Like many of us, I have not traveled very far since the pandemic began. I went home to Alabama the Christmas before the pandemic started. In fact that holiday season, I took a cruise from New Orleans to Mexico with some friends of mine, then flew home to Alabama before returning to Vermont just before the New Year. I could not have guessed back then that I’d be spending my second Christmas in Vermont away from my family. I don’t completely miss traveling to Alabama. I know that probably makes me a bit of a bad person, but when I go home, I basically still have to pretend to be someone else and suppress my sexuality. I don’t miss doing that. I also have zero alone time when I go home, and I like my solitude at times.
While I may not miss going back to Alabama too much, I do miss traveling. For Thanksgiving and my birthday in 2019, I went to New York City to see my friend Susan, and we had a very lovely Thanksgiving dinner, and she took me to see Chicago, one of my favorite musicals, on Broadway. I got to see the Stonewall Inn and the Freedom Tower among other famous Manhattan landmarks. I would love to get to spend more time with Susan in person, whether that is her coming to Vermont or me going to Manhattan to see her, but that won’t happen until COVID-19 becomes as routine and as seasonal as the flu.
I also want to get back to Montreal, which has become one of my favorite places to visit. New Orleans used to be my favorite place to visit in North America (Italy, especially Florence and Rome, still beat out everywhere else), but while New Orleans is fun, it’s also kind of nasty; it stinks, and it’s filled with drunk tourists. Montreal is a much cleaner city. The Village (formerly the Gay Village) is much larger than New Orleans’s gay area in the French Quarter, and Canadians are much nicer than Louisianans. I just always have more fun and feel safer in Montreal, so I’d really like to go back when the border is easier to cross again.
When you are like me and enjoy traveling, it’s hard being somewhat confined to central Vermont. The farthest I’ve been is Burlington to the northwest of me and Lebanon, NH, to the southeast of me. Both cities are about 45 minutes away. I guess I got spoiled working at my museum. When I first started as the oral historian, I traveled all the time to conduct interviews all over New England. Then, we had the traveling exhibit which took me to places all over the eastern seaboard. It all came to a sudden halt when the pandemic began. At some point, I do believe we’ll get back to normal. Vermont thought it was ace enough to return to some sort of normalcy, and now we have the fifth highest percentage of COVID cases in the country. All we can really do is stay vigilant and keep up with our vaccinations. If we do that, then maybe we will return to normal sooner or later.
I have been visiting Vermont... through the internet. Nice place. Beautiful scenery. It must be very nice to live in a place like Vermont. I envy you, you have to take good care of all those nice things you have to enjoy.
ReplyDeleteI live in the north of Spain, in a city called Oviedo which is the capital of the Principality of Asturias.
Asturias is a very mountainous place with beautiful forests of oak, beech, chestnut, hazelnut and several other species of trees and vegetation. It is a very green place and has plenty of beaches with a Cantabrian Sea always with its waves that helps you to enter the water without realizing if it is cold or not.
It can be said that there are similarities between Vermont and the Principality of Asturias.
Greetings to all.
Angel
I am with you. Aside from roadtrips and visits to Provincetown, I had not traveled much since March 2020. Earlier this month I flew to DC to visit friends - my first time on a plane in nearly 2 years.
ReplyDeleteI too love Montreal and would really like to get back there for Jazzfest (first week of July) this year, but we will have to wait and see if that is possible.
LMK if you ever come down to Boston. I'll buy you a drink.
Merry Christmas Angel,
ReplyDeleteAlways good to see comments from new people.
Be Well.
Alexander
Alas! Covid19 is here to stay - and big time. There is not going to be "going back to normal". Some time down the road, the virus will attenuate and preventing infection may become more effective. But not soon and don't count on it. Roderick
ReplyDeleteMy family all live in the same city as me but I found missing the holiday season 2020 with them to be a great relief. I am close with my mom but mostly only see the others during the holidays and events like weddings. I am on good terms with everyone but we all live busy and very different lives. The holidays have devolved to a large crowd crammed into my parents' small home for a tense meal. It's not really possible to bond or catch up with anyone in the chaos despite my attempts. Holidays now simply equal obligation. I spoke with my mom about skipping Thanksgiving 2021 since it was not possible to verify that everyone attending was vaccinated. That's a valid reason, but I will admit that I also dreaded being packed in with family for a tepid group conversation and awkward goodbye. She was fine with it! Christmas is complicated with hauling home a pile of obligatory gifts that I stack in a corner until I have time to quietly move them on (i.e. discard or give them away). They give lovely, thoughtful gifts that I simply can't use or make room for. Despite all of this, I am not anti-holiday at all but everyone should spend them as they prefer rather than as they feel obligated.
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