Quotes From "If Your Dream Doesnt Scare You It Isnt Big Enough: A Solo Journey Around The World" By Kristine K. Stevens

1
I was 8, 569 miles away, 37 butt-numbing hours of travel across seven time zones in the last two days, or was it three? Amelia Earhart, eat your heart out. Kristine K. Stevens
2
People dream. They talk about escaping from it all. Their friends and family diligently listen and politely ignore it when the ruminations fade into oblivion. So quite a few eyebrows went up when I made this trip a reality. Kristine K. Stevens
3
For the rest of my life, Zanzibar will be the Swahili word for rain. The rain would drizzle, spit, mist, downpour, shower, torrent, gust, deluge and blast. At one point it hit the ground so hard it created a haze as it bounced back up two feet and fell a second time. Kristine K. Stevens
4
Slowly, all the days became Saturdays, full of more sunlight than I could remember seeing in a long time. Kristine K. Stevens
5
When we saw a destitute-looking man trying to sell worn flip-flops, I vowed never to complain about a job again. When I considered the steady paycheck and quality of life it provided, my past gripes - primarily boring meetings, back-biting office politics and pantyhose - were just whining. Kristine K. Stevens
6
Toilet paper was either bleached white or unbleached gray, yet there were more than a dozen kinds of ketchup and about 30 brands of cookies. I approved of their priorities. Kristine K. Stevens
7
There I was, poised on the edge of the high diving board of life, and the pool kept moving around. Kristine K. Stevens
8
While National Geographic magazine had given me a taste of the world, the three-dimensional details of this moment - the tickle of the rain drops, the suck sound of my feet in the mud, the challenge of getting photographs of the monkeys, my immature urge to make the driver wait even longer because he was annoying - would feed me for years to come. Kristine K. Stevens
9
I like the idea that when I die, I will have a long sit-down chat with God and get answers to all my questions. For example, those apple coresthat I threw out of car windows when I was a child–did any of them becometrees? Few boys or men had ever asked me out. I told myself that itwas because I was almost 6-feet tall. Was that true or was there somethinghumbling I needed to know? Kristine K. Stevens