Tell a tale !

A Quiet Detour to Milfontes

Sometimes (okay, most times) I don’t know how I feel or what I want. And in those moments, I do things like booking Milfontes—the small place tucked between Lagos and Lisbon. It just felt nice to go. So I went.

I was carrying Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine. Yes, the title resonated—deeply—and it felt good to return to reading while traveling through Portugal. I finished most of it on the bus to Milfontes. I reached in the evening, and of course, the sad part: the sunset was unfolding on the left side of the bus while I was seated on the right. My heart ached, naturally—it always does when I miss things like that. Still, once I got off, the sky put on enough drama to make up for it. (Check the pic.)

The Airbnb itself was quaint, and I met another traveler who looked visibly relieved at my arrival—she’d been staying there alone with her dog for four days. Company is always nice :) She cooked dinner and kindly offered me some. After food and easy conversation, I took a long shower and hugged the bed like it had been waiting for me.

The next morning, I decided to walk the Fisherman’s Trail. I started around 9, assuming I’d find a café somewhere along the way. Surprise—there was nothing. So there I was, walking for the next six hours on an empty stomach. The only savior was a daily milk bar I’d bought the day before in Lagos. The walk—from town through farms and out onto the cliffs—was stunning. Hardly anyone around, except for a generous number of cats keeping watch.

After a while, I saw a few people here and there, moving in both directions along the trail—not crowded, just enough to remind me the world still existed. It felt surreal. I could see myself, hear myself—my thoughts moving alongside the ocean, the sun, and the vast stretch of sand. Luxury, isn’t it?

Around 2 p.m., I decided to head back and somehow chose the most odd route possible. I crossed arid sand dunes, wandered into fields of nothingness, no one in sight in any direction—just me, singing to myself, enjoying every little thing along the way. Yes, including the trees. I felt like I was home. Like this was exactly where I was meant to be.

At some point, I struggled to find my way back—everything looked the same, all grass alike, all trees indistinguishable. Eventually, instinct kicked in, and somehow I crossed over near someone’s house (private property)… and that’s that.

I made it through a crooked road and finally back into town, to the BnB. It had been a perfect day—full of nature, myself, and a deep sense of serenity. Just before reaching the BnB, I spotted a café. I was relieved, and I’m fairly sure the server was too. I must have looked as exhausted as I felt. A great coffee, toast, and eggs later, it was time to retreat to bed.

And honestly, I couldn’t have asked for more.

Milfontes, Portugal
Fisherman Trail, Milfontes
Tell a tale !

Strangers at a Table – Home for a Night

Christmas Eve 2025 was special in the most unexpected way.

Picture this: two Germans, one Austrian, an Indian, and an American—complete strangers—sitting around a dining table in a hostel in Lagos. Plates half-full, stories overflowing, laughter bouncing off the walls. By the end of the night, we were no longer strangers, just humans sharing pieces of our lives with open hearts.

The Austrian man was elderly and proudly analog. No digital gadgets, no constant scrolling—just a man carefully planning his travels the old-school way. He worked at a ski resort in Austria, and there was something deeply grounding about how he moved through the world. Watching him made me wish I’d lived in that era… or at least inspired me to seriously reduce my digital footprint.

One German girl was three months into backpacking across Southern Europe—curious, fearless, and full of stories. The American girl was making the most of her one-month summer break, traveling across Europe with a kind of joyful urgency. She was from Minneapolis—yes, the irony! Of all places. After working with AMPF, I never expected to meet someone from there at a hostel table in Lagos. She was genuinely surprised I even knew the place.

Another German guy was traveling too—cooking, chatting, and casually smoking weed (which, let’s be honest, felt very on brand 🥲).

And then there was me. Listening. Laughing. Sharing.

Our conversations drifted effortlessly—from how each of us travels, to the strange familiarity of grocery stores around the world, to why analog still feels incredibly cool in an overwhelmingly digital age. We talked about how America is changing, how there’s still hope (Mamdani), and how we imagine watching the sunrise—like an egg yolk slowly spilling out of a sky-blue pan over the ocean.

Lagos, Portugal

Travels

Perks of going Solo ;)

Almost after 3 years of writing the first post and sitting in amongst COVID19 restrictions seems to be the best time to reminisce the perks of going solo ;)

So here it is.. from my experience to the comfort of your digital media.

  • You learn to face yourself – Yes, it is true. No matter how much others may tell you, how and what you are, we don’t really believe them. Which is of course how humans are. But trust me when you are out there alone, you realise how much of that was true. So being able to cope with our self is the first thing that solo travels blesses you with.
  • You get creative – Surprisingly even the most dull person becomes creative and solution oriented when it comes to survival and finding your way out on your own. Cause remember – you are solo :)
  • You learn to seek help – Believe it or not, most of us are self proclaimed self sufficient when it comes to deciding and doing things on our own. But when you are out there on a strange land, street, room, or a restaurant – you learn to ask how, where, what, why to even strangest of the people. This by the way is my favourite PERK !!! I love stranger conversations.
  • You perceive better – The lens of perception is the key to our daily living and solo travel changes/adds to it magnificently. The time spent at each and every place, with each person you meet, they stories you hear, the connections you make changes you as a person. This is a life changing experience.
  • You are liberated – Once you have stepped out alone into a strange world and made your way into it, there is nothing in this world that you cannot do. This is very true for people who live on their own, away from families, for work or to study. They know what am talking about. It makes your strong, self reliant and independent.

Being a ambivert, the course of my solo travel has been due to sheer want to get away from my usual life. To take a break from everything and to start afresh every time. To me, these solo experiences bring a lot of comfort, positivity, greater perspective and willingness to continue and live life each day.

I hope these little perks, give you that long pending push and go out as soon as its safe to do so !! If not, may be the picture will do the trick 😀

Colombo Airport, Srilanka