How I Met Toni 🇬🇧 Join "People We Met While Traveling" Contest in Steem-Travelers!

in hive-111293 •  3 years ago 

It was a very cold hostel, pipes of the heating system were hardly warm in the dormitory. They were wrapped in wet socks and T-shirts (washed in sinks by budget travelers, us) - otherwise, the clothes didn't get dry. Late October in Istanbul 🇹🇷 can be dank.

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A street in Istanbul, ©datych

Returning from walks, guys used to slip into sleeping bags and additionally cover themselves with a blanket. When it was rainy, everybody stayed inside and the dormitory resembled a refugee camp.

The hostel was called The Stray Cat and it was quite an appropriate name because this was what you felt under its roof: being homeless.

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I got two buddies there and, years later, I remember only them from that dormitory. It was Elijah, a young curly white Californian 🇺🇸 waiting for a flight to India. On a day of leaving, he gifted me a tent saying: "India is cheap, I won't need the tent over there". Since that time, when I am camping in Russian 🇷🇺 forests, I sleep in that American tent. My other mate was Toni, a British woman 🇬🇧 who has become a close friend of mine afterward.

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Stairs at the hostel, ©datych

Nothing special happened except we simply started a conversation in the dormitory and continued it during our walks in the crooked streets of the old Istanbul. Ten years have passed but the talk between us has been lasting.

We went our own ways after leaving The Stray Cat but kept in touch on Facebook and sometimes had online discussions of traveling, cultures, philosophy, politics, photography, music, books, etc, or just chatted about life routine, about hopes and hardships.

A couple of years later, Toni came to travel in Russia and stayed at my place. A few years later, we met each other in Cambodia 🇰🇭

The coronavirus pandemic brought much stress to our lives, much isolation, and some online friends became more real than those who lived in an hour away. I and Toni, like many other people, sometimes were at the egde of losing sanity, and sharing thoughts and feelings between us was a way of moral support almost every day at that period.

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Toni in Cambodia, ©datych

These things work like this: you find that some people walk the same way as you all the time. Toni was often somewhere near (metaphorically). In 2021, both of us started learning crypto from scratch: what all these coins are about, how to trade, and what would happen next. We found out that crypto trading is an emotional and spiritual challenge either. We had nobody to share this exciting, hard experience except each other.

Toni spent years in travels, she visited every corner in marvelous India 🇮🇳, she explored Southeast and East Asia as well as countries of Eastern Europe. She is an artist and radio host today, living in a small town in England. She stays connected to nature and grows herbs and veggies at her allotment. She is a loving grandmother besides - nobody as happy as Toni when she is with her magic boy.

Always learning, always open-minded, always on the side of justice, compassion, creativity, and peace, a kindred spirit of mine, my adorable friend Toni. 🙂


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Fontaines D.C., a cool Irish 🇮🇪 band Toni has shared with me:

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guys used to slip into sleeping bags and additionally cover themselves with a blanket.

This reminded me of my first winter in Rosario, we only had a mattress and a few blankets, without a heater, we had to warm ourselves with sleeping bags.

Beautiful friendship, great that you have been able to meet again through the years!

#travelers-say #onepercent #affable

This post is plagiarism-free!

Thank you :)

my first winter in Rosario

So you are not from Rosario, originally. So why Rosario then, not Buenos Aires, not Ushuaia, for example?

Life in Argentina, an interesting topic. Maybe @papi.mati will post about it, he promised to cross the ocean in his last post about Oman :)

Sounds like a good plan. I could write about Argentina from the foreigner perspective ;)

I am from Venezuela is even hotter than Rosario. I love the City, is very nice in general to live here, you can have a peaceful life, that in Venezuela is impossible.

Yes, I heard Venezuela had much political troubles... I hope Russia won't follow this example. But alas freedom and dignity lost in this country so a new hard transition will follow once.

🙏🏼

Man, you've got the talent. Reading it is like reading a book - you know how to manage with the words. Chapeau Bas!

Friendships from the journey, from Couchsurfing, hostels, or hitchhiking together can revolutionary change our world. I know that very well - I have a life partner who I met in a hostel in Valparaiso over 3 years ago :)

Once under one of the publications we were saying (I think it was with you, forgive me if I am wrong) that even if we would really love that, it's impossible to visit every place in the world. Meeting people from different cultures and different countries makes it partially possible. We may not be physically in all those countries, cities, and towns where they are from, but by getting to know travelers like Toni, we somehow discover their homeland without visiting it.

PS: remember about leaving the link to the entry under the contest post ;)

Thank you!

over 3 years ago

A long term, great to hear it.

Once under one of the publications we were saying (I think it was with you

It was. Meeting travelers is a way of traveling, true. This is what I did first before I started my wanders - I was a host on couchsurfing. I met nice people from there and got a close friend too (from Moscow this time). It is pity that the time I don't travel - 2020-2021 - meeting travelers is not possible too. CS demands payment "because of covid" - probably, they want me to pay to make me see that nobody is in the city.

Yes, true. I was a couchsurfer too. I was hosting (more) and using while traveling (less). I quit when they changed their policy. I mean I could accept the payment for the travelers but at the end I was hosting only and I didn't think it's fair. Paying bigger bills and buying extra food for my guests is something I'm okay with, but additional fee for the international website? not really

I understand you.

Step by step, they have killed the website. So searching for alternatives is relevant. I got an account on trustroots.org but not many people from Russia there (some in Western Europe) - wrong time for such platforms. So new ones can't grow and the old one is dead - killed by the management. :( Sad.

А Тони не ведёт блог на Стимит? Было бы интересно почитать, на фотографии она выглядит светлым и открытым человеком.

Привет, спасибо) Я ее звал. Она попробовала зарегистрироваться и у нее что-то не получилось. Она махнула рукой и сказала: я предпочитаю жить в реальной жизни. Да, она постит в ФБ и переписывается, но ...правда, онлайн много сил забирает, так что надо остановиться в какой-то момент, и каждый свою черту проводит.

The world has changed with the pandemic.
And if there was no Internet? How would we communicate and work without him then?

If there was no internet additionally to the pandemic? I think, then, people would start doing strange things. Much violence. Because, nowadays, internet is an opium for the people :) Internet soothes and entertains. People spend all their extra money in mobiles. If you steal from them one social media, you should give them another one. But internet must go on.

I think some sort of blind energy would push people to collect into mobs against anything - against the government, against national minorities, against the rich, etc - no matter. At some moment, the rulers of Russia would consider it is smarter to be a leader of people's mood (to avoid being a victim) and, then, they would start a war against some neighbour (just to flush down the anger) or would active search for an inner enemy (including pogroms and stuff), high-profile public scandals, the resumption of the death penalty. To flush people's anger down the toilet.

In my opinion. Maybe I am wrong ... But who can know the exact answer for such a question? :)

I totally agree with you.
But the authorities are afraid of the Internet. Constant talk about prohibitions. And if you close YouTube and Instagram? I think that not only young people but also old people will be dissatisfied with this.

  ·  3 years ago (edited)

I don't know. I guess nothing serious will happen in case YouTube and Instagram would be banned. Several hundreds of mostly very young people would be arrested here and there - protesters. Many people would find ways to still use Youtube and IG. Many people would find entertainment on rutube, vk.com, telegram.

Maybe I am wrong. Ultimately, nobody can predict.

I think poverty will make people upset. But we have an example of Belarus.

No idea what will happen :) Probably, a big collapse in 2 or 10 years or 50. ) Or maybe a new Khrushchev will appear. Or Gorbachev :) Who knows :)

Thank you @datych for introducing us to Toni! I’ve heard about her but I never knew how it all started! I also spent time between flights in Istanbul. The Stray Cat sounds like nobody’s first choice for accommodation so I’m glad it turned out to be a great place to meet another kind creative soul! Friends are special and it’s fabulous when we actually learn together rather than just party. I find your choice of using black and white photos to illustrate this travel story of yours just another way to take us back in time when we were all travelling, there were less restrictions in place and nobody knew what Covid-19 is.

:) Yes, b&w is good way for telling about the past. And a good way to hide disadvantages of an image especially unattractive colors... like a bright blue fence or distracting red plastic chairs.

Thank you! :)

You’re more than welcome @datych I like the idea of getting rid of all the colours to avoid distractions. Many places in Istanbul looked like a huge bazaar so plenty of colours, glitter and smells to carry you away. The colour blue is something I saw a lot of whilst in Turkey.