Travelling, especially through volunteering or alternative routes, can be deeply disorienting. You’re often surrounded by unfamiliar languages, customs, and landscapes. People enter your life quickly, sometimes intensely, and just as quickly disappear.
The pace of connection and disconnection is constant.
In the middle of all this, itโs easy to lose your sense of centre. You might start to feel unsettled by whoโs not around, or overly attached to someone youโve only just met.
Thatโs where this quote lands with weight:
โBe so rooted in your being that nobody’s absence or presence can disturb your inner peace.โ
This isnโt a call to detach or isolate yourself; itโs about building something stable inside you, so that you donโt collapse every time a person leaves or cling desperately when someone arrives.
Peace is something you carry, not something you find in others.
Volunteering abroad teaches this quickly. You give your time, your energy, sometimes your heart, and often without knowing what will come back. You witness lives that are different from yours, not better, not worse, just different. And to stay open, to stay useful, you need to not be constantly thrown off by shifting emotions and changing company.
Inner peace, in this context, is practical.
It lets you listen without defensiveness. It helps you leave without guilt. It allows you to show up fully, knowing that your sense of worth isnโt on the line every time someone smiles, ignores, or praises you.
This rootedness doesn’t make you cold. On the contrary, it makes your presence steadier, your kindness less fragile, and your intentions clearer. Youโre not serving or travelling to be seen. You’re doing it because it’s aligned with who you are, and that’s something no one else can give or take away.
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