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travel far now

a sporadic archive of rants & revelations from life on the road

substack essays

In defense of sensory experience, and the wave has a thousand moods

2/18/2026

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The wave has a thousand moods, writes William Finnegan. The wave is an event. The wave is an illusion. The wave disappears when you’re on it. The wave is a train you have to jump to ride.

I eyed the glorious waves once from a secret beach in Mtende, on the southern tip of Unguja. My ex and his staff at the lodge he owned knew about the place and we’d take day trips there, setting up camp in the secluded sandy spot between two towering cliffs.

Climbing down the rocky steps, I looked out at the startling beauty of ocean, cloud, sky and couldn’t quite comprehend what forces of luck had led me here. My body didn’t know how to be at home here so I took cues from my fellow travelers, finding shade under the rocks with a little blanket, watching the men spear fish on sticks and grill them over an open fire. Looked like a quilt of fish.

Always an outsider by design I suppose, I measured the parameters of my loneliness by how well I could regulate my nerves with the atmosphere. (At most, fear). Press your feet in the wet sand, I’d tell myself.

Go watch the women harvest sinewy rope from coconuts hidden under stones in the water. Go greet the fishermen who show up from a parallel universe with no business talking to you, whose faces break into warm smiles when you say hello in Swahili. Go wade in the caves. Collect the clouds like dream coins that will one day return you back to this memory.

Experience, not yet extinct but endangered. If we allow our phones to mediate every facet of our lives, we have two choices with our bodies: ignore them or control them, writes Christine Rosen in “The Extinction of Experience.” What ever happened to the non-quantifiable experience of unmediated pleasure? The you by the sea with your feet in the sand with no intention of documentation? She’s gone.

It’s been years since I was last at that spot, which has been blasted all over the internet as a “secret beach,” and now tourists pay for the approximation of experience. I suppose it was only a matter of time. Gatekeeping beauty is a tricky task, especially in a place like Zanzibar, where those who live there are constantly mediating the crash between tradition and modernity.

I’m home now and I realize how I’ve never gone looking for the secrets of this place. Learning to be somewhere is learning to talk about the land where you stand. The more we spiral into the outer spaces of the internet, the more my body moves in the direction of the forest. I always seem to spot a deer if I’m thinking about one, and that gives me a sense of place.

One time, a doe chased after me. My heart raced. I told my friend on the phone that I was frightened. I hid in a bathroom. The doe kept running. It was never after me! But I felt as though I had to flee. The sun burned bright on my freckled face. I found myself in an open field, exposed.

I heard relationship expert Esther Perel talk the other day about how human-AI relationships are so dissatisfying because the pleasure of loving someone has to do with accepting the risk of losing them—that one day, through separation or death—it will be over. AI relationships create the sensation of unconditional love, but we all know that friction and ripples are the point.

​The wave has a thousand moods.

Do we want to be here but nowhere, or nowhere but here? To look or to live, the voyeur or the visionary? Know thyself or only show thyself. These are the ideas percolating for me today. I’m not afraid to surrender to these waves of new experience—one that’s mediated through light waves—but I stand in full defense of the senses.

​Transit Slips, #18

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On flowing rivers and coexistence of old and new

2/4/2026

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When I was eight, I began to have a feeling about poetry that I couldn’t yet put into words. I’d discovered a sense of peace within the privacy of an upstairs bedroom closet with purple carpeting, and the pleasure of reading with a bag of large jelly beans by my side. My brain collaged a connection between sweetness, solitude and language.

I studied rivers in elementary school, the Nile in particular. I spent months drawing a long replica of its slither and scope with blue and green pencils. I was a kid pulled out of class for “advanced studies,” spending hours learning key facts about the longest river in the world. Years later, debates about the mega dam boomeranged me back to this brief but deep relationship to this river now causing so much grief.

Elena Ferrante’s description of “dissolving margins,” is a helpful way to explain what sometimes happens with memories and life experience, how “the outlines of people and places dissolve and disappear,” how this seems to occur by “unknown entities” and tend to reveal life’s more unstable nature.

In high school, my first love pointed to the street lamps in the middle of a summer night and asked, “hear that?” I had never noticed their electric buzz until he pointed it out to me. Back then, I was angry and all I saw was ugliness in my world—dirty snow, Brutalist architecture, abandoned parking lots, cracked cement, maniacal designs, rusted cars, broken signs!

But then these childhood places where I ate pancakes with my dad and gabbed with mom and chatted with my aunts and fought with my sisters disappeared one by one, and rose up like palaces of great nostalgia in my mind, carnivals of joy, classrooms of passionate chaos, those platters of hot corned beef on rye, pickles as promises.


I meditate on coexistence as a contract we signed when we all arrived, of course, at different times and dates. How are any of us surviving this wild astrology, each week, an unprecedented transit! The old and new exist together always and forever, we know this, but we forget to look for it. AI agents are chatting away in the mirrored halls of our collective fever dream and the Nile river keeps on flowing through difficult passages in its own natural history.

Yes, we can lament the looming extinction of experience, or we can experience it and write about it and make plays about it and invite ourselves into the farthest rooms with the most magnificent sunlight and bask in it together and marvel the whip cream floating atop our hot drinks. Writing daily is an experience in which I feel my cold fingertips on a black plastic keyboard and hear the ticking of my tiny pink clock and think, I’m still here and so are you, if you’re still reading.
​

And if you are, I want to thank you for accepting the unedited river of thoughts that seem to flow out of me ever since the new year dropped me off at an unfamiliar juncture and asked me to find a way forward. 
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    Essays by Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

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    Bio:

    Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein is a writer, poet, editor and vintage collector based in Skokie, Illinois. 

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