In March I arrived in Olomouc on a three-month study abroad excursion.
The plan was rather simple: to explore Europe and enjoy myself before heading
back to the United States and starting law school in the fall. Much of the three-months
blew by in a blur of long lunches and late nights before I was able to ruminate
on my marvelous adventure. But I learned broken Czech in a few weeks and fell
in love with the Czech Republic even faster.
Now three months, 24 diverse cities, 12 different countries later, I can
give a candid assessment of my time abroad.
Český Krumlov, a small city in Southern Bohemia
"The soul should always stand ajar, ready to welcome the ecstatic experience."
Sometime in late May, the shining sun announces that the coolness of
spring has started to slide into the warmth of summer in Moravia, a region in
eastern Czech Republic that straddles the borders of Poland, Slovakia and
Austria. This geographically beautiful area that I have called home since early
March is at its best in that glorious sun when the human eye can see clearly
the vast, rolling hills and bucolic landscapes that abound.
Moravia is a Unesco-protected heritage landscape, with historic
architecture amid lush valleys and hills.
My three months in the Czech Republic have offered innumerable moments
of elation, laughter, and most of all, gratitude.
A mere meditative blog post is not sufficient enough to provide an
adequate reflection of my time in the Czech Republic but I shall give it my
best. My enthusiasm, joy, and gratitude are immense, and I am simply unable to
fully summarize or relate these feelings in words. One of the most persistent
challenges of traveling for me is the frequent failure of language to capture
its textures, emotions, and effects. Travel has revolutionized my sense of self
in the world, more than I am able to write with precision.
While we were abroad, terror struck Brussels. In that moment, I had a
decision to make. Here’s what I promised myself: I adamantly refuse to let
senseless acts of terror affect my resolve to travel, to explore, and to keep
engaging with the world at large. That is the story that we all must tell; the
radical notion that we part of a single human family and that every life
matters and has meaning. I believe travel opens one's eyes to the universalism
of humanity, dissolves and destroys prejudices, and reminds us all of how
precious our shared existence really is.
So here I am, back to where it all began: Omaha, Nebraska. I have
traveled and seen more during my brief collegiate career than I ever imagined I
would. And when my plane gently touched down on the tarmac amongst fields of
corn in Nebraska, I was at peace. For I arrived at my favorite place in the
whole world: home.
So I will conclude with this: I hope my time abroad is, to both my
readers and myself, a source of a few simple reminders: Time is limited. Life
is miraculous. And mankind is beautiful.
And so I go, closing this indelible chapter and moving onward to the
next adventure.
I think what I discovered most though is that the true beauty of life
is in our fleeting moments—however majestic or mundane—because it is these simple
moments that enable us to be.
If ever I were to go abroad again, an experience more exhilarating and
edifying can scarcely be imagined.
"Doesn't everything die at last, and too soon? Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?"
A quiet farm road in Central Bohemia
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