Family and the Expeditions of
an Explorer – How two worlds are together and inseparable.
By
Brian
Perich
I had some terrible
difficulties finishing the Mongolia expedition this year,
still only my second major challenge with a bike. What was the biggest problem
this year with the expedition – Communication?
My wife of 9 years (10
years together), whom is South Korean, was a major factor in managing the
expedition, what was the problem this year? When you consider the vast
landscapes of the least populated country (per km square) in the world, you are
resting thoughts on one of the most amazing places to explore – Outer Mongolia.
Mongolia, where the terrain, remoteness of the Nomad clans and Ger tents dots
the horizons, there in that paradise of a mountain, steppe grassland mystery,
came the greatest problem I have ever encountered on adventure – a vivid gap
between the family I created and love, the expedition I love, and between it
all brewed a maelstrom of challenges for me.
I
eventually overcame, but the worst of the flies, mosquitoes, sweeping rivers
about to take my bike, or the locals who confronted me the following 12 hour
day, turned my mind inside out, visions of my wife taking the children away,
divorcing me over taking the expeditions, and leaving me in the dark, that
desert I was in where I choked on mosquitoes and took refuge in my tent. When I
had to strip down to the buck and wash myself like a baby because at 2 pm
I couldn't continue on, when the SPOT did not function, but
I had a mobile phone signal from Bokmoron, I sent out distress messages to a
friend James in Switzerland, and my wife Misung in Korea, but no one responded
and I had to carry on. It was insane, I've never pushed myself so
hard to get through, and the truth is, without family and friends behind the
journeyman, the journey would end me. It’s not worth leaving everything behind,
so I found that my failed preparation, lack of equipment to protect me, and
last ditch efforts to cross Mongolia without a stove, fuel, pots, and even
water filtration (due to the broken rear carrier rack…I decided to ‘make it –
that I needed to leave everything behind except – 2kg of protein, 1.5kg of gatorade
powder and high-potency multi-vitamin and mineral packs for 45 days.
I completed the expedition with the help of local Mongolian Nomad
herders and their lovely families, I purchased
non-perishable food goods where I could to trade for their chai-woo goat-milk
tea, bread, butter, and cream, and the lovely hardened-dry “arroz” Mongolian
cheese, a luxury because it’s one dairy I love, and it’s so expensive by the
ounce in South Korea. I was cycling on cloud nine with the cheese and basic
provisions until I came to other challenges. For instance, on 107km and 134km
stretches of northwestern steppe, there were no Herders, Gers, animals or the
sight of people settled anywhere along my route. The dirt tracks turned to
sinking sand, and when I ran out of water stress increased (in my mind, I just
wanted my wife to call, to text message, I sent 90 text messages and received
about 12-15 from her all summer long…she was in denial the expedition was
taking place, busy with the kids, busy with tutoring her students, and that
took her mind off me…but I could not take my mind off them, my children Matthew
5, and Sierra just 2, and Misung 34 taking care of our household). Without
human connection to family, I went into a famine for human connection that I
knew familiar. Adding physical ailments, injured feet and ankles, walking the
sand traps for 50-60km a day, or climbing out of high altitude desert lakes for
12 hours after days of diarrhea from the unpurified water every snot-nosed
little child in the area was acclimatized to, started pushing me apart, my
mental thoughts still surrounding my family the entire time, not so, the actual
journey ahead. Injuries or falling ill days while I continued on antibiotics
without clear water led to days I couldn’t ride, all Hell came to visit me in
the shadows, fears and crevasses of my mind without a simple connection – my
family connecting with me out on the journey.
Thus, the expedition was completed in entirety, but the prices I
paid came at a high cost during the journey itself. I’m
not feeling the same way, thinking the same (ideal) way, moving around my
ordinary routine the same way I did before crossing Mongolia. I learned that
fear can become too real, too terrible to relish the freedom to travel and
explore. I learned to witness families of different cultures apart from my own,
to accept life on these terms, to communicate, to connect with others, to
become more tolerant of suffering because I had asked for it failing to fully
prepare for it.
But in the end, I returned with
greater love and affection for my family, I
cannot express the gratitude I feel now just having them here, having children
that love and admire me, as daddy. And when my son and I watched videos I made
while traveling overland in Mongolia, he says with excitement and energy in his
eyes,
“Daddy, I want to take a bike
trip with you!”
I’m very pleased to hear this and can’t imagine he would enjoy
going through all that I went through. But for this reason, I started
taking expeditions on my own (starting at 38, last summer), and proving to
myself that dreams can become realities with relentless passion driving the
mission, in social circles (social media sharing) and with actually carrying
out what I said I would in the end. Reaching the finish line, never felt harder
or more rewarding, of course, for me, the biggest prize is having my family
with me today. I’m certainly lucky to have this family expedition still going
strong, and I will stay the course with them, growing older, learning about
expeditions (windows of opportunity, sacrifice and amazing adventure), and
building a future that I can hopefully share one day with my children, if they
decide they would like to learn from the same school of experiential learning –
being an explorer, like I am working towards today.
Brian Peric is a teacher, father and Adventure Explorer. He lives
with his wife and two children in Gangneung, South Korea. Read more about him
at http://korean-world.blogspot.se/p/expeditions-adventures-1991-2012.html
This article was originally published by Mikael Strandberg - Global Explorer. Mikael
Strandberg was born in 1962 in Sweden. He started his
professional career as an explorer 25 years ago. The multi-talented Mikael is
currently working as an explorer, a lecturer and a writer. Mikael has also
produced three internationally renowned documentaries for television “PATAGONIA
– 3,000 kilometres by horse” and “THE
MASAAI PEOPLE – 1,000 kilometres by foot” and his much awarded, “-58
degrees – exploring Siberia on skies.” To read more about Mikael
Strandberg, visit his site.
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