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Nadia Mitchem in Budapest

Accidental nomad responds to whisper and whim

She was a high-powered executive, having built national volunteer-management infrastructures for leading charitable organizations.

But there was that whisper.

I always knew that there was more, and something just kept pulling at me about the idea of taking a leap and doing something bold and different, said Nadia Mitchem 98.

She lept into a slomad lifestyle a slow-moving, nomadic existence that has taken her on nine solo U.S. road trips covering 5,000 miles and, so far, on long visits to 12 countries in Europe, Northern Africa and the Middle East. She is careful to say she is not on vacation, packing in every conceivable experience; she is living a lifestyle with the attitude that she will return to each destination someday.

The world has been opened up in some of the most enchanting ways, she said. She spent an afternoon with a master violin maker, who demonstrated how he coaxed melodies from a block of wood. She departed with a sore back and reddened fingers but also an appreciation for womens contributions and the painstaking labor that is put into the artistry after learning to weave a rug from a woman in mountainous Turkey.

Mitchem at the Charles Bridge in Prague
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Charles Bridge in Prague

Qasar Al Wantan Palace in Abu Dhabi  Devin Kessler
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Qasar Al Wantan Palace in Abu Dhabi

Popic Winery in Lumbarda, Croatia Sandy Berman
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Popic Winery in Lumbarda, Croatia

She was struck by the dignity Rembrandt depicted in Two African Men, a 1661 painting, and the irony that it hangs in The Mauritshuis, a museum that used to be the living quarters of a Dutch sugar farmer who enslaved people.

She marveled at her freedom while traveling the Harriet Tubman Byway in Maryland, and contemplated how women in the past, especially Black women, did not have the agency to decide when and where and for how long they could move. She toured Southern plantation homes to claim my place in American history.

Mitchem said she is an accidental nomad in the sense that this wasnt my intent. Initially, I thought Id travel and then return and go back into a traditional environment. Instead, I had to give myself permission to color outside the lines because this was a bit unconventional.

That took time. It was 2014 when the whisper was loudest in my ear, but I didnt take any concrete steps. She was working for the American Red Cross, where she created the infrastructure to support 272,000 volunteers across more than 100 local chapters. She was deployed for six months to advise the international affiliate in Geneva, Switzerland, where the pace was so palpably different from the hectic American workplace and the wheels started turning.

She had just determined that she should find something new when St. Jude Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, recruited her to create its volunteer infrastructure. That job was fine, but I still didnt quell that whisper, she said. In fact, it probably got louder.

That, and the universe was just conspiring in my favor, positioning ideas and people in front of her and inspiring her to set March 29, 2020, as the date she would resign. Then COVID happened. She postponed but didnt cancel her plans and in August 2020 she stored her belongings, identified her hometown of St. Louis as a base and headed out across the U.S. for six months.

It probably took me three months to unwind from that sense of do, do, do and to recognize that I had complete control over my day, Mitchem said. I was really exploring. I was really able to subject myself to whim and give in to whim. And that was amazing and refreshing and delightful and delicious.

The whisper, though, still nagged. I realized the power in asking myself Why not? she said. I couldnt come up with any good reason. And so, in June 2021, she lept still farther, this time to a month-long program in Croatia curated for professionals who need a timeout. Though she was a veteran international traveler before this experience, I wanted a degree of structure because of the uncertainty in the world at the time. After that, Ive been solo and nomadic all around the world.

Mitchem heeds U.S. State Department travel warnings and listens to other travelers especially Black women also traveling alone as she chooses each destination. Sometimes she merely mulls a map. When she spoke with 51勛圖厙 Magazine, she was newly arrived in Marrakech, Morocco, where she planned to stay five weeks, then head to Milan, Italy. I dont know what Im doing after that, she said.

She has formed many friendships, often with other solo travelers whom she seeks out on Facebook and Meetup as she moves from place to place, and thus she never feels lonely. I enjoy my own company, and I seek community when I feel like I want community, she said.

She is recording her experiences and encouragement to would-be solo nomads, especially Gen Xers (born 1965-80) and Xennials (a microgeneration born in the late 1970s and early 1980s) on a website, globalchroniclesofnadia.com, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube.

She has no plans to end her travels. I dont know that I will go back to a desk because Ive realized you dont have to, she said. She has done some consulting but 90% of my time is still mine and I would engage only in things that bring me joy. I protect my peace in ways that I had never considered protecting my peace before. I embrace the fact that no is a complete sentence.

I want to be able to dream.

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