Henry Wadsworth Longfellow The Last Week of Yoga Training The third week of yoga teacher training in Guatemala is testing week. Everyone in the training had to teach a one hour class during the week and take a written exam at the end of the week on Friday before (hopefully) graduating on Saturday. As the usual, we still had a 90 minute yoga class with Doron each morning. Every once in awhile, if the group looked particularly exhausted, he would go easy on us with a slower, less strenuous…

  • Central America,  Guatemala

    Becoming a Yogi: Part 2

    “Every exit is an entry somewhere else.” – Tom Stoppard Dance Like No one is Looking A week through my Yoga teacher training class in Tzununa, Guatemala.  Honestly, it’s been great.  Better than great.  I hate to be cliché, but it’s life changing.  It’s like three weeks of physical workouts, intensive emotional therapy, career and life counseling, friend making, and new experiences.  Saturday mornings we do Zen Dance for an hour and a half in lieu of a morning meditation.  It’s 90 minutes of music, and dancing like a liquored up soccer mom let loose on a cruise ship dance floor. A.K.A., like no one is looking.  Limbs are flailing,…

  • Central America,  Guatemala

    I’m Gonna be a Yoga Teacher

    “Life is not what happened to you but what you remember and how you remember it to retell it.”  — Gabriel García Márquez Get me to the Shala on Time Yoga training.  Guatemala.  Here we go.  I left Antigua on the arduous trek to Lake Atitlan, the location of my yoga teacher training. I’ve spent enough time relaxing and eating while traveling, it’s time to Yoga. Three hours on a shuttle bus that ran 45 minutes late, and a long walk with a heavy backpack later, and I’m waiting at the dock in Panajachel, a.k.a. Pana. Pana is one of the larger towns on Lake Atitlan, and the one connected to…

  • Guatemala

    Last Stop: Guatemala

    “When you’re traveling, you are what you are right there and then.  People don’t have your past to hold against you.  No yesterdays on the road.” – -William Least Heat Moon Back on a Plane After two months stateside, I left the US in early April for my last foreign destination of this year of travel: Guatemala. I’d be lying if I didn’t say it felt bittersweet leaving the US this time. After spending two months at home, I expected to be excited to jump on a plane for one last passport stamp. When I was home, I felt a lot of life stresses coming back. But I also felt…

  • Central America,  Mexico,  United States

    A Stop at Home (and Mexico)

    “I think you travel to search and you come back home to find yourself there.” –Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie So am I Still Traveling? Hi folks. It’s me again. Upon leaving Singapore in January, I took a short travel break and spent a few months back at home. If you didn’t see me stateside, you likely never noticed any of this happened. When I left Singapore I was just a tad behind on blogging. You’re welcome for that. Because of my laziness and time-consuming, over-thought, forever-taking process of writing, none of you had to wait very long between blog posts. This isn’t Game of Thrones. To answer your questions, no I…

  • SE Asia,  Singapore

    A Day in Singapore

    “If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.”   — Henry David Thoreau Quick Layover I arrived in Singapore after leaving the temples and volcanos of Java Indonesia. This was my last stop in Asia before heading home for a few months. It’s really just a prolonged layover really. I was barely in the city for 48 hours. Not nearly enough time to see everything, but it’s a start and it will have to be enough. Get in. See some shit. Get out. Go home. This will be a relatively short post.…

  • Indonesia,  Java,  SE Asia

    Mount Bromo and Leaving Indonesia

    “I don’t want to own anything until I know I have found the place where me and things belong together. I’m not quite sure where that is just yet. But I know what it’s like.”   — Truman Capote, Breakfast at Tiffany’s More Java Moving across Java, I took an overnight train from Yogyakarta eastward to Malang. Midnight training across Indonesia isn’t a bad way to get around, but arriving at a train station at 10pm and trying to sleep in an upright seat for 11 hours is not my favorite. It’s as comfortable as you’d expect. So not very. Malang is one of my last stops in Indonesia. I’d…

  • Indonesia,  Java,  SE Asia

    Yogyakarta and Central Java

    “Live your life by a compass, not a clock.” -Stephen Covey Waking up in Java It was before dawn in Yogyakarta when my alarm went off. The sun still lay sleepily below the horizon while I sleepily got dressed. It was 3am. On this day, I was scheduled to meet a van filled with foreigners and a local tour guide at 3:30 am. We were headed to Borobudur Temple. A.k.a. The largest Buddhist temple in the world. I came to Yogyakarta to see Borobudur. And a few other things. But mostly this temple. Yogyakarta is a medium-sized and relatively calm city in central Java, the biggest island in Indonesia. The…

  • Gili Air,  Indonesia,  SE Asia,  Uncategorized

    Yoga Retreating in Indonesia

    “It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” Confucius Diet, Exercise, and a Life of Travel I am an active person. Before embarking on this year of life and world exploration, I was a runner, cyclist, short distance triathlete (though I do not care for the swimming), occasional rock climber, and general cardio connoisseur. I’ve woken up at 4:30am to make a 5:30am spin class. Got home at 9pm on a Wednesday night because I stopped on the way home for a Yoga HIIT class. Whatever that means. I don’t do these things because I’m a natural athlete who just loves cycling so…

  • Indonesia,  SE Asia

    New Years in Ubud

    I know I’m WAY behind on this Blog, but good things are worth waiting for, so keep your pants on. Cassandra Johnson Leaving the Resort After spending Christmas by a Hilton Conrad pool in Nusa Dua in Bali, Vinisha, Ali and I made the journey to the faraway land of Ubud, Bali. It’s a deceivingly short 45 kilometers between the two cities. But don’t let that fool you. It takes damn near all day to get there. Balinese residents have had the pleasure of living in a peaceful, tourist-free oasis existence until just recently. Because of this, there are no wide-laned highways transversing the island. It’s blatantly obvious that the…

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