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I’ve Always Wanted to Go!

Posted by Anne Born on July 17, 2018
Posted in: New York, Traveling, Uncategorized. Tagged: family, travel. 1 Comment

Today, I am putting on my travel coach hat. This is where I hear your lament – “I have always wanted to go there!” – and I turn it into, “I am so glad I went there.”

Eiffel Tower? You can go to Paris, you know. How about a soccer game, opera performance, art exhibition, concert? How many times do you have to miss something because you just can’t figure out how to get there and back without breaking the bank?

I call it it a “Bugout.”

I was working at Columbia University many years ago in the Department of International and Public Affairs. The woman whose office was just next door to mine was a professor in the department and her husband taught in the Business School. They were very comfortable, financially speaking, and took some nice trips. But it was one trip in particular that made me re-think bugout travel. They went to Barcelona for the weekend. They left on Thursday night, and came back the following Tuesday.

I was stunned. They were not super rich first class, jet set travelers, they were just a husband and wife wanting to go to the museums in Barcelona for a few days. My conversation with her went something like this: “How did you, where are you, when did…” I never considered a trip like this. I always figured you had to have ten days, two weeks. I have a friend now who is going to Spain, Portugal, and Morocco – but for three weeks of traveling.

So, what did I learn? Other than you can go someplace far and get back in just a few days? I learned that bravery was necessary. That timing was critical to a successful bugout. That planning was essential. But that all in all, it was completely doable.

First consideration: the best long distance bugouts involve nonstop, direct flights to your destination. If you want to go to Barcelona, don’t fly in and out of Madrid. You run the risk of missing a connection when time is of the essence. This means you can go best when you can get to your destination in one flight.

Next – plan to take next to nothing with you. This will reinforce the bugout nature of the trip and ensure you get in and out of airports with the least number of events. Meaning, don’t check a bag you have to retrieve, run the risk of losing, have to drag around. Get just what you need into a carry-on.

Then, get tickets to the place and to your thing. I bugged out a few years ago to Miami to see a ballet company perform that was not going to be in New York that season.  I remember calling my daughter when she lived in Madrid to see if she wanted to go to Lisbon for the weekend. I bought the tickets on Wednesday and was on the plane Thursday night. We spent Friday, Saturday, Sunday in Portugal visiting Lisbon and Sintra. She went back to Madrid, I went back to New York. We did the same thing for Barcelona. And just this past June, I went to Italy for a long weekend to see the Palio in Siena.

Bottom line – life is so short. If you can just get out to the airport, get out and go. Maybe it’s just to North Dakota because you’ve never been there. Or DC because you want to protest in front of the White House. Get maps, get guidebooks, get online and get your tickets.

It’s O.K.

If you’d like to read more travel tips, try “Buen Camino!” Paperback and Kindle.

Just Say No to Jet Lag!

Posted by Anne Born on July 13, 2018
Posted in: New York. Tagged: family, flying, jetlag, time, travel. Leave a comment

6174649296_IMG_0728Jet lag will bring you down. It’s a weird, disorienting feeling that you are too tired to lie down, to jazzed to stay in one place, too foggy to think – and in no way, shape, or form are you ready or able to enjoy a vacation, business trip, or family bug-out.

In a word or two – jet lag is the pits.

I have conquered jet lag – and I do not say that lightly. I really have decided to beat it at its own game and in order to do that, I have set up some protocols that seem to work every time. It’s been over more than a few trips, and it does reflect my own body chemistry, but it works.

Allow me to fill you in on my protocols. They are a little floopy, but I think if you have issues with jet lag, you got nothin’ to lose by trying them out on your next trip over time zones.

One note: these tips are based on trips to Europe from the US.

  1. Step out of time. This means taking off your watch, shutting off your phone, and letting the day tell you what time it is. Certainly you want to make your flight, but let all those airport clocks remind you of the current time. Then, once you are on the plane, don’t sit and mentally remind yourself of the six hours or so ahead you will be when you land, or the time it is now at your destination, or the number of hours in your flight. Step out of time altogether and let life present itself to you. Like medieval farmers.
  2. Bring a watch already set to the time where you are going. But set it the day before you leave so it doesn’t bring you back into time. Put it in your bag and don’t look at it until AFTER you land. Look out the window at your new day and put on the pre-set watch.
  3. Ignore folks who say, don’t drink caffeinated drinks on the plane, or don’t eat anything. I’m a coffee lover – going without it gave me a headache. I do pack food these days because I tend to land and then keep going, either to a train or another flight, so I need food to tide me over breakfast or lunch when I land.
  4. Sleep. If you are on an overnight flight to Europe or beyond, don’t beat yourself up if you think you are not sleeping enough on the flight. Rest is paramount, sleep is a bonus. If you put the book away, turn off the screen in front of you, wrap a nice fleecy blanket around your shoulders, and rest, you will likely fall asleep regardless. Trying to make yourself fall asleep won’t work and it is stress-inducing!
  5. When you arrive at your destination, get as much daylight as possible. Do not be tempted to just sack out when you get there. Stay on your feet, find something neat to do, get lunch at lunchtime, dinner at dinnertime, best as you can. While I would not book Wagner opera tickets to sit through five hours of singing in German on the day I arrive, there’s nothing wrong in booking a nice twilight tour of Paris on the Seine or a night walking tour of spooky spots in York.
  6. If you are too tired, seriously tired, take an hour nap not later than early to mid afternoon.

What I have found is the constant mental math of what time is it here, what time is it there, or how many hours have I been traveling is what makes for world class jet lag. Best is to convince yourself you are a world class traveler, but one who is not tied to clocks and watches. Sun up, you’re up. Sun down, you’re down. Then little by little, the new place will come into brilliant focus and you will have a fabulous trip. And besides, everyone wants to know what you bought, what you saw, where you went, not how many hours it took you to get there.

Get up and go! Life’s too short to stay in one place.

If you’d like to read more travel tips, try “Buen Camino!” Paperback and Kindle.

The Mourning Dove

Posted by Anne Born on June 16, 2018
Posted in: New York. Tagged: memory, Michigan, new_york. 1 Comment

There’s a mourning dove near my window in the Bronx. She’s new. I hear her in the morning now, and at twilight sometimes.

I grew up listening to the soft grey birds near my parents’ house in Michigan. Over breakfast. The cooing, the pattern of cooing, that plaintive, slow soft grey cooing. The other birds set off on a frantic chatter, but the doves, they were the calmer voice of reason. A sultry mezzo countering the soprano chorus of ingenues.

There was another dove on the windowsill at work today in Queens. She let me watch her until my shadow forced her away. I’ve never seen one up so close before.

I tell you this and I know you’ll think, oh, listening to that sad sound from the visitors by her window now must remind her of home and lazy Michigan summers.

It’s not that at all. It’s that now I know: home must have been reminded of me.

The River

Posted by Anne Born on February 23, 2018
Posted in: Uncategorized. 1 Comment

I am the pioneer, not you.

When you came, I had already seen

the vast stretches of tall cool grass and trees shading, standing,

watching.

When you came,

I had already known

the warmth of late summer twilight and the chill of an early fall sunrise.

I am the pioneer, not you.

I washed over your tired feet and soothed your limbs and your pain

I was there to refresh you and I watched you smile at the taste of my

clear water.

Do you remember the quiet winter when you skated across my frozen surface,

shouting and laughing with your friends?

And then the spring, when you built little boats and I tossed you in them?

I am the pioneer, not you.

I washed over my banks over and over again and you said I didn’t know where to stop.

I flooded the hills and the paths over and over again

and you thought I was wrong, that you could fix me.

I came up to your silly bridges

and lapped against the fragile wood structures you buried in my riverbed.

I’ll win you know.

I carried away your simple tents and your plantings and playthings

And you.

I carried you all on my back down stream until nobody remembered

you,

But you will remember me.

You will say,

“The spring of aught-six was

a bad one, the river was a terrible thing,” and you will fear me now,

you will run from me

and you will move your tents away and you will have to bring my water up hills to your homes.

And I will miss the time when I washed over your feet and you sat along my banks, sipping my clear water.

It’s different now.

It’s my nature that you should fear me.

I am the pioneer.

Not you.

(Written about the St. Joe River. It is now, as pictured above, 6′ above flood stage). Photo credit: WNDU

Reviews are in!

Posted by Anne Born on February 3, 2018
Posted in: Camino de Santiago, Spain. Tagged: camino, caminodesantiago, churches and sanctuary, new_book, Spain, writing. 1 Comment

Thank you to the lovely people who have written kind things about our new book!

Buen Camino! Tips from an American Pilgrim – available on Amazon, B&N, and by special order at your favorite independent bookseller.

All are FIVE STARS!

Great motivation book for the Camino de Santiago

PorCliente Amazonel 20 de enero de 2018

I really liked this book by Anne Born on the Camino de Santiago and was surprised how easy it is to read. Even though it is an information book, the story really flows and the anedocts are really interesting. I was able to go 3 times on the Camino this year, last time end of October. But this book made me want to go back as soon as possible 🙂

A wonderful book that transports you to Spain and then is your companion throughout!

ByKarenon 3 February 2018

Anne writes a delightful book that is a joy to read. She wets your appetite if like me you have never been a pilgrim and give you a mountain of helpful information that you would need for your trip. It is written in a warm style, offering you the opportunity to think about taking some time out from a busy life to walk, providing yourself with ample opportunity to relax, reflect and contemplate. Highly recommended to pilgrims and non-pilgrims alike.

A Small Gem Of A Guide To Walking The Camino

ByJ. Haskinson January 1, 2018

“Let me start by saying I love this book. It is interesting and informative and a wonderful read whether you are planning to walk the Camino soon, or are like me, thinking about putting it on your “Maybe One Day” list.

Anne Born’s voice is so warm and friendly it often reads like a memoir, but it is full of useful information. Anne covers everything you need to know right down to avoiding blisters and what to use if you get them. (Neosporin, Chapstick, and a nice big bandage)

She talks about why someone might want to do this, (there are so many varied reasons) and how to make it happen. She offers advice and information in a way you feel like you are sitting across the table from her.

In the chapter, “What Do I Need?” Anne leaves nothing out. Including the poignant reason you need to bring a small rock. (No spoilers)

I started reading this book and finished it the same day. I marveled at how much information Anne packed into such a small book with such a friendly, yet reverent tone.

The glossary at the end is very helpful to understand some of the unfamiliar words and how to pronounce them correctly.

Anne’s personal journey walking the Camino is fascinating and truly a joy to read. I heartily recommend this guide for the Pilgrim-To Be and the Wannabe-Pilgrim as well.

There is so much here to love.”

I loved the organization of the book and the simple titles …

ByAnonymouson January 6, 2018

“Anne Born has compiled a fundamental consolidation of all things one should know when planning a long walk across a country…not in an encyclopedic format, but as thoughtfully presented factual categories of information for your consideration and tidbits to inspire AND keep things in perspective. I loved the organization of the book and the simple titles of each chapter. Can’t get lost here! And you know exactly to where you should return when wanting to “read that part again”.

Once you’ve completed Buen Camino! you can go forward searching for more detail or other opinions, should you feel the need and Anne leads you to those resources.

Prior to my first camino, I craved all specifics about the camino, over and over again. Redundancy seemed soothing and Buen Camino! feeds this need. Anne has approached this book from the perspective of “A Day in the Life of a Peregrino”. So helpful ….and calming.

As a 36 day pilgrim trekker on my inaugural, followed 2 years later by a short 5 day journey from Samos to SdC and a 15 day hospitalera assignment in Ribadiso, I consider myself experienced enough. In Buen Camino! I learned more than a dozen tips I wish I had known prior to my first step, perhaps before I had bought my plane ticket. Glad to know them now as there are always caminos on the horizon!

I recommend this book for returning pilgrims, first timers and your family members to understand what is ahead for a pilgrims’ journey. Get your highlighter out and enjoy!”

A Must Read

ByStacey A. Quartaroon January 24, 2018

“I loved this book! It is informative and provides lots of helpful details for anyone thinking of taking a pilgrimage. Of particular interest to me were all the personal anecdotes spread through the book from Anne’s many trips to the Camino (and it was noteworthy that one can experience the Camino in a variety of ways). A must read!!!”

Buen Camino! Tips from an American Pilgrim

Posted by Anne Born on November 10, 2017
Posted in: Camino de Santiago, Uncategorized. Tagged: camino, caminodesantiago, Spain. 3 Comments

New BOOK Notice!

Not a guidebook, no maps, no long-winded legends or history – just lots of helpful suggestions to anyone planning their first Camino or just waiting to go back.

Available now on Amazon and Barnes & Noble – $6.99 paperback and Kindle

Recommended for anyone planning to walk the Way of Saint James – or as a pilgrim’s gift to your family.

What is a typical day like? Where do you stay, how much will it cost? Why on earth do people do this? Buy the book!

Silver Medal!

Posted by Anne Born on September 9, 2017
Posted in: Uncategorized. 1 Comment

It’s so exciting to be recognized by the greater writing community! These Winter Months – the Kindle edition – won silver in the Global E-Book Awards. You’ll see the new sticker on our cover! http://globalebookawards.com/2017-global-ebook-award-winners/

Finalist!

Posted by Anne Born on May 23, 2017
Posted in: Uncategorized. 3 Comments

“These Summer Months” has just been named a Finalist in the 2017 International Book Awards! Look for the list of winners and finalists here: http://www.internationalbookawards.com/2017awardannouncement.html

These Summer Months – Look for our promos!

Posted by Anne Born on March 8, 2017
Posted in: MTA Journal, New York, Poetry, The Late Orphan Project, These Winter Months, Uncategorized. Tagged: new_book, open_mics. Leave a comment

Just a quick heads up – pub date is April 14, 2017!

VIDEO

With the help of Empyre Media Productions, we produced a short film, featuring three of the contributing authors to These Summer Months, to give you all a glimpse of the wonderful variety of our work. A quick shout-out to Empyre Media Productions for their expertise. Look for it here!

PODCAST

Two 15-minute podcasts are up on Our Salon Radio. Featuring the editor and contributing author, Anne Born, the podcasts will be a chance to get better acquainted with The Late Orphan Project and both anthologies: These Winter Months and These Summer Months. Look for “Born in the Bronx” here.

OPEN MICS

Inspired Word NYC has developed a series of events to highlight the upcoming Queens Lit Fest in Long Island City, April 29 and 30, 2017. Look for editor Anne Born with Inspired Word NYC, reading from her new book of poems written on the NYC subway: Turnstiles.

 

These Summer Months: Stories from The Late Orphan Project

Posted by Anne Born on March 6, 2017
Posted in: The Late Orphan Project, These Winter Months, Uncategorized. Tagged: adult_children, bereavement, dad, death, family, grief, grief support, memory, mom, parents. 4 Comments

Welcome to These Summer Months: Stories from The Late Orphan Project. The Backpack Press is proud to announce the writers whose work will be included in this second volume of stories. This volume will be available April 14, 2017 on Amazon, paperback and Kindle, and by special order at your favorite independent bookseller.

Lorraine Berry
Karen Blue
Clive Collins
Greg Correll
Don Fleming
Mary Kay Fleming
Claire Fitzpatrick
Lee Gaitan
Liz Gauthier
Christine Geery
Sue Glasco
Kathy Koches
Lea Lane
Brianna Meinke
Susan Mihalic
Erin O’Meara
Scottt Raven
Bonafide Rojas
Brian T. Silak
Rob Smith
Suzanne Smith
Molly Stevens
T.K. Thorne
Margaret Van Every
Eileen Wiard
Aida Zilelian

If you would like more information on the Late Orphan Project, or the previous volume of stories, These Winter Months: The Late Orphan Project Anthology, please contact lateorphanproject@gmail.com.

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Silver Birch Press

Poetry & Prose...from Prompts

If You Stand Here

A Pilgrim's Tour of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela

Tradición Jacobea

Un espacio WordPress.com para el peregrino jacobeo

Georgiana Goddard King, pionera del Camino de Santiago

Proyecto de investigación

Ultreya Tours Blog

Welcome to the Camino de Santiago Operator's blog

Discover WordPress

A daily selection of the best content published on WordPress, collected for you by humans who love to read.

The Backpack Press

Writing about New York and everywhere else

Oh What A Journey

The Semi-Adventurous Travellers

Letters from the Camino de Santiago

A letter you always wanted to write

Jerry T. Johnson, Poet

Poetry and Prose of Jerry T. Johnson, Poet (photo by Matthew Hupert)

Amy Abbott Writes

The Late Orphan Project

Writing about us, after the death of our parents

Nina's Adventures

The Broad Side

Padraig Colman

Rambling ruminations of an Irishman in Sri Lanka

Solo Camino

My solo Camino adventure

Newtown Literary

a journal of fiction, creative non-fiction, and poetry

Geosi Reads

A World of Literary Pieces

lifeisacelebration

This site chronicles my travels, musings &ramblings as I get busy celebrating life!

This Amazing Planet

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