It's Hard To Learn A New Language. But It's Way Harder To Learn A New Culture.

It's Hard To Learn A New Language. But It's Way Harder To Learn A New Culture.
ASPEN, CO - JULY 01: Ta-Nehisi Coates speaks during the film screening and discussion of 'Sing Your Song' at the Aspen Institute's Aspen Ideas Festival 2011 at the Paepcke Auditorium on July 1, 2011 in Aspen, Colorado. (Photo by Leigh Vogel/Getty Images)
ASPEN, CO - JULY 01: Ta-Nehisi Coates speaks during the film screening and discussion of 'Sing Your Song' at the Aspen Institute's Aspen Ideas Festival 2011 at the Paepcke Auditorium on July 1, 2011 in Aspen, Colorado. (Photo by Leigh Vogel/Getty Images)

I spent the majority of this summer at Middlebury College, studying at l’École Française. I had never been to Vermont. I have not been many places at all. I did not have an adult passport until I was 37 years old. Sometimes I regret this. And then sometimes not. Learning to travel when you’re older allows you to be young again, to touch the childlike amazement that is so often dulled away by adult things. In the past year, I have seen more of the world than at any point before, and thus, I have been filled with that juvenile feeling more times then I can count—at a train station in Strasbourg, in an old Parisian bookstore, on a wide avenue in Lawndale. It was no different in Vermont where the green mountains loomed like giants. I would stare at these mountains out of the back window of the Davis Family Library. I would watch the clouds, which, before the rain, drooped over the mountains like lampshades, and I would wonder what, precisely, I had been doing with my life.

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