Angela Maxwell: Solo Adventurer

 

“You never really know what lies around the corner.”

-Angela Maxwell, Solo Adventurer

SheWalksThe Earth.com

 

 

 

SheWalksTheEarth
SheWhoWalksTheEarth

Angela Maxwell: She Walks The Earth

 

At 32 years old, Angela Maxwell had a wonderful life. But something was missing.

 

“Often times we wait for some type of crisis to change things…I was doing really well…everything was actually quite good…I felt like I’m still seeking something more.”

 

A story about an inmate that walked the jail yard, and walked the equivalent of an around the world trip, intrigued her. Who else had done such a thing? Books by solo female adventurers such as Ffyona Campbell, Rosie Swale Pope, Robin Davidsons and Jane Goodall fueled her imagination and wanderlust.

 

 

Angela Maxwell

In August 1983, at the age of 16, Ffyona Campbell set out from Britain on a walk that was to take her around the world.

 

Solo Adventurer

After her husband died of cancer, 57-year-old Rosie set off to run around the world, raising money in memory of the man she loved.

 

Solo adventurer

Robyn Davidson walked the 1,700 desolate miles from Alice Springs to the Indian Ocean

 

So Angela decided to walk around the world. She left Bend, Oregon on May 2, 2014.

 

“I was a complete amateur. Just a few day hikes.”

 

Her first stop, after Oregon, was Australia where she hiked from south to north along the west coast.

 

“Australia will always be my favorite country because it was the…harshest. It stripped me of the identity of who I was.”

 

SheWalksTheEarth

The west coast of Australia was Angela’s first lengthy hike around the world.

 

Yet for all its hardships, including sun blisters and heat stroke, Australia also provided Angela with the knowing that this could be done.

“I waltzed around the world,” she explained, using a combination of air travel and extended walks that lasted six and a half years. Along the route she encountered new friends, places and some hardships. Her TED Talks touches upon some of the challenges she encountered.

 

Angela Maxwell at TedEx: Courage Is A Verb

 

 

 

 

 

 

​Bump In The Road:

Angela Maxwell

 

 

 

 

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Six and a Half Years, 14 Countries and 11 Pairs of Shoes

 

 

Angela Maxwell

Six and a half years and eleven pairs of shoes later, Angela Maxwell has some tales to tell! Stay tuned for her upcoming book.

 

What does one learn from such a remarkable journey?

 

“I left still a bit of an adolescent, and through the walk I feel that I came back a little more mature in womanhood…

It was getting comfortable in my skin; getting confident making my own decisions.”

 

 

Angela Maxwell

Angela as she set out on the first leg of her trip to Portland

 

Angela Maxwell

Angela six and a half years later

 

Perhaps the best way to see Angela’s journey is through the photographs of her around the world adventure, along with the second part of the podcast. Subscribe as a Bump II member to access the conversation.

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In the second part of this podcast, Angela and I continue our discussion of her trip and the lessons learned.

Bump II subscribers can log in here to listen to the second half of the podcast.

 

 

 

Angela Maxwell on Adventure and Courage

 

 

 

“Often times we wait for some type of crisis to change things…I was doing really well…everything was actually quite good…I felt like I’m still seeking something more.”

 

“On May 2, 2014 I left Bend, Oregon to walk around the world.”

 

“An adventure is really about where it takes us and who we meet, and those experiences along the way.”

 

“Australia will always be my favorite country because it was the …harshest; it stripped me of the identity of who I was.”

 

“Australia gave me the foundation and the encouragement that if I could survive that and enjoy it, surely I could keep walking for years to come.”

 

“New Zealand…there were no venomous snakes to worry about!”

 

“It’s a different way of adventuring…maybe you don’t even make it to the end result because I’m going to let myself feel into the environment.”

 

“There are a tremendous amount of female adventurers that most people have never heard of.”

 

“For me, it was very much a spiritual pilgrimage.”

 

“I want the walk to shape me.”

 

“Courage is a choice. I see it as a motion. It’s something we have to choose and step towards.”

 

“Courage is something that doesn’t take a grand adventure…Wherever we meet the edges in our life…anything beyond our comfort is being courageous.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

About
Bump in the Road

Everyone hits a bump in the road. The question becomes: What do you do with it?

I share stories about how people experience, manage and navigate life's bumps, hopefully using them as a pivot into a more conscious and meaningful life.