So, here goes. Whenever I begin something, and I mean something bigger in scale than emptying the dishwasher, I find the words I choose are often borrowed from one of my great loves, C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien and G.K. Chesterton. These men are so beloved to me, I can't help by wish I had a name as clever as Clive Staples, and could shorten it to initials, slipping ever so softly into an enigmatic persona.

Today I am borrowing from Chesterton, a quote which I used in my Lit thesis on the recovery of the senses, "The whole object of travel is not to set foot on foreign land; it is at last to set foot on one's own country as a foreign land." I know I am an East Coast girl. I love the coast, I love the hustle of little Baltimore; the impatience and constant motion serves as a reminder of the thrilling hum of humanity around me. However I am excited for this new adventure, a chance to see new places and meet people from such foreign walks of life. I only hope to discover so much about this different world that I can see myself through eyes reborn, and thus return one day to view my own home of Baltimore as a new, perhaps even foreign land. When I say foreign, I mean only that one day I might see all this with new eyes so that I can appreciate all the wonderful things that I have grown to gloss over, to look at without seeing.
As ever, just the musings of a wanderer,
J.C. Timmel.