By the time this post goes live, I will probably be pretty close to Monument Valley.
As I write this post though, I’m still at home, maybe too excited to sleep even though I will need it with the 7-and-a-half hours drive ahead of me. Honestly, I’m giddy at the moment, like a kid running down the stairs on Christmas day, ready to tear into the presents.
This is my present to myself this year – a road trip to places mom would never go because (her words) there’s nothing to see.
My aunt and uncle decided to tag along but only for two days. My uncle is the one I don’t like. He’s someone worse than my mom, as in he throws a tantrum at a drop of a hat. But whatever, as long as I don’t have to ride in the same car or live in the same room with them, I don’t mind. I’ll still have 4 days to myself.
Beside, as much as I like to be alone, I am starting to get lonely, to the point that I’m willing to talk to anyone and I mean anyone. Maybe it was the reason why I picked up the phone that day. Maybe I’ve lonely all along as mom and I talked less and less.
Yesterday was a special day. It marked the 22nd year since the day I stepped foot in the U.S. How time flies, right?
Mom got very angry when she learned my cousin was heading back to China. “Why?” She asked. “What’s there in China that’s not in the U.S?”
“Everyone’s different.” I told her. “Perhaps he felt something there you didn’t.”
“I don’t see you want to go back.” She snapped. How can she compare me to my cousins? When I left, I was 10 years old. I was a loner in school. I didn’t own anything of value. If I was an adult, I could’ve been one of those individuals that can drop everything and leave. After so many years, the U.S has become my permanent home. Everything I own and have are here and I am absolutely thankful to have a home here.




🙏💫
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Safe travels. May you enjoy this precious time in nature.
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Thank you.
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I hope you’ve a wonderful trip.
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It has been both a good and a bad trip so far. The bad parts are the bad weather and that my phone’s SIM card is broken.
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I hope you can get a replacement sim.
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I did but lost service again when I entered Navajo Nation and didn’t have my service returned until I left.
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These places don’t have strong phone signals
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How does a SIM card break? Gosh. I hope you find someone nice to talk to along the way.
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I don’t know, most likely when the package was shipped, the SIM was tossing around so much that it was barely holding on.
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Who would have thought that would happen
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Well, anything can happen during shipping.
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I hope you’re enjoying your trip and finding pleasant people to talk to and interesting things to see and do.
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Surprisingly, I found the landscapes more interesting than the people.
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