I loved living and working in Samoa in 1978 but then the fatal call came one day, "Would you like to do a consulting job in Penang in Malaysia?" And so I packed up, climbed aboard an AIR NAURU jet on a Saturday, overnighted in Nauru, changed planes in Manila on a Sunday, and was met at Penang Airport and taken straight to my new office inside the Penang Port Commission.
Many years later, in 1981, I had bought a little house on the beach just outside Townsvile and settled into comfortable domesticity, when that fatal phone call came again, "Would you like to assist in the setting-up the tug-and-barge operations on the Ok Tedi Copper Project in New Guinea?" I gave notice to my comfortable domesticated job, put all my newly-acquired domestic stuff into storage, and flew to Port Moresby.
The only reason I lasted a whole three years with my Saudi employer in Jeddah was because he, too, knew that the simple act of moving is for some people the only source of hope. Whenever he saw me falter a little and beginning to lose my edge, he would send me to supervise the transhipment of 20,000 tonnes of barley at Sembawang in Singapore or check up on what was going on in our office in Fetter Lane in London.
Having somewhere to go, not feeling stuck where we are, gives us hope. And it needn't be a jet plane. A car gives you control. You choose the direction. You decide when to leave. Even sitting in traffic, there’s a quiet truth: you are not stuck — you are in motion. You don’t know what’s around the next turn ... and that’s the point. A train invites you to let go. You’re on a shared path, moving forward with others, trusting the tracks beneath you. There’s something deeply calming about that.
Of course, planes are the most hopeful of all, because they collapse distance and time. A different version of your life — new people, new perspectives, new memories — awaits you just a few hours away.
Physical movement doesn't solve problems but it interrupts the feeling of being stuck. And that’s what hope is: the belief that you are not stuck. Hope isn’t the destination; it's the act of going. You can tell yourself, "I'll feel better when I get there", although the really hopeful part is in the commute, the ride, the journey between the two points.
Heute hier, morgen dort.



