Listen "A week away from America can really do the soul some good"
Episode Synopsis
We had planned a trip to London and Paris in 2020, but it was cancelled by the pandemic. Until last week, we hadn't left the country since before that awful year. Ironically, the thought of visiting or even living someplace else has never taken up more space in my soul. Even my latest book is fundamentally about the mysterious "what ifs" that come from how life might be different if it were simply spent "someplace else." We finally got to go last week. As a much younger person, I used to wonder why people would even go on trips like this, when there really wasn't some specific reason. Now, I feel true sympathy for those who never do. First of all, the enormity of London alone is striking, but the best thing about its size is the variety of everything in it. For example, I never thought of London as a great food town. Wrong. There is no food on earth that can't be found there. The restaurants seem smaller, but the pubs, cafes and ethnic offerings are literally everywhere. I wasn't looking for Uzbek or Sri Lankan food, but now I know the most convenient place to find it. In just six days though, the giant city had shrunk for us, primarily because of its phenomenal train system. No area or neighborhood was difficult to get to, including a little town called Paris. Navigating it also couldn't have been easier. As a world traveler, I'm a novice. I haven't been many places. Not yet. But every new place I go these days is less of a vacation and more of an adventure. Seeing unfamiliar places, and spending time with unfamiliar people is the most provocative way for anyone to grow. Every adventure teaches me something unexpected. It is so predictable that I purposely make fewer and fewer plans on each new trip. Why bother? The best parts can't be planned anyway. Visiting the Churchill War Rooms Museum, however, was definitely planned. I'm in the words business, English is my language, and Winston Churchill is likely the greatest orator who has ever lived. Yea, yea, he led and won the big war, but his weapon of choice was language. Our last exhibit there was a display of the anti-Churchill propaganda that was distributed in Nazi Germany and Japan during the war. None of it was all that surprising, particularly by today's standards, but a museum staffer approached us there and began explaining the depth of the exhibit's importance. This elderly man pointed out the racism built into the drawings and the impact of its lessons in faraway places, especially on young people growing up with the imagery. He asked us to imagine young people who only knew of the British through this messaging and how difficult it must have been to overcome for generations. He analogized the struggle then to the one today with Russia's Vladimir Putin, the invasion of Ukraine, and the valuable mission of NATO. My wife and I enjoyed his lesson, but I was fascinated with how comfortably he went there with two people from America who could have just as easily been hostile to his suggestions. Connect with Michael Leppert Visit michaelleppert.com to read the full post and links to any resources or articles mentioned. Twitter @michaelleppert Facebook at Michael Leppert
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