“I’m going travelling whether you come with me or not!” Without this ultimatum from my partner I may never have stepped off the career ladder to circumnavigate the globe. In April 2006 my girlfriend and now wife took the plunge and left our comfortable jobs to travel the world for a year. It was the best decision we have probably made in our lives, so good in fact that we came back married.
I had never really written any poetry prior to my travelling but decided it would be a great way to document our trip, so I started writing poems in the first week from our hostel in the heart of Mexico City and I carried on until the last leg of our journey on the Trans-Siberian Express across China and Mongolia to Russia. Any way, we returned to the UK in March 07 and I eventually took the advice of my many travel companions and compiled my book which I self published through a online company (author house)
345 days, 16 countries, 4 continents, 3 hospitals, 2 wedding rings, 1 police station and a day lost forever. From burping Mexicans to BBQ rat in Laos, a leap of faith in Vietnam and an irate nun in Russia, my poems follow the ups and the downs of life of two novice travellers on the backpacker trail. I hope they make you laugh ? Make you ponder ? Make you cringe ? Or make you wonder… anyone would quit a comfortable job to circumnavigate the globe.
Let me take you on a taster trip around the world with some of my observations, the serious and the funny that will inspire you to either book the next flight to somewhere new or convince you to never go on holiday again. So whether you are a globetrotter or a ‘rather-not-er’, read poetry everyday or would rather play on the motorway, just sit back, fasten your seatbelt and enjoy the experience. Will these poems give you rhyming reasons to travel the globe…or not ?
Pop culture (Mexico)
The Indian people of Chamula
 Say “Kushee” instead of “Hola”
 And like many other people
 They worship Coca-cola
 It’s part of their culture
 From the workers to the Chief
 More than a fizzy pop
 Rather a religious belief
 In the colours of the corn,
 From cans and bottles they slurp
 The evil spirits are released
 When they belch or burp!
Slow boat
Thailand to Laos on the slow boat
 Was an ordeal, not to repeat?
 Crammed in like tinned sardines
 Bags and people at your feet
 Not much to eat, not much to do
 On wooden planks you’re sat
 Occasionally someone jumps on board
 To sell some barbecued rat!
 It may take an age to get there
 Hard going to say the least
 But it’s safer than the speedboats
 And you’ll get there in one piece
Leap of faith
How does the traveller cross the road?
 With difficulty it would seem
 In Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam
 Motorbikes you will dream
 Questions you may ask yourself…
 Will I live until I’m old?
 Or make it to the other side?
 The future is untold
 Forget what you have learnt before
 Forget the ‘Green Cross Code’
 Remember this survival tip
 When you have to cross the road:
 You must take a leap of faith
 Your instincts must be ignored
 Don’t try to make a dash for it
 Or curl up on the floor
 Keep an eye on the traffic
 Don’t run, just have belief
 Walk slowly as they steer around
 That’s it…feel the relief!
Have faith (Russia)
Be careful when using a phrasebook
 I found this out to my regret
 I pointed to the wrong word
 A moment that’s hard to forget
 In a church in the middle of Russia
 With a nun we couldn’t understand
 I pointed to ‘atheist’ not ‘agnostic’
 Ooops! The fires of hell I’d fanned
 Horrified and shocked don’t come close
 To describe the look of her disgrace
 Thought I’d sent her to heaven early
 I hurriedly tried to save face
 With a lot of smiles and many nods
 We tried to communicate
 And patiently listened to her sermon
 As it started to get late
 If we hadn’t made our move
 We would probably still be there
 Let this be a warning to you
 With your phrasebook do take care! 

If you like Graham’s poems and what to read more, his recently self published book ‘Around the World in 80 Poems: Rhyming Reasons to Travel the Globe… Not!’ is available from most online book stores or directly from his publishers www.authorhouse.co.uk.
You can find out more about the book by following the link http://www.authorhouse.co.uk
10% of any profits Graham makes will be donated to environmental charities.
Graham can be contacted about his book or any travel related matter at garelton@googlemail.com