If someone had told me a year ago that I was about to take an eight-month road trip through every state, province and territory in the United States and Canada, with no planned route -- or even that I'd be using Twitter on a daily basis -- I would have let out a hearty guffaw and carried on my way (which was probably to the nearest library). I'd been working toward a career as an art dealer or curator somewhere in Europe for most of my 26 years, and none of the above was on my life's to-do list. Let's start and the beginning: 2008 was a hell of a year. It started with a classic tale of boy breaks up with girl, girl moves in with parents in an attempt to regroup. What followed, however, was not so classic. Four months after I left London, where I'd been a student at Christie's Education, my parents' house burned to the ground. A furnace fire destroyed the entire building and within minutes, all of our material possessions (including my beloved budgie bird, Percy) were gone. It was right before Christmas, and I literally had nothing but the flannel shirt on my back.
To make matters worse, I had just earned my master's in art history. (I did my dissertation on representations of facial hair in Renaissance art, in case you're wondering.) In These Economic Times, that's not exactly a ticket to employment, especially in Toronto, where the museums are great, but few and far between. Finally, after months of looking for work, I got some good news: A major art auction house in Toronto offered me a position. Exciting!
But wait. On the eve of my first day, I got a phone call telling me that the office was closing. No job for me.
All of the above happened within a period of 12 months.
It seemed that every time I turned around, life was forcing me to throw out my expectations, face disappointment, think on my toes and start from scratch. I spent a good deal of time feeling sorry for myself, asking questions that had no answers: Why is this all happening to me? Why can't someone just tell me what I should be doing with my life? Why can't I seem to hold on to happiness? But at the end of all the wallowing in frustration and self-pity, I knew this quarter-life crisis I was facing would be there with or without the breakup, the fire and the unemployment. I realized it was up to me to learn whatever lessons there were to be learned and start carving out my own existence.
About six months after the fire, some hope arrived in the form of an insurance check. Instead of using it to replace all of my destroyed possessions, I put it aside for a trip. I had begun the application process for a PhD program, so a few months back in Europe would be a great way to focus my mind and figure out a topic to study, while also giving me the chance to work on my foreign language skills. It made perfect sense on paper, only not in my heart.
For whatever reason, even though it would be a complete 180 from my "life plan," I had this underlying desire to explore the continent I called home. But I didn't even own my own car.
Enter Luke. Luke is my best friend (a best friend who also happens to have a car). Until very recently, Luke was working as a successful consultant for a very big company -- he had the type of job that most people dream about but never get. But like me, he didn't feel inspired in his position and didn't want to settle.
Then one morning, at the end of last summer, Luke texted me: "I don't like my job." Half jokingly, I replied: "You should quit and come on a trip with me." And he did! We started devising an extensive exploration of North America, north of the Mexican border, which at the same time, would be an equally extensive exploration of social media. Since September 2009, we've been busy planning the unplanned.
Almost everything we see and do will be determined by the suggestions and votes of our followers -- you guys -- via our Web site Alex and Luke, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Gowalla. Our followers picked our uniforms, named our car (he's called Burt Reynolds), suggested we learn to cook on Burt's engine, and that's just the beginning. We're crowd-sourcing our adventure, which means we'll be experiencing North America in an entirely new way. We'll be doing lots of updating from the road -- including a weekly travel program and a show aimed at kids starring some puppets I picked up in Europe -- and all the while, we'll have constant interaction with our followers. You guys are the real drivers of this trip.
I have a lot to learn, from how to do my hair in a rest stop bathroom and which cities have the best food, to whether this whole crazy experiment is even possible. My life this year might not be turning out exactly how I had originally planned, but something tells me the Alex and Luke experiment is going to yield more knowledge and experience than I could have found within the walls of a museum. I cannot wait to see what North America has in store for me.
So, Lemondroppers, talk to me! I'll be checking in with Lemondrop regularly and need your help to decide what to talk about. What do you want to know? Do you have questions about a certain way of life in a specific part of the country? Do you have tips for taking a long road trip you can share? Are you curious about the differences in guys I noticed in different cities? Send all your thoughts to me at @alexandluke with the #LDAlex hashtag.
Alex and Luke started their adventure this past Saturday, March 20. Followers voted on where they should start their trip and sent Alex and Luke north toward Collingwood, Wasaga Beach and North Beach, Ontario, where Alex conquered her fear of the chairlift and tried snowboarding for the first time (click through to watch her first run). Below, check out a video the pair made explaining their trip and what they hope to accomplish.












Comments:
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Monday 22 March
By Michelle
You guys are AWESOME!!! GO FOR IT!!!
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Monday 22 March
By Lulu
To AOL, please, don't be so shallow when you pick stories to put on my front page to have to look at each morning. I am realizing what a joke this is. I guess,it's because young dumb dumb's who have their priorities ass backwards are picking these nonsense stories. Get in touch with what is really going on and send us a story of someone working from the ashes in more then one sense, please.
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Tuesday 23 March
By Stacy
It took me a failied marriage in my forties to figure out I had been living a life that was only good on paper. It's hard to shirk the traditional path. Following your instincts/heart takes guts. I wish I'd known what I know now when I was your age. Good for you. Happy traveling!
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Tuesday 23 March
By adam
You should stop in Stonington Connecticut/Stonington boro a sea side fishing village. It's as New England as you can get. Great clam chowder. Avoid RT 70 across the country... pretty blahh. Enjoy!
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Tuesday 23 March
By Michelle
This is a cute idea.
It is not brave or inspiring whatsoever.
It's two affluent young people who have the resources to blow off responsibility and play all over the continent. This woman had a few set backs in her life, not "hardships" by any means. If this would have happened to a lower-middle class family, avoiding being homeless and employed would have been first priority. I wish more people were fortunate enough to experience something like this. It will no doubt be a wonderful, life changing adventure. But AOL should be ashamed for touting this as "brave" and implying that this woman should be pitied for her suffering. Has everyone forgotten what's going on in the world? There are children in Haiti fighting for their lives everyday. Families struggling to regain what's left of their lives after an earthquake took away EVERYTHING. There are soldiers in Iraq fighting for our country this very minute. That takes bravery that is news worthy. Two 20 somethings taking a road trip is hardly the "bravery" that merits news coverage right this moment. AOL really dropped the ball on this one, IMO.
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Tuesday 23 March
By Richard
You lost me at 'facial hair" and getting an insurance check and taking off to see the country side. My son had a degree in computer science. His company folded, he was in his late 30's and could not find a job. His wife's company folded three weeks later. They lost their home through mortgage foreclosure and their car. They had to move into a run down motel just to have a roof over their heads.They have 3 kids. He took jobs as a construction laborer, concrete mixer driver, store clerk, shoe salesman, and now works for a company that repairs home computers. His wife (with a BBA degree) works as a waitress. they live in a rental home, drive an old car, but support themselves and the kids. So they did not get to see Europe or travel around and study facial hair, or get an insurance check.....get my point??
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Tuesday 23 March
By Yolanda
Very inspiring. I thought I was going through, but when I heard this story, it made me realy believe, I am going to be alright.
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Tuesday 23 March
By Mandi Martinez
Can I join ya'll!!! I'm down here in Texas come scoop me up!
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Tuesday 23 March
By Renu
Get books-on-tape/cd! You guys can enjoy cool books or classics that you never had time to read and you can learn a language(s)
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Tuesday 23 March
By f.w.bousquet
HI I THINK YOU SHOULD KEEP A LOG OF ALL THE PLACES YOU VISIT & WHAT YOU SEE . THEN WRITE A BOOK ABT THE TRIP. GOOD LUCK TO BOTH OF YOU. ITS A ONCE IN A LIFETIME TRIP & WILL MAKE INTERESTING READING
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Tuesday 23 March
By mike
come to new haven, Connecticut on the 30 of march ahaha great band, and you wont regret it! (not my band - they're from oregon)
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Tuesday 23 March
By joanne shelley
You're wonderful and amazing. I am 75 and still love to travel. The people you mee are wonderful and so interesting. When you come through Colorado contact me and I will give you a wonderful bed to sleep in and a home cooked meal. I would love to hear abou your adventures.
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Tuesday 23 March
By Laylah
This is a great adventure your on, I just wish it wasn't so self indulged. Please consider doing it for a cause greater than yourself. At least report doing good deeds for others along your journey. I really wasn't impressed to here your first experience was the chair lift and sking. It just sounded selfish because your viewers are mostly grounded in real life and to keep an interest on your adventure, I would start considering what you can do for others along the way.
It would make the experience more meaningful for you and your viewers, maybe you could even write a book afterwards!
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Tuesday 23 March
By Mark Kreutzer
Come to Saint Louis. I make a great host & tour guide. Who knows what may happen if you should travel here, the possibilitues are endless. Do you have the soul to accept my invite?
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Tuesday 23 March
By CANDY MAN
FIRST GOD BE WITH YOU. ENJOY YOU YOUNG ADVENTURERS.IF YOU COME TO THE WEST COAST OF THE U S OF A STAY ON HWY 1 BEST SCENIC VIEW OF THE PACIFIC.GOD BLESS YOU TWO.
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Tuesday 23 March
By Connor
Wow, it's wonderfull your doing this, I would love to do this. I live in a quiet town around Victorville known as Apple Valley CA. It's wonderfull, but in the middle of the desert. When you visit Montana, let me know how it was, I'm visiting the last two weeks of June. Hope you have a wonderfull trip, and I'll make sure to keep up with this amazing project.
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Tuesday 23 March
By Jeanne
Make sure to enjoy the Blue Ridge Mountains/Highway in the Fall, Texas in Summer...the colors will take your breath away!
I wish you both the best!
As another person stated about tasting a certain food (chili was mentioned) in each state/place...BBQ is another thing that is so incredibly different by region too...dry rubbed and slow, smokey flavor or Texas, some kinda somethin' else with what seems like bbq sauce water you squirt on it and served with red slaw(wth???) in NC, the icky(good icky), sticky, need-a-roll-of-paper-towels-when-you-eat-it in GA
I am looking forward to enjoying ya'll's trip! I hope ya'll are able to take in the feast all of your senses are about to take in!
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Tuesday 23 March
By burbank mahogany
Alex, do you fly from your pain? Percy, the "beloved" budgie never had that chance, did he, as he roasted in his cage?
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Tuesday 23 March
By Taylor
I enjoy the story as well as the significance of the endeavor that the two of ya'll (Yeah I'm Texan) are about to undergo. After reading the first page of comments I do however feel compelled to speak my voice albeit out of context. As for Hillary and Petra's comments, because you are so unhappy in your own life and not in the position to have the same experiences doesn't entitle you to disparage such a worthy idea with envious and negative connotation. Moreover, you are average, and it is because you chose to be. I gathered that this adventure is an effort to choose otherwise. I can't stand negative people and I enjoyed the well put and positive words of kjip and fully agree with the sentiment. To conclude my spiel, given that you are starting in the North I could think of no better place to end such a journey then In Texas. You should try the 72 oz steak challenge at the big Texan in Amarillo and make your way through the Texas hill country to Austin. The vastness of Texas should serve you well in reflecting upon your experiences and our existence in such a awesome world. Good luck and be safe!
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Tuesday 23 March
By Swie
COME TO NEW YORKKKKKKK!!!!!!!! nice bars and night life....
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