What A First Trip To The U.S. Taught Me About Scale, Kindness, And The Pull Of Nature

23/10/2025 1h 4min
What A First Trip To The U.S. Taught Me About Scale, Kindness, And The Pull Of Nature

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Episode Synopsis

Send us a textWhat does it really mean to arrive somewhere new—beyond passports and planes? With Mukhalita, a Calcutta-born economist-turned-artist, we trace a first journey to the United States through the senses: the shock of Houston’s concrete spiderweb of flyovers, a reunion that softens jet lag, and a sunset that feels like a ceremony. The early weeks unfold into a nuanced map of belonging—New York’s familiar chaos, the hush of car cities where silence sounds like tires on concrete, and the subtle difference between everyday politeness and felt warmth.Food becomes a bridge and a revelation. Home-cooked staples steady the spirit while Houston’s Mexican flavors reset expectations. Grocery aisles brim with berries and avocados that feel rare back home, sparking a season of baking and smoothie bowls. Then comes the tiniest culture shock with outsized meaning: ice water at every table, even in winter. Small rituals tell big stories about comfort, care, and how hospitality is encoded in daily life.When the family faces healthcare delays—a two-week wait for a simple x-ray—gratitude for India’s accessibility grows alongside questions about systems that feel advanced yet out of reach. In the gaps, nature steps in as medicine. Long walks and bike rides through parks, meadows, and lakes lead to naming trees, learning new landscapes, and finding a steadier rhythm. A gift of Braiding Sweetgrass opens a path into indigenous teachings and reciprocity, inspiring a performance back home—“Emin Goyak,” Potawatomi for “that which has been given to us”—that reframes nature not as a resource but as a relationship.Come for the travel story, stay for the deeper invitation: choose curiosity over assumption, build community on purpose, and let the land teach presence. If this conversation sparked something in you, subscribe to Voices Around the World, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your reflections—we’d love to hear where you’ve most recently felt at home.