Thursday, April 17, 2025 | Madhu Bazaz Wangu
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Thursday, April 17, 2025

Thursday, April 17, 2025

When you read, words turn into images in your mind and thought process begins that awakens senses and feelings. Two-dimensional pages conjure three-dimensional realities. You become absorbed in the sensory experience of an unfamiliar world. Mentally out of your body you temporarily live subliminally the protagonist’s life. Events seem real as you shed tears, smile, laugh, or feel heartache. Hours fly by as you experience pleasure or suffering from an artistic distance. 

At times it so happens that a sudden call, a noise, a smell catapults you out of your imaginary orbit and back to your armchair. How you wish that had not happened! Reading can be that fantastic. And so much more. “Much more” for me is when intense reading persuades me to actualize what I have read, coaxing me to adventure into the setting of the book, this time I myself as the real protagonist.

This happened to me twice!

In 2007, I persuaded my husband to do exactly that. I had read as much as I could about ancient Egyptian art and architecture. But had not experienced it. We decided to visit the country that I had only vicariously felt. We took a flight to Cairo and from there a river cruise over Nile from Luxor to Aswan. We were charmed by the country and its people. And loved it so much that two years later we did it again, this time including Alexandria to our itinerary.

Reading can convince you to turn literary images into reality. Again in 2019 I read fantastic journals titled, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West. A compilation of daily records of Lewis and Clark’s journey, (these were Lewis’s journals) they followed no grammar, punctuation or spelling rules, and were hard to read. Yet as I read, I could see, hear, smell, taste, and touch the time span from August 1803 through September 1806 during which Lewis and Clark adventured uncharted land west of the Mississippi River. Populated with Native Indian tribes, the frontier was mostly wilderness, high mountains, vast prairies, wide rivers, and flora and fauna unknown to zoologists and botanists of the time. North America before 1803 was a mind-boggling reality of wilderness and the islands of Native Indian life.

Reading those journals wowed me! The feeling was so intense that once again I persuaded my husband for us to follow the voyage of discovery and adventure. So in May 2020 we left for a two-week adventure—but ours was in a luxurious boat. This time it was our tour guide with his stories based on facts and surrounded with real historic settings that each day we found ourselves

with Lewis, Clark, Sacagawea (the young Native American woman), her baby boy, and thirty young military men, testing “our” endurance and exploring spirit. I felt I was traveling with them. 

Only because of the magic of reading was I able to vicariously enjoy the company of these exemplary explorers and one brave woman. The book had conjured up pristine images of people and places and during our travel the actual settings filled us with awe, allure, mystery, and romance while the characters came alive in our imagination.

6 Comments
  • Lorraine

    It is amazing that words on paper can transform to reality through travel. I also like reading stories about places I’ve already been. It takes me back in time. Reading is magical!

    April 17, 2025 at 11:32 am
  • Good afternoon Madhu and Lorraine. Both of you have inspired me to travel more. Madhu, someday, I hope Harry and I can also take a luxury train ride tour through the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Lorraine, after I retire, my sister Dianne and I have talked about walking the Camino de Santiago. The way you shared your experiences in words makes me went to board the train and be a a pilgrim trekking through glory.

    April 17, 2025 at 12:50 pm
  • Jennifer D. Diamond

    Lovely inspiration, Madhu! Thank you for sharing!

    April 17, 2025 at 8:16 pm

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