Wanderlust

I have a condition called Wanderlust. Wikipedia describes it like this, "The loanword from German came to English in 1875[1] or 1902[3] as a reflection of what was then seen as a characteristically German predilection for wandering that may be traced back to German romanticism and the German system of apprenticeship.

The term forms from the German words wandern (to hike) and Lust (desire). The term wandern is frequently misused as a false cognate, it in fact does not mean "to wander", but rather "to hike." Placing the two words together translates to "to enjoy hiking", although is commonly described as an enjoyment of strolling or wandering.

In German the term has become somewhat obsolete. A more contemporary equivalent for the English wanderlust in the sense of "love of travel" would be Fernweh (literally "an ache for the distance").

Since the term is a noun, its initial letter is always capitalized in German ("Wanderlust") but usually written in lower case in English ("wanderlust")."

Do you have this? An ache for the distance? For me, it's genetic, nothing I can change. It's inherited from my mother's side of the family. I am always thinking of changing my surroundings. Decorating and renovating when I cannot move, moving apartments (this is why I don't like to buy homes) when I am able to move locally, moving cities when I am able, moving from state-to-state and now -- moving to a new country. I love to roam around and explore and had I not married a man who isn't exactly the opposite, I would be planning my next big move to a new spot in another year or two, possibly Sweden, maybe Australia, Belgium, or even Denmark. I've even thought about moving to California. There is nothing wrong with me, I'm not suffering from childhood trauma or feeling insecure or lost or anything else that often is negatively associated with a wandering soul. I'm not "looking" for anything in the sense that I'm lonely and in need. Truth is, I get bored very easily. My teachers in school always sent home letters to my parents that I was bossy and wanted to take over the class and be the teacher, not the student. It wasn't because I was truly bossy, it's because I'm a natural leader, motivator, teacher and the type of person who is highly motivated and who gets bored when left alone or not challenged consistently. I love challenge, I thrive on it... when things go too smoothly I feel bored. Not that I want stress, negativity and chaos in my life -- just the opposite, I seek peace, love and understanding. I have pure intentions. I run from negativity. But what I personally thrive on is external stimulation in many forms, healthy stimulation (not destructive or negative), and if I am bored or not finding it somewhere I either become very inventive and develop things to occupy me or I start to consider a new environment so that I may once again feel challenged and thrive. When my life is too perfect I feel bored, I wither. When things are too easy, I can't blossom. Give me challenge, give me hard work that I love, give me projects that take months and endless hours to complete and I am ON IT. Give me something to consume my time, like moving or renovating or decorating, I blossom. So now here I am, living in Hannover, Germany exactly 6 months today. SIX MONTHS. I can't believe it, it feels like I just got here in some ways and like I've lived here for 10 years on other days. How will I survive long term when all is going so smoothly, so well, so efficiently? I was thinking about this today. And I decided on how I will answer this. I will create healthy challenges. I will teach, I will write, I will take on projects, I will push myself and drive myself and bloom where I've been planted as the popular expression goes. Because though I may have wanderlust, I've decided that I will ache for Istanbul, Paris, and Rome and then jump on a cheap fly and just GO there. I don't need to live there to satisfy the ache. And I will learn to ache for other things, I will learn to ache for a new distance -- maybe ones that will challenge me in new ways - instead of aching to see more and experience more I will ache to become more, learn more, and grow more. So these are my thoughts on being a wanderlust... Do you ache for a new distance? Are you also a wanderlust? How do you manage, especially if your significant other, career or children prohibit you from packing up and running to uncharted territories? I'd love to see how you manage... xo, Holly

Comments

Nina said…
I definitely hear you. I have had consistent wanderlust my whole life. For me it was likely due to being in an army family, so we moved every few years. I think it was the best way to grow up! Seeing new places and trying new things is the best way to expand your experience and to become a more adventurous and interesting person. I can't imagine living my whole life in just one place. I try to get away as often as possible, even if it's not far, a weekend trip does wonders for your well-being. I think you should try some traveling now that you're so central in Europe, you're surrounded by so many amazing places. I envy you!
V said…
I love your self-reflections. Thank you for sharing! I used to think I needed to be far from the Midwest in a bigger city and since I moved back to my home state and live in a smaller "big city," I've been able to look more at personal growth and it's much more fulfilling. How lucky that so many different places are just a short flight from your new home! Sounds like a great move for a girl with wanderlust.
oh my.....all i can say is amen sistah!
i too suffer from 'wanterlust' and i guess i totally embrace in. thank goodness for the internet and blogging....when i was young i constantly made collages from magazine cutouts that would excite my mind....now i can blog, paint, and redecorate all the time. i also love to travel (its why i moved to california) so i could visit even the smallest of city, and just get away for the weekend...take a new adventure and see something new. you are fortunate to live overseas and take in so many different things......
hope that helps! and just know, you are in good company i am pretty sure

:)
You have described me perfectly. My friends often comment on how easily I can become restless. I'm not one to settle into something (city, job, house, relationship) and just be content to sit with the status quo, even if the status quo is great. While I think this can be a good trait at times because it means I am comfortable with change and I enjoy tackling new challenges, it can also have it's drawbacks. I am easily dissatisfied. Sometimes I think I don't (or can't) stop to smell the roses and just be happy where I'm at. For several years it meant that I sabotaged all my relationships because they got 'boring'. I need to work on my ability to enjoy what I've got and where I'm at rather than focusing on what might be elsewhere.
Frau Mayer said…
Well, of course, been traveling since I moved out at a tender age of 16. By now, I've been almost everywhere around Europe (with a sad exception of Scandinavia) and seen most of the States but there's a LONG to go to list that I need to stick to.
Speaking about career - this is probably the best thing about mine. Right now, while still completing the formal education, I don't feel that free and will probably spend Easter holidays with my nose poked in books but I'm SO looking forward to those 3 months of holidays every year as soon as I am not a prisoner any more :)

My motto has always been Don't talk, do it! And so far it's worked out pretty well...
This is why the only thing I can say is - go ahead, get yourself cheap tickets, travel! Europe has SO much to offer.
Juliette said…
I think my husband and I both have wanderlust for all sorts of new horizons: physical location, academic, career stuff, family stuff, etc. Sometimes it feels schizophrenic, sometimes we stress out trying to do too much - or sometimes nothing happens at all b/c we're just too overwhelmed by it all!

However, the best developments have ALWAYS happened organically - not when we've pushed too hard. Sometimes we need to step back and remember that. =)
haus maus said…
Nina: Yes weekend trips. I've taken a million of them in my lifetime. They do SO much to refresh and recharge.

Catherine: Oh your wanderlust sounds a little different than mine. So I guess this comes in all shapes and sizes. I AM able to be very happy IN the present, I can't imagine how hard it must be for you if you cannot. And as far as friends go, I don't get sick of people easily -- in fact I am quite the opposite, I am really cherish my friends and don't expect anything from them except loyalty and love. :)
Sandra said…
This is so funny... you know what is playing here right now? "Wanderlust" by Björk. Just thought I'd share!
And yes... in the summer months, I get the urge to travel somewhere different... not in the winter months,though. I just want to crawl under a warm blanket and sleep all day!
I love to visit other places and see new cities, countries, cultures and indeed my own country, but I always like to return home. Irish people have a very strong sense of place/ attachment and connection to their families and homes. In rural Ireland very little people rent property they buy or build their own house with large garden so I suppose that way we become more connected to the area. I think it is probably as Ireland was traditionally a rural country with only small villages and towns. I do love weekend breaks away in the city though but there is just too much going on there for me and I get a bit claustrophobic. I perfer the open countryside with lots of greenery, woods, lakes, walking in the open air, the wildlife, but then I keep occupied with college, crafts, work, reading, family, friends and of course planning my dream home of the future here in Ireland. Thanks so much for sharing your wanderlust with us all :)

All things nice...
Brigitte said…
You could be describing me right now. I have been working on a business plan to open a little shop, but I'm terrified to lock myself down to one place. I want to explore the world!
Anonymous said…
I've been having this longing in my guts for as long as I can remember... And I get very annoying when I have to stay in one place for too long, especially since the one thing stopping me from travelling is always money. I've mastered wandering around on a budget, working on the road and sleeping in 2. class trains, but when there's really no way to escape, it helps to just go and walk around your home, have short one day or weekend trips or when the weather is lousy - read books about distant places that make you wander in your mind.

Just embrace the way you are and don't worry about it!
Melissa A said…
It's always has me pondering when I see two or three things in a day when I wasn't even looking for it at all. Just after reading your post here today, I clicked on a link to the etsy storque from another blog and saw this,
http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=37919347&ref=storque
A little notebook for the Wanderlust.
Victoria said…
it's very familiar to me, -
i moved to another country for my husband four years ago, and all the changes made my life so exciting! But now i already feel the desire to change my surroundings again. Since my husband doesn't have even the slightest desire to move somewhere, i guess the best thing to do is to earn more money, and travel. And after reading your post, i think to create healthy challenges for myself will do the work too! Thank you:)
Victoria Klein said…
This sounds so much like me it is eerie - both the "wanderlust" definition & your moving situations over the years. I lived in 6 different houses in my hometown during my childhood before my mum's job started moving us all over the country. Now, I adore exploring new places & facing the challenges of adapting.

"When my life is too perfect I feel bored, I wither. When things are too easy, I can't blossom. Give me challenge, give me hard work that I love, give me projects that take months and endless hours to complete and I am ON IT. Give me something to consume my time, like moving or renovating or decorating, I blossom."

That's me! I like what you said about trying to "create" challenges for yourself ... healthy challenges obviously, but I think I need to do exactly the same thing. :)

I'm still trying to figure out how to manage my wanderlust, though I often fail miserably. I long to explore numerous countries & cultures, but responsibilities & cost always hold me back. I'd love to just up & go tomorrow ... but now with a husband who just joined the Marines, I'm tied closely to him for a long while, though I will be moving around with him, which could be exciting. :)
Supermomee said…
Thank you! Now I finally have a word for what I have! I never could put my finger on "what I had". Even as a small child I loved to look at maps and dream of visiting or moving. Now that I have a family and house I have been wondering how to"handle" whatever it is that I have, the thing in me that draws me to look at maps, follow blogs from other more exotic locales than where I am. I have also started to tell myself that even if I could move to here or there it would soon become a routine. So I will take your post as advice and maybe travel to some of the places that intrigue me. Until then I know "I have wanderlust"! Cool
Kelly said…
Oh, yes. The wanderlust. One of my favorite words, but not a favorite thing to suffer. I caught it from my dad's DNA -- my mother's family all still live close to home. I married someone who is a reluctant traveler, who is content to be a homebody. It's hard...children, small children, school schedules make it harder -- as does this economy. *Sigh* But I am very well-traveled within my home state, at least. (California.)
Kerstin said…
Holly, I totally relate to this. Having lived in four countries, about ten different cities/towns and having moved at least 20 times I have always had "Wanderlust", and Fernweh. It's why my friends call me a gipsy.

Like you I love moving, not many people understand that. But something in me comes alive when I start packing the boxes, measuring new space and dreaming about what I might do with them.

I grew up in a tiny German flat, just 2.5 rooms for my mother and my two siblings and I. But even there, as a kid, I used to draw floorplans and create proportionate cardboard pieces of our furniture and move them around so that I could make sure everything fit before changing things around for real. Looking back I am amazed that my mother let me do this on a regular basis. Even now I love doing this when I am living somewhere for an extended period of time.

And you are in the best place for extended explorations of foreign places! Flying in Europe is so cheap compared to the US, and of course everything is a lot closer, too. You can let the airlines pick your destination and be surprised of where it might take you :)

Thank you for a refreshing take on "Wanderlust!" :)
Billy said…
I think I suffer from the opposite condition right now, wanting to go back home and not feel like a foreigner anymore. But then there are the rest of the days when being away is ok and has its perks.

I guess it all sums up to we´re never happy with what we´ve got! ;)
Dens said…
Readng your comments I just had to reply.I really thought I was the only person who just cant seem to settle anywhere for very long ,be it in a house or a country.
I was born and spent my childhood in Africa,moving house frequently with my parents.Moved to Ireland as a teenager and to Germany on my way to Australia in my 20's.Met my husband here,(so did not make it to Australia) My husband and kids moved to California where we stayed for five years(miss it soooo much)but then decided to return to Germany two years ago.In total I have moved house 22 times in my life!We have now bought our own house and I cant help feeling trapped!
My husband and kids all get nervous when I mention anything about moving again but honestly if i got the chance I would pack my bags tomorrow and move again,preferably to another country.Only I know its not possible .Children really do need roots and another move would probably turn them into a restless soul like me, which honestly now being in my forties is beginning to drive me crazy.I wish I could be just happy in the moment and in the place I am.
I am lucky in that my husband also loves to travel and we have been all over the world together and with our children.Funny thing is that the kids are always anxious to get "Home" when we are on our travels and now tell me that they will never move out of the home we have now.So it looks like I will have to move again.....


















mention moving again
Alissa said…
I absolutely suffer from the same affliction and even named my etsy shop Wanderlust Arts!

2009 was the first year since '02 that I didn't travel outside the U.S. and though I am aware how lucky I am to have lived and traveled abroad, it still pains me that I haven't explored another culture this past year!
Henrike said…
I just came across your blog for the first time and read this. I so can relate to your feelings!
It's quite funny because you're living in Hanover which is not far away from Hildesheim where I live...
I used to work as an Au-Pair in Ireland and I loved it. Ever since I was dreaming to go back one day. I've never been to America though. But I really love to travel to "unseen" countries.
Trying to keep up with your blog! And hopefully you'll find a nice spot to travel to ;o)
Katrin said…
I think "Tapetenwechsel" is another word you might like.
I believe I suffer from this...over the past few years I have had an innate desire to move around. I get to a place, live there for a short time and then want to move somewhere else. I think I always like to have plans, something to look forward too, something new and exciting. When I get back from a vacation, I am already starting to think about planning my next vacation. Some might say I am hard to please but I don't think that's it. I just like to seek out new experiences, I like to pick up and move and make big changes because it's exciting! Luckily my husband shares these same traits, I think it's because we are both military kids and are used to being shuffled around every few years!

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