Peace isn’t something you capture in a vacation photo; it’s that quiet moment when your shoulders finally drop from your ears while everyone around you argues about which exit to take in a station where you can’t read the signs.
My son is currently navigating Japan—three weeks meant for tranquility punctuated by six-hour stretches of family discord, trapped in train cars with meticulous itinerary-makers and go-with-the-flow wanderers whose arguments harmonize like trumpets and clanging pots and pans together. He sits squarely in the middle like a human traffic cone, managing family squabbles with gentle nods while hunting Tokyo for a vending machine coffee that doesn’t taste like folded paper.
Two Type A travelers, one with a schedule so tight you could fit a bullet train through the eye of a needle, and another with a to-do list so long it could double as a kimono, are joined by two Type B souls who wander with the grace of sunbeams and occasionally forget their own names. One of them literally left the Air BnB leaving the door wide open. My boy, bless his heart, is the die-cut in the middle; he’s the duct tape of this expedition, the one person who can say, “Let’s try both the temple and the ramen bar and see which one we still like after the third bite.” And that, dear readers, is where peace begins to throw you a lifeline in the shape of a soggy dumpling wrapper.
I told him to protect his sanity, protect his peace first. It’s the cheapest travel insurance you’ll ever buy, and you don’t even have to read the fine print to understand the risk: existential drift, the slow drain of enthusiasm, the moment the group realizes the itinerary needs three more hours and a second cup of matcha that will never be sweet enough.
Here are a few practical, not-at-all-boring-but-very-possible ways to find peace when your traveling squad is officially classified as a seasonal weather system:
- The pause rule: before reacting to a plan, count to three in a language you don’t speak well. Japanese is perfect because your count sounds like you’re negotiating with a polite librarian who owns an apple orchard. It buys you the space to decide whether to smile, nod, or quietly retreat to a vending machine for emotional standby.
- The peace inventory: carry one tiny thing that grounds you every day—maybe a thermos of coffee, maybe a photo of your own sofa, maybe a tiny rubber duck with a passport stamped “No Sleep Til’ Brooklyn.” When the days tilt, you touch it and remind yourself, “This is my soft anchor in a sea of bold decisions.” It’s surprising how many big storms shrink to the size of a boiled dumpling once you honor your anchor.
- The middle-seat meditation: treat the seat between two Type A and two Type B as sacred space. Breathe in through the nose, out through the mouth, and imagine you’re a lightly seasoned bento box—carefully arranged, not overly ambitious, and you still leave room for a sweet pickled plum on top.
- The surprisingly simple approval ritual: give yourself permission to skip one thing you “should” do each day in favor of something you “want” to do. The world will not end if you pass up a shrine tour to wander a quiet street with a good noodle shop and a window that catches the afternoon light just right.
Peace isn’t a destination; it’s a spare battery you carry in your pocket, a ritual you keep in your pocketbook, and a reminder that sometimes the best trip is the one you take inside your own head. My son may be wedged between Type A and Type B like a human compass, but by the end of this three-week odyssey, I suspect he’ll return with the quiet confidence that peace, like good ramen, is best enjoyed when you don’t rush the broth.
(Chris Kamler penned this column from his Zen Garden)





