In 2002, my calling card read Carol E. Carreon, Chief Executive Officer, BayanTrade. A year later I tried to slow down and became a consultant to the company. In another year, I found myself in North America where two of my three daughters made their home. I had to recast my hectic lonely life as a single Mom. “I wanted time to cook a little, teach a little, travel a little, write a little, and love a little.” I thought the last one would be impossible to do in the Philippines. At my age, all the good ones were taken!
From humble beginnings near the esteros (polluted small water canals) of Manila, my parents unwittingly lit up a fascination for America. This fascination turned up several notches due to some life-changing events. Although my first two years in America were a HUGE misstep in Texas, I decided to stay and moved to Seattle where I was happy babysitting and cooking for my eldest daughter and her family. But soon I was again caught in the web of a driven life: teaching in two colleges and a university and counseling small businesses for SCORE. Check: cook and teach, although not a little, but a lot!
Throughout our travels, homes, museums and grave plots of great American writers inspired me to no end. Several traveling budding writers I met encouraged me to write. A couple who maintained a humor blog taught me the basics. Bill bought a Nikon DSLR, and he tossed the ball back to me. On March 2010, my blog was born. Today, it has three hundred posts with almost 600,000 views, half from the US, the rest divided among France, UK, Germany, the Philippines, etc. Check: write a little! All my five wishes had come true!
But it wasn’t as easy as it sounds. In June 2010, I missed an appointment with the Commission on Immigration Services in connection with my application for US citizenship.
As momentous as the occasion was, it was more the extensive witnessing of America’s grandeur, inspiring history, and diverse people that changed me. In 2012, driving up the East coast of the US, I accepted I had become an American. But my Filipino heart was as strong as ever. I was more keenly aware of the similarities and differences in geography, culture, and history between my two countries. I realized I had the best of both the developed and the developing worlds. In October 2013, in the Philippines Consulate in LA, I pledged my loyalty to the Filipino flag again and became a dual citizen.
With this settled, I felt complete freedom. And the more we traveled, the more I realized we had become more than tourists; we had become explorers, adventurers, and pilgrims. Although I still plan the details of what to see and do, we cut short visits when we feel we have seen enough. But we extend them, too, whenever local magazines point to untried experiences, locals tell of less-known places or arrows point to intriguing spots. We have become true Wanderers.
But what I thought was going to be a never-ending honeymoon was not to be. In 2010, we upgraded to a 37.5-ft. Class A motorhome with one slide and bought a membership into a network of campgrounds. After I had become a US citizen, we slowed down and slipped into an ordinary married life. Little did we know the rigors of the road were taking a toll. Health issues grew as cultural, gender, and personal differences rose. We were slowly drifting apart. I sorely missed the social support system of the Filipino. The RV community is mainly white, and I had met only a couple of Asian, Hispanic and African-Americans.
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