I’ve progressed. At first, when I would wake up some place new, I’d think I was at home. It would take me a minute to make out the unfamiliar details, now disclosed by daylight. The heavy hotel drapes, the hefty TV set, my messy suitcase, the meticulously folded white towels. As a new place took shape beyond the curtains, wimpled, enigmatic, frequently cream-coloured or yellow still from the street lamps.
But then I entered into a phase that travel psychologists refer to as ‘I Don’t Know Where I Am’. I’d wake up totally disoriented. Like an alcoholic coming to, I would try to remember what I’d done the previous evening, where I’d been and how I’d got there, going over every detail in an effort to decipher the here and now. And the longer this procedure would take, the more I would panic – an unpleasant state, similar to labyrinthitis, the loss of basic balance, verging on nausea. Where in God’s name am I? But the world is merciful in its particularities, which would always steer me back in the right direction in the end. I’m in M. I’m in B. This is a hotel, this is my friend’s apartment, the guest room in the home of the N. family. Someone’s sofa.
This type of awakening was like getting my ticket stamped for the next part of my journey.
Then came a third phase, which travel psychology refers to as the key phase, the crowning phase. In this phase, whatever your destination might be, you are always heading in that direction. ‘It Doesn’t Matter Where I Am,’ it makes no difference. I’m here.