In my travels in Ireland, my
favorite way of traveling was hitchhiking. It saved a substantial amount of
money, but more importantly, it was an inseparable part of my trip. Meeting the
people, conversing with them, hearing their stories and even the uncomfortable
silences were a core experience and a way to really get to know the local
people and culture. To start a conversation I always had to answer the usual
questions (how old are you? Where are you from?) For one of that question, one
that was a basis for the things to come, I always had a hard time to answer.
“So what are you, a student?”
The solution was to quickly
and clearly answer No, that in Israel when you reach the age of 18 you are
enlisted to the army, you serve your time (women serve two years and men three),
you are relieved, you work, save money and hop, you travel!
For some reason they had a
hard time understanding that my current status was “traveler” rather than a
“student”. It was probably the conformist and common logic that said that,
because at the age of 20 surly I will be at college.
It seemed that in the few
seconds after I answered their question, they had to create a new category to
classify my part in life. In a less known part.
In one of my hitchhiking
adventures in the land of the Leprechaun, as usual, I entered a car and that
same banal question was asked. For god-knows-how-many-times I answered the same
answer that by now sounded like a broken record. I waited for the awkward
minute in which the person has to digest and reacts to my answer with a fake polite
smile, to pass as soon as possible. I already thought of defenses and
explanation for my current status but this time - this time was different. He
reacted different.
He had a different smile on
his face.
A satisfied smile, not a fake
one. A proud smile and not one of suspicion
“you know what?” answered this
gentlemen “Better! Even perfect! What you are doing now is graduating from the University
of Life”
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