Travel After 50 Changed Me More Than Therapy Did


A friend once read my palm. She studied the lines carefully. Then she looked up and told me, with great authority, that I had no lines for foreign travel. None. Finished. That was that. She said it the way people say things they secretly enjoy saying. This was the same circle that watched my difficult years after my husband, with a little too much comfort. The grief stage. The barely any money stage. The starting-over stage. They had front row seats and settled in nicely. So when she announced my palm had no travel lines, I looked at her and said something I meant completely. I told her I would carve those lines with a knife. This is how Travel After 50 Changed Me More Than Therapy Did.
Guadalajara Came First

A few years later, I boarded a flight to Guadalajara, Mexico. My grandson Arian had just been born. I was not travelling for adventure. I was travelling for love. However, that first stamp on my passport felt like a small, quiet victory I did not announce to anyone.
Mexico did not let me stay quiet for long. I went to Tequila — yes, the actual town, not just the drink. I travelled through landscapes that looked nothing like anything I had grown up seeing. Moreover, I went back in 2018 when my younger grandson Amir was born. Then twice more after my son passed. The same country. The same arms are waiting. Different grief in my luggage each time.
Arian is twelve now. Amir is seven. Mexico is not just a destination for me. It is where my heart has people.
The Palm Reader Was Wrong About Everything
Before 50, I barely travelled. Life had other plans — responsibilities, constraints, the general business of surviving. Then something shifted. The second half arrived, and so did the passport stamps.
Bhutan came — the happiest country on earth, they call it. I felt right at home. Egypt came next, and that one undid me completely. I am a History student at heart. Standing before the pyramids, I did not feel like a tourist. I felt like I had come back to something. As a little girl, I used to imagine I was Cleopatra. At the pyramids, that little girl finally got her moment. Then came Meghalaya, with its living root bridges and clouds that sit at eye level. Assam and Manipur, where India feels ancient and green and completely unhurried. Kashmir, where I wrote a piece that eventually found its way into a sixth-grade textbook. London, Barcelona, Paris. Melbourne, where my daughter and I froze at a penguin parade that frankly underwhelmed us, laughed all the way home on the last tram, and called it a perfect evening.
Furthermore, I went to Tequila. The town. And raised a glass. Metaphorically speaking.



Travel After 50 Changed Me More Than Therapy Did
New People Never Judge You
This is what nobody tells you about travel. The strangers are the best part. At home, people know your story. They know the before and the after. They carry their opinions about you like hand luggage they refuse to check in.
Strangers carry nothing about you. They meet you exactly as you show up that day. A woman with curious eyes and too many questions about local food. A person who wants to understand how things work in your world. Someone genuinely interested in your culture, your customs, your everyday life.
Therefore, travel gave me something therapy tries hard to give and sometimes cannot. It gave me the experience of being seen without being judged. Of connecting without history getting in the way. Of curiosity without consequence.
I am a people person by nature. Travel gave that part of me full permission to run.
What the Lines on Your Palm Cannot Tell You
I like to travel not to escape from my life but so that life doesn’t escape me. That line came from my Kashmir travelogue, and I stand by it completely.
Routine is comfortable. However, comfort left unchecked becomes a kind of shrinking. Every new place I visited expanded something in me that grief and difficulty had tried to compress. The Nile did not care about my losses. The mountains of Bhutan asked nothing of me. The streets of Guadalajara just wanted me to show up and pay attention.
So I paid attention. I still do.

Carve the Lines Yourself
The second half of life has a reputation for slowing down. Settling. Accepting limits. However, nobody handed me that memo, and I would have ignored it anyway.
My passport tells a different story than my palm. It has stamps from countries that were once just names in books I read as a girl who dreamed of going places. It has entry marks from the town called Tequila and exit stamps from airports I navigated alone, luggage in hand, completely fine.
A palm reader once told me I had no travel lines. She was not entirely wrong. I did not have them then. I carved them myself. One trip at a time. One stamp at a time. One stranger-who-became-a-story at a time.
The second half, it turns out, is an excellent time to pick up the knife.
This post is part of Blogchatter’s A2Z Challenge.
The Theme of my A2Z series is The Second Half
Find all my A2Z Blogs Below
- Aging Well Versus Looking Young
- Being Needed Less: The adjustment no one talks about
- Clutter of The Heart
- Doing Less Without Feeling Guilty
- Evolving Friendships in the Second Half
- Feeding Your Own Soul
- Growing Old as a Woman in India
- Humour That Saved Me
- Women’s Intuition: My 7th Sense
- Judgement: What I stopped carrying
- Kitchen Hacks: 25 Tried & Tested
- Lifelong Learning: From Letters to AI Prompts
- Matka Magic
- Neighbours and the quiet joy
- Old Photo Albums Versus Digital Photos
- Pickle Jars & Indian Achar
- Questioning Social Beliefs
- Relationships
- Social Rules Nobody warned you about








