Pre-trip butterflies
By Joe E | Permalink |It’s not that much different than when I was a little kid and I went off to summer camp for the first time. Once again, I am worrying about little things. It never really gets better.
Oh sure, I have gotten better at packing, but the pre-trip angst and stomach butterflies still have me all worrying and sleepless.
Will I remember everything? Probably not. I always forget some major item. Something obvious, something necessary, something important; that is the item that I choose to forget at home.
Whatever it is, when I return home I find it left out in an obvious place where I placed it so that I wouldn’t forget it. Which, of course, I did.
Would it make any difference if I forgot it? Probably not. Amazingly enough, there are these things called stores overseas. Just like at home, convenient emporiums in which to buy things.
So I go through the inventory of my belongings: How many pairs of socks and underwear? How many shirts? Should I account for buying a few shirts on the road and take fewer to start with?
And what about a towel?
The towel question has me puzzled. Beach towels take up too much room in the pack and besides, I don’t do much beach stuff. Whenever I lie down upon a beach towel, concerned citizens ring up ‘Marine Mammal Rescue’. I have learned to carry a smaller towel, one that I don’t care much about. One not part of a matched set.
I will pack that random towel that somehow strayed into the linen closet, the mysterious one that was placed there by aliens.
In order to save space, maybe I’ll pack a smaller towel this time.
Will my castoff smaller towel be big enough?
Without belaboring the obvious, I have a lot more surface area than most people. If I want to get dry at all, a towel the size of a hanky won’t do it.
I’ve already packed my towel and already I am thinking about replacing it with a different towel. This pre-trip fretting is something that I can never master. I will obsess about trivial things. I am a worry-wart.
“And what” you say, “about washcloths?”
The cheap-ass guesthouses that I stay in usually provide a towel or two, but for some reason they never supply a washcloth. Speaking candidly as a sweaty lad whose oily skin would be the envy of the Bush administration, I find it necessary to wash my face with hot water, (hot enough to open my pores) and then, using actual soap, scrub my face with a washcloth in hopes of getting my clean skin again. Otherwise, my enviable complexion soon resembles a deluxe pizza. Adolescence follows me into middle age.
Use soap and hot water: there’s my beauty tip for the day.
I bring along a clean washcloth and keep it in a Ziploc bag. This keeps it from getting dirty, it keeps it from getting my clothes damp, but the Ziploc bag never lets it air dry. In fact, it serves as a moist terrarium. Exotic molds and mildew quickly turn my washcloth into a science project. No way is that thing touching my skin.
Good thing that they sell new ones there.
Comments
Have you heard of/seen those chamois towels, Joe? Swimmers use them and I bought one before my first trip in ‘96. I found it useful to get rid of moisture, but it did tend to get malodorous without the occasional washing (much like me).
You mean the Pack Towels, right?
I am well aware of them and have friends who swear by them. Personally, I don’t care for the way that they feel next to my skin, but that’s just me.
How about a nice squeegee?
I went through towel-packing angst on my last trip, and decided against it under the assumption that most of my clothes could be considered towels, if necessary. It turned out to be a good decision, and I doubt I’ll ever pack a towel again for those pack-as-little-as-possible trips. However, I did feel a bit sad that I was not in tune with the degree of importance assigned to having a towel by the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Three days before I am to set off on my RTW trip, I have finally found a website that addresses my most angst-ridden concerns (how lovely)… except for one concern… I am less concerned about the towel as opposed to the waterproof, all-season coat (combination rain coat, fleece, or both at the same time). That’s like 25% of my baggage real estate.
I am also concerned about the temperature and humidity- my body likes it around 65 degrees… I am going to be a sweaty mess (heading to Laos in April)… Any advice in that regard would be very helpful.
So… Thank you, Joe, after reading a few of your postings I feel a little more relaxed about this pit in my stomach and the big question mark in front of me (first time doing this).
Steve
Any old rain jacket will be fine for Laos. It is too warm there for a waterproof-breathable to work. Leave the fleece at home.
As a large guy who also prefers 65 degrees f., I use cotton short-sleeve shirts and I shower a lot. Make sure you bring along some talcum powder and some antifungal creme. Plus, a roll of the most luxurious toilet paper (with aloe!) that money can buy.
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Interesting thoughts Joe. I too often wonder…Should I bring a towel? and if so, how big of one should I take…like you said, the big ones take up so much damn space…but, golly, they are nice to have.