Post
by Candybox » Thu Sep 27, 2012 12:36 pm
What a great post. Maybe what you mean is other ways to have peak experiences?
Rather than Peace Corps (2 year commitment, no real choice of country), you can sign up to teach English for a year in pretty much any country you want. Really low work commitment (usually under 20 hours a week), TONS of vacation time (due to following a school / break schedule), and the experience of actually living in a different culture is amazing. You can basically have your pick of any country in Asia that I know of. I ran off to China for a year after college (though to be fair, I'm Chinese-American... but the adventure part still applies).
My favorite thing I did there was go to Lijiang and hiking Tiger Leaping Gorge with my friends. Tiger Leaping Gorge is the tallest / deepest river gorge in the world, and it is a 2 night trip with a stop in a guesthouse along the way.
Another favorite memory of mine is tripping all night in Florence. When my boyfriend and I got there, we'd been robbed and pick-pocketed and utterly defeated, but exploring and being constantly surprised by the vasty vastness of that great city made it all better.
This past year, when we (initially) didn't score tickets to BM, we decided to make it up to ourselves by going on vacation. We went to Death Valley in the spring, rented a Jeep, and went off-roading and camping for the better part of a week. We'd wake up and climb sand dunes and watch the sun rise in the raw and early morning. Every moment was real and every moment was amazing.
Oh, and we topped off that trip with an overnight visit to Slab City. It's sort of like Burning Man. Sort of. But with a high dose of reality.
In essence, it's a squatters colony on an abandoned military testing base, a few miles off the shores of the Salton Sea. Some people live there because they have to, most people because they want to. It's the "last free place in America". There are the really scary looking homesteads, and the amazing.
A big ol' burner had set up an his base there. Shipping containers and solar panels and installation art. A really remarkable permanent desert camp. Called it East Jesus. He passed away last year, but his friends were trying to keep it going. We donated to their IndieGoGo, and as a result they fed us and we spent the night. In the distance we could see the glow of bombs (there's still a testing base nearby).
And the most amazing part about my trip to the slabs was getting to see Salvation Mountain. An old desert prophet spent 30 years building his technicolor monument to God's love. I walked in an atheist and walked out agnostic. Inside, it was so pure, so full of pure naive artistic intent, I wept. Salvation Mountain is pretty much my favorite place in the universe.