travel

Favorite Countries for Eating, Ranked 1 through 41 (Updated for Bolivia)

Here are the countries that I have visited ranked by their food. I spent a day watching corporate training videos and needed some way of maintaining my sanity and this was it — at least that’s how it started. I have since updated it ans I traveled to more countries. I have excluded the US and microstates such as the Vatican, San Marino, etc. I have also excluded Uruguay and Brasil because I spent so little time there. I should note that I tend to eat pretty local, I probably don’t know where to get the best burger in Bangkok. Update: by food I really mean cuisine. My rankings are based on the local food, not the availablity of chains from other countries. Variety figures very high in my rankings. You can yse whatever criteria you feel appropriate.

  1. Peru: It has a cuisine that I could subsist on long-term. Ceviche, Pollo a la brassa, and parilla. Wonderful street food including these wonderful little donuts made of sweet potato flour called picarones. I went on a ceviche bender that caused a gout flareup. I don’t know what they do to rotisserie chicken but pollo a la brassa is amazing. There are also some wonderful stews like Aji de Gallina.

  2. Vietnam: An outstanding food tour in Ho Chi Mnh City. Whether it’s Pho, Banh Mi or Bun, not all of the best foods in the world come from Vietnam just five or six of them. Note: there is no rice flour in the Banh Mi. The crispy crust is made by misting with water during baking.

  3. Mexico: An amazingly diverse cuisine. All you really need to be happy are street tacos in Mexico City, but there’s so much more. Churros from Churreria El Moro, Sanborn’s for nostalgia, the seven moles of Oaxaca….

  4. Thailand: Great stir fries, great curries. Thailand is a bit of a crossroads with Islamic and Hindu influences as well as Portuguese. They are not afraid of spice, but not all Thai food is spicy.

  5. Morocco: I had the most amazing tajine for my first meal in Marrakesh and many other great meals followed. The biggest issue with food the great desert band that stretches from the Sahara through Arabia into Uzbekistan is that the food is all similar and kind of changes along a continuum. I think couscous is unique to Morocco and I don’t recall seeing any falafel there. So, the biggest knock would be less variety, but still very good.

  6. Colombia: The down side is that the food is generally lightly spiced. The upside is that there are many fruits not found anywhere else and some interesting cross-cultural influences including Sephardic Jews, Africans, indigenous, and t eh Spanish. Many good bakeries, seafood and bunuelos. The country appears to be celebrating its own cuisine now. Reflecting on this post a year later and I just keep coming back to the fruit. It is like none other.

  7. Turkey: Morocco, Turkey and Jordan are basically tied. I think Turkey may have more variety than the other two. There’s a lot of grilled meat on sticks and flat breads. There’s also the world’s best desert — kunefe.

  8. Jordan: Hashem. Everyone will tell you to go to Hashem. Well guess what? Go to Hashem. It lives up to its billing. Jordan also has kunefe and falafel and meat on stick as well as many other lovely foods.

  9. Ethiopia: The food is wonderful and among the most unique on the planet — not even bordering countries share that much with their cuisine. It was the original coffee culture and the only country in the world that grows teff.

  10. Trinidad: Trini has influences from all over the world. Their Indian food is not Indian, their Chinese is not Chinese, their Middle Eastern (note: the British sent the best ME cooks to Mexico), their African is not African. It all comes together to make a unique cuisin.

  11. Greece: Greek food is also similar to that middle eastern continuum, but they have pork and shellfish.

  12. Portugal: Many lovely things to eat here. They have brought many things back from the colonies which has helped their cuisine, I stayed in a suburb of Lisbon and a Mozambique guy cooked at the restaurant across the street from me. We talked over Google Translate. He would ask me general questions about things I liked and come up with something. He made a wonderful Peri Peri sauce. There was also great seafood though most of the fish eaten in Portugal are from places other than Portugal.

  13. Bolivia: Bolivia struggles with it’s culinary identity. It was once part of Peru and has Peruvian influences ex-seafood in the west and Argentian and Brazilian influences in the east. The south’s main source or meat are llama and chicken.

  14. Grenada: Grenada is the spice island and uses spices in unexpected way. I particularly liked a bun that was spiced with nutmeg, some grilled chicken that was perfectly charred, and the chocolate is as good as it gets.

  15. Argentina: Argentina does many things well and some things hardly at all. There are three essential ingredients to Argentinian cuisine: meat, cheese, and bread. The bakeries are nonperiel. The pizza is excellent. I was a little diappointed in the parrilla as they tend to overcook (order: jugoso). There’s just not enough use of fruits and vegetables, or fish to push it higher.

  16. Spain: Tapas and paella, what else do you need. Jamon Iberico, I suppose.

  17. France: It’s been a while since I was there and that was mostly Paris.

  18. Barbados: This could be higher had I known that Saturday was pickle day and also chicken feet day. I wasted it on a food tour. There are some good things here, but they really don’t know what spice is.

  19. Israel: This is also part of that Middle East continuum.

  20. Italy: Naples had great food, Milan not so much and everywhere else was in between. Italy is really a bunch of little places, each having its own cuisine. It’s more German to the north and better to the south. Naples was once one of the two Sicilies and controlled by Spain.It’s where good pizza comes from.

  21. Poland: We had some excellent meals in Krakow. Perogies, jelly donuts, the ancestor of the bagel and much more.

  22. Czechia: The food is pretty heavy and surprisingly similar to French in some instances. The Garlic soup is a favorite.

  23. UK: I moved the UK up on the strength of Scotland’s haggis. Overall, the food is bland and has a lot of meat pies and scones and tea with milk. The best food here is Indian and good cood from the former empire is everywhere. Only American tourists eat British food these days.

  24. Ireland: This food is very familiar to me, though I had no corned beef while there. The food was generally good but unremarkable to my palate.

  25. Germany: I unwittingly showed up at the beginning of Spargel season once. The Germans sure do lover their asparagus.

  26. Slovakia: I only spent one night there, but had a cherry-poppy seed strudel that was so good I had a second.

  27. Ecuador: We ate at several high end restaurants that were in Quito. We also had nachos at the highest German brew in the world. We should seen that coming. Oh, and chicken ceviche.

  28. Panama: This is a tough one. We spent four days there and most of that time was spent in the San Francisco area of Panama City, so we had little authentic Panamanian food. We did have some excellent seafood at Mercado del Marisco and Panamanian food at Diablicios. Probably not a great sampling.

  29. Belgium: Mostly I remember drinking there, but the food must have been good too.

  30. Austria: Very short trip to Austria.

  31. Hungary: I got a little tired of the Hungarian fare, but Budapest has the largest Chinatown in Europe and I had a wonderful conversation with the widow of a former diplomat who spent a lot of time in China and Virginia.

  32. Azerbaijan: It’s also part of the continuum. They have a flat bread they call Naan, plov and a lot of meat on sticks.

  33. Georgia: There are some excellent dishes here and their wine alone maybe should place them higher. I have to say that the dish they are most famous for Khachapuri is not very good. It’s basically cheese bread — and not very good cheese bread. If you want good cheese bread, go to Naples. They call it Margherita and you can get it anywhere. The Ojakhuri is excellent and the wine is outstanding.

  34. Cyprus: Similar to Greek.

  35. Uzbekistan: At the far end of the continuum.

  36. Kazakhstan: The transition from Arabic to Chinese occurs here.

  37. Netherlands: They overuse sprinkles on bread.

  38. Canada: Tim Hortons and poutine are their greatest culinary contributions. Canada may also suffer from being close to the US and I overlook it. It also is a place with a lot of international options that don’t really count as “Canadian”.

  39. Nigeria: There are really two things that I don’t like about Nigerian food, (1) texture and (2) smoked fish. Not every country cuts its meat the same. In much of the world, tough, gristley meat is prized and it is butchered for that. They also put fish bones in their soup which I can’t get past. The smoked fish is a strong flavor that is difficult for me to like. Other than that, the flavors and the spice level are pleasant. I could see Nigerian food get popular, but it needs to go through a westernizing process first.

  40. Ghana: I feel that I should give it another shot. It wasn’t much to my tastes, but this was our first trip to the developing world, so maybe it was me.

  41. South Africa: We had Italian, Mexican, Portuguese, burgers, Ghanaian, Ethiopian, Cameroonian. There doesn’t seem to be much in the way of South African and that’s too bad. So, there is good food. just not South African.

As I said, I try to eat as local as possible. And this list is obviously subjective. Some of these places, I was only in a short time and others for longer periods and that may have affected my opinion as well.

Favorite Countries for Eating, Ranked 1 through 39 (Updated for Grenada and Barbados) (Copy)

Here are the countries that I have visited ranked by their food. I spent a day watching corporate training videos and needed some way of maintaining my sanity and this was it — at least that’s how it started. I have since updated it ans I traveled to more countries. I have excluded the US and microstates such as the Vatican, San Marino, etc. I have also excluded Uruguay and Brasil because I spent so little time there. I should note that I tend to eat pretty local, I probably don’t know where to get the best burger in Bangkok. Update: by food I really mean cuisine. My rankings are based on the local food, not the availablity of chains from other countries. Variety figures very high in my rankings. You can yse whatever criteria you feel appropriate.

  1. Peru: It has a cuisine that I could subsist on long-term. Ceviche, Pollo a la brassa, and parilla. Wonderful street food including these wonderful little donuts made of sweet potato flour called picarones. I went on a ceviche bender that caused a gout flareup. I don’t know what they do to rotisserie chicken but pollo a la brassa is amazing. There are also some wonderful stews like Aji de Gallina.

  2. Vietnam: An outstanding food tour in Ho Chi Mnh City. Whether it’s Pho, Banh Mi or Bun, not all of the best foods in the world come from Vietnam just five or six of them. Note: there is no rice flour in the Banh Mi. The crispy crust is made by misting with water during baking.

  3. Mexico: An amazingly diverse cuisine. All you really need to be happy are street tacos in Mexico City, but there’s so much more. Churros from Churreria El Moro, Sanborn’s for nostalgia, the seven moles of Oaxaca….

  4. Thailand: Great stir fries, great curries. Thailand is a bit of a crossroads with Islamic and Hindu influences as well as Portuguese. They are not afraid of spice, but not all Thai food is spicy.

  5. Morocco: I had the most amazing tajine for my first meal in Marrakesh and many other great meals followed. The biggest issue with food the great desert band that stretches from the Sahara through Arabia into Uzbekistan is that the food is all similar and kind of changes along a continuum. I think couscous is unique to Morocco and I don’t recall seeing any falafel there. So, the biggest knock would be less variety, but still very good.

  6. Colombia: The down side is that the food is generally lightly spiced. The upside is that there are many fruits not found anywhere else and some interesting cross-cultural influences including Sephardic Jews, Africans, indigenous, and t eh Spanish. Many good bakeries, seafood and bunuelos. The country appears to be celebrating its own cuisine now. Reflecting on this post a year later and I just keep coming back to the fruit. It is like none other.

  7. Turkey: Morocco, Turkey and Jordan are basically tied. I think Turkey may have more variety than the other two. There’s a lot of grilled meat on sticks and flat breads. There’s also the world’s best desert — kunefe.

  8. Jordan: Hashem. Everyone will tell you to go to Hashem. Well guess what? Go to Hashem. It lives up to its billing. Jordan also has kunefe and falafel and meat on stick as well as many other lovely foods.

  9. Ethiopia: The food is wonderful and among the most unique on the planet — not even bordering countries share that much with their cuisine. It was the original coffee culture and the only country in the world that grows teff.

  10. Greece: Greek food is also similar to that middle eastern continuum, but they have pork and shellfish.

  11. Portugal: Many lovely things to eat here. They have brought many things back from the colonies which has helped their cuisine, I stayed in a suburb of Lisbon and a Mozambique guy cooked at the restaurant across the street from me. We talked over Google Translate. He would ask me general questions about things I liked and come up with something. He made a wonderful Peri Peri sauce. There was also great seafood though most of the fish eaten in Portugal are from places other than Portugal.

  12. Grenada: Grenada is the spice island and uses spices in unexpected way. I particularly liked a bun that was spiced with nutmeg, some grilled chicken that was perfectly charred, and the chocolate is as good as it gets.

  13. Argentina: Argentina does many things well and some things hardly at all. There are three essential ingredients to Argentinian cuisine: meat, cheese, and bread. The bakeries are nonperiel. The pizza is excellent. I was a little diappointed in the parrilla as they tend to overcook (order: jugoso). There’s just not enough use of fruits and vegetables, or fish to push it higher.

  14. Spain: Tapas and paella, what else do you need. Jamon Iberico, I suppose.

  15. France: It’s been a while since I was there and that was mostly Paris.

  16. Barbados: This could be higher had I known that Saturday was pickle day and also chicken feet day. I wasted it on a food tour. There are some good things here, but they really don’t know what spice is.

  17. Israel: This is also part of that Middle East continuum.

  18. Italy: Naples had great food, Milan not so much and everywhere else was in between. Italy is really a bunch of little places, each having its own cuisine. It’s more German to the north and better to the south. Naples was once one of the two Sicilies and controlled by Spain.It’s where good pizza comes from.

  19. Poland: We had some excellent meals in Krakow. Perogies, jelly donuts, the ancestor of the bagel and much more.

  20. Czechia: The food is pretty heavy and surprisingly similar to French in some instances. The Garlic soup is a favorite.

  21. UK: I moved the UK up on the strength of Scotland’s haggis. Overall, the food is bland and has a lot of meat pies and scones and tea with milk. The best food here is Indian and good cood from the former empire is everywhere. Only American tourists eat British food these days.

  22. Ireland: This food is very familiar to me, though I had no corned beef while there. The food was generally good but unremarkable to my palate.

  23. Germany: I unwittingly showed up at the beginning of Spargel season once. The Germans sure do lover their asparagus.

  24. Slovakia: I only spent one night there, but had a cherry-poppy seed strudel that was so good I had a second.

  25. Ecuador: We ate at several high end restaurants that were in Quito. We also had nachos at the highest German brew in the world. We should seen that coming. Oh, and chicken ceviche.

  26. Panama: This is a tough one. We spent four days there and most of that time was spent in the San Francisco area of Panama City, so we had little authentic Panamanian food. We did have some excellent seafood at Mercado del Marisco and Panamanian food at Diablicios. Probably not a great sampling.

  27. Belgium: Mostly I remember drinking there, but the food must have been good too.

  28. Austria: Very short trip to Austria.

  29. Hungary: I got a little tired of the Hungarian fare, but Budapest has the largest Chinatown in Europe and I had a wonderful conversation with the widow of a former diplomat who spent a lot of time in China and Virginia.

  30. Azerbaijan: It’s also part of the continuum. They have a flat bread they call Naan, plov and a lot of meat on sticks.

  31. Georgia: There are some excellent dishes here and their wine alone maybe should place them higher. I have to say that the dish they are most famous for Khachapuri is not very good. It’s basically cheese bread — and not very good cheese bread. If you want good cheese bread, go to Naples. They call it Margherita and you can get it anywhere. The Ojakhuri is excellent and the wine is outstanding.

  32. Cyprus: Similar to Greek.

  33. Uzbekistan: At the far end of the continuum.

  34. Kazakhstan: The transition from Arabic to Chinese occurs here.

  35. Netherlands: They overuse sprinkles on bread.

  36. Canada: Tim Hortons and poutine are their greatest culinary contributions. Canada may also suffer from being close to the US and I overlook it. It also is a place with a lot of international options that don’t really count as “Canadian”.

  37. Nigeria: There are really two things that I don’t like about Nigerian food, (1) texture and (2) smoked fish. Not every country cuts its meat the same. In much of the world, tough, gristley meat is prized and it is butchered for that. They also put fish bones in their soup which I can’t get past. The smoked fish is a strong flavor that is difficult for me to like. Other than that, the flavors and the spice level are pleasant. I could see Nigerian food get popular, but it needs to go through a westernizing process first.

  38. Ghana: I feel that I should give it another shot. It wasn’t much to my tastes, but this was our first trip to the developing world, so maybe it was me.

  39. South Africa: We had Italian, Mexican, Portuguese, burgers, Ghanaian, Ethiopian, Cameroonian. There doesn’t seem to be much in the way of South African and that’s too bad. So, there is good food. just not South African.

As I said, I try to eat as local as possible. And this list is obviously subjective. Some of these places, I was only in a short time and others for longer periods and that may have affected my opinion as well.

Hawaii

We took our long-planned trip to Hawaii from January 11 through 21. As it was an expensive trip by our standards, we wanted to cram a lot into it. The statistics:

Islands: 3 (Oahu, Hawaii, Kauai)

AirBnBs: 2 (Honolulu and Kona)

Hotels: 3 (Volcano Village, Lanai, Honolulu)

Total Cost: $4,740.00 (Accommodations = $1,047; Food = $1129; Transportation = $1,847; Entertainment= $49; Miscellaneous = $668)

That total takes into account that Tanya’s flight was a frequent flyer ticket and mine was deeply discounted due to a voucher. We also spent an additional $511 to island hop on Hawaiian Airlines. A rental car is a near necessity and probably cheaper than a succession of Ubers.

We had only two moderately expensive meals, both on the big island. The first cost $120 and we took some friends out that we had met up with. The other was just a nice restaurant. Taking out how much we spent on shave ice and fruit and water and malasadas, our meal cost was about $710, or about $13.50/meal/person. Some of our most expensive meals were breakfasts at a place called Cinnamons. The rest of the the time, we tried to eat local. We ate poke several times, loco moco, Thai and Vietnamese, and seafood.

As for accommodations, we tend to favor AirBnB over hotels. Having said that, AirBnB did not have a lot available when we were going. The most expensive place we stayed was the last night at the Courtyard Waikiki for $230, including valet parking. All others were under $100/night.

Of course, you can always wring some costs out of miscellaneous expenses as we bought water shoes and a few shirts and various other things.

Overall, this trip: the intro to Hawaii, there's not much i would change. I wish we would have gotten on the water (our Napoli cost boat tour was cancelled due to weather).

What would we do next time? I think we would probably stay on Oahu. Explore Honolulu and the cultural attractions. I think we would get out on the water. I would love to try sea kayaking or a catamaran. I would also take a surfing lesson if the weather and my nerve held.

What did we do?

Day 1 Oahu: Drove to Sandy Beach for the sunrise. From there, we continued around Oahu, stopping at a variety of beaches and roadside stands. This took all day. At sunset, we were on Waikiki.

Day 2 Oahu: Drove to Lanikai Beach for sunrise, then breakfast and a Farmers Market. We hiked Waimea Falls and then Diamond Head.

Day 3 Hawaii: We flew to Hawaii, landed in Kona and drove to Hilo for lunch. We then drove to Volcanoes National Park. With the government shutdown and eruption, we could see everything that was open in the afternoon. Dinner in a forgettable Thai restaurant.

Day 4 Hawaii: Drove to the black sand beach for sunrise, then breakfast at the southermost restaurant in the US (according to the sign). We hiked to the green sand beach. Not worth the arduous trek in questionable footwear in my opinion. And on to the AirBnB in Kona.

Day 5 Hawaii: Captain Cook in the morning. A state park beach after lunch.

Day 6 Kauai: We flew to Kauai and drove out to Hanalei. It rained, so we didn’t do much other than drive. We bought the famed Sugarloaf Pineapple (aka the $16 pineapple) and stayed at the Tiptop Motor Lodge.

Day 7 Kauai: Our Napoli boat tour was cancelled. We drove to Waimea Canyon, stopping at overlooks and hiking along the way. We continued on to the Napoli coast and did some hiking.

Day 8 Oahu: We flew back to Oahu and went to the north shore and just messed around, explored Honolulu.

Day 9 Oahu: We drove around Oahu andHonolulu, up into the mountains and around the University. We flew out that night.

Reading List

I have spent a fair amount of time this fall planning a trip for next fall. I will resist the urge to book anything for a while in case it doesn’t come to fruition. Also, because I tend to like to plan and book things in advance and I would like a little more spontaneity in the trip. That being said, this is the very tentative itinerary (I actually have this in a nice easy-to-read spreadsheet, but it won’t copy and paste easily here in a readable format):

Kazakhstan: Fly into Astana, spend a day and take the night train to Almaty. 3-4 days in Almaty.

Kyrgyzstan: Tour from Almaty to Karakol. 2 days in Karakol taking in the Dungan culture, then on to Bishkek for a couple of days. Fly to Osh for 2 days.

Uzbekistan: Cross the border from Osh and go to Andijon and if time permits on to Tashkent. Spend one night in Tashkent and take the train to Samarkand for two nights. Train to Bukhara for two nights. Train to Urgench and taxi to Khiva for one night. Train to Nukus for two nights (probably not worth it, but logistics appear to require it. Train back to Kazakhstan.

Kazakhstan: Train and/or taxi to Aktau. Aktau is a port town on the Caspian Sea. I will give a boat about one chance. As intriguing as it sounds to go by ship across the Caspian, it sounds anti-climatic. Ship traffic is irregular. Stock answer appears to be tomorrow. So, if there’s a boat there when I arrive, I’ll get on it for the next 30+ hours for the ride to Baku. Otherwise, I go to the airport and fly in 50minutes.

Azerbaijan: Baku for 4-5 days. Lots to see in the City and surrounding area. On the way out, take the train to Sheki and spend the night in the Caravanserai. Then on to Georgia.

Georgia: 4-5 days in Tblisi and the surrounding area. Bus or train to Armenia.

Armenia: 2-3 days in Yeravan. Then on to Tatev, taking in some sites along the way. Armenia is the world’s oldest Christian nation, so lots of monasteries. There’s also the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh that’s a possibility, and Lake Sevan. Back to Georgia (Georgia and Iran are the only land border crossings.)

Georgia: A night in Tbilisi and then on to Batumi and a border crossing to Turkey.

Turkey: A bus to Cappadocia for a couple of days and then on to Istanbul for a week +/-. Fly to Greece.

Greece: Athens? Haven’t put much thought into it and can’t get that excited about Greece. Maybe I will change my mind or drop Greece. On to Italy.

Italy interest me. Originally I was just going to base out of Milan for a week or so (cheap flights). Now, I am considering starting further south (Naples is a possibility) and working my way up. I could also see Rome and/or Florence. The Vatican is a possibility, though I need to pace myself on churches. I also want to visit San Marino as I have kind of a pet interest in microstates.

Leaving Italy: Rent a car in Milan and drive to Switzerland. spend a night somewhere like Lucerne. Drive to Liechtenstein and have lunch. Liechtenstein is too expensive to spend much time in so drive over to Germany to spend the night. Drive to Luxembourg the next day and spend the night. spend one night in Lyon and head to Monaco. Eventually find my way back to Milan to return the car and get on the bus.

France: Marseille for a week +/-. Bus or train to Spain via Andorra.

Andorra: I said i had a pet interest in microstates. And on to Valencia for a week +/-.

Spain: Valencia.

Portugal: Take the train to Lisbon or Porto. Fly home from Portugal.

All this leads us to books. These are the books i hope to have read by the time i leave:

  1. Kazakhstan: Aitmatov, “The Day that lasts more than 100 years”

  2. Kyrgyzstan: Aitmatov, “Jamilla”

  3. Uzbekistan: Alexander, ‘A Carpet Ride to Khiva”

  4. Azerbaijan: Said, “Ali and Nino”

  5. Georgia: Chiladze, “Avelum”

  6. Armenia: Bohjelian, “The Sandcastle Girls”

  7. Nagorno Karabakh; de Waal, ‘Black Garden”

  8. Turkey: Shafak, “The Bastard of Istanbul”

  9. Greece: Gage, “Eleni”

  10. Italy: Forrester, “A Room with a View”

  11. Switzerland: Twain, “A Tramp Abroad”

  12. Liechtenstein: Harrer, “Seven Years in Tibet”

  13. Luxembourg: Pavone, The Expats”

  14. France: Gary, “The Life Before Us”

  15. Andorra: Cameron, “Andorra”

  16. Spain: Caubre, “Confessions”

  17. Portugal: Mercier, “Night Train to Lisbon”

That’s about it for now.

A To-Do List for a Big Trip

Planning about a year into the future, there are things to take care of:

  1. Passport: It needs to be valid through six months after your return date. Do you have enough blank pages left?

  2. ATMs: Get a bank account that reimburses foreign ATM withdrawals. Charles Schwab.

  3. Figure out who/how bills will be paid while you are gone.

  4. Get a VPN.

  5. A credit card that doesn’t charge foreign transaction fees.

  6. Global Access.

  7. Visas: Where are you planning on going that require Visa? How much time does it take to get one.

….to be continued.

Existential Angst

I guess we all ask these questions at some point.  Whether it's a mid-life crisis or trying to figure out a career path or a gender role.  The weight of the world, or the reflection of a lifetime (to date) are coming into focus.  I think, when I was younger, my life would have made more of an impact or served more people.  But, the truth is, I never found my calling and I have reached the conclusion that I don't have -- many of us don't.  i admire people who can figure out at an early age what they want out of life and just do that.  I don't know that i want to be them, but it seems like they have managed to make one aspect of their life a lot less complicated.

I have always had divergent interests and a desire to serve others.  I'm not sure what that means.  I'm also plagued by doubt.  Let's start with divergent interests.  I think, career-wise, I packed those away at an early age and settled into a career in engineering.  This has afforded me the opportunity to make a decent living without ever really advancing.  i get bored, frustrated, whatever and move on.  The longest I have stayed in one job is shy of six years.  This sealed my fate for advancement. 

The desire to serve was probably killed by a career in engineering.  I have designed hundreds of buildings -- mostly commercial, Walmarts, convenience stores, etc.  it's hard to argue for a public good in those structures.  Now I work mostly for insurance companies helping them evaluate claims. I guess I have never felt that i was particularly good at engineering because I lack the passion that most of my colleagues have.  I view it as a job -- not a calling.   I can't bear to spend an extra minute with most of my colleagues, past or present.  They are not my people.  

What does this have todo with service?  Nothing, other than that I have never really done any.  Which brings us to doubt.  Part of why I have never been too committed to the service that i crave is doubt.  Doubt that any service I provide will have more than a fleeting impact, if not actually do harm.  Most service organizations have some ulterior motive at their core.  I checked into a few different organizations that drill water wells or build schools in the developing world.  Both laudable goals, but they also had a strong evangelical bent to them.  Here's your water and your Bible.  You lack the skills to read it, so I'll tell you what's in it.  Or, they decide what people need in a certain part of the world to make them more like us.  It's complicated and something is missing.  Sorry I have more questions than answers.

I think that education might be the best form of service.  People can use education to help themselves.  Sure, clean drinking water is also important, but it has to come without judgement.