“There is nothing more truly artistic than to love people.”

— Vincent van Gogh

Ever since spending three months in a yurt on Canada’s Salt Spring Island last year, I have wanted — to paraphrase a long-time hero of mine, Virginia Woolf — a yurt of one’s own.

There was just something about living in a circle that won me over — waking to the pink clouds of dawn in the domed window above me, listening to rainfall on my canvas roof, and watching the moon cast white moon-shadows through the roof window at night. Aside from an infestation of carpenter ants when the weather turned warm (during which I yelled to the ants at one point, “You guys are totally ruining my zen — get out!!”), I loved the connection I felt with the natural world.

But it wasn’t just the yurt itself I wanted — it was the entire arrangement my landlord had set up for himself on the island: the separate kitchen that took exactly 23 steps to reach across the tree-encircled yard; the raised flowerbed lining the path to the kitchen, where an abundance of fresh rosemary and mint grew; and the three-sided woodshed next to the yurt, piled high with stacks of cedar firewood, which filled the air with their heady fragrance when I split them into kindling each morning.

It wasn’t long after I arrived on Salt Spring that I began scheming to build a yurt of my own one day, but when talking to others on the island about my plan, I’d always follow it up by saying:

“I don’t just want this yurt — I want all of this.”

When the time came to leave Salt Spring, say goodbye to the yurt, and return to the U.S. from my Canadian abode, I assumed it would be a while before I’d have the chance to build my own — if ever.

Still, I spoke often with a good friend of mine in Seattle, who shared in my yurt-life aspirations. He talked about building one on another island in the Pacific Northwest, one just a couple of hours north from Seattle called Whidbey Island. It sounded very similar to Salt Spring, and so I started browsing real estate sites every so often, just to see what kind of land was for sale on the island. This was largely an exercise in wishful thinking — that is, until, January of this year.

I’m making my monthly visit to the real estate site when I click to the last page of listings on Whidbey (i.e. the least expensive lots…), and stumble across two listings of land for sale not on Whidbey, but on another place called Hat Island — land priced so low it’s actually in my humble artist’s budget. Having spent several months in the Pacific Northwest, I’d prided myself in getting to know the many islands scattered across the Puget Sound. But I’ve never heard of Hat Island, and at this, my curiosity is piqued.

As it turns out, Hat is located right next to Whidbey. It’s a private island home to 26 permanent residents; just a half-mile wide by a mile and a half long; its only roads are gravel; and while it has a marina, yacht club, fire station, and even a 9-hole PGA-rated golf course, it has no stores or other commercial establishments. In other words, it sounds adorable.

After binge-reading about the island for a few hours, I summon the courage to call a real estate agent named Sherri who is listed for the two lots I’d found. She answers immediately.

“Um, hello?” I stammer, feeling far out of my depth, every sentence coming out of my mouth like a question. “I’m calling about some land for sale on Hat Island? I’m a writer and artist looking to build a yurt…”

Sherri interrupts me before I can say anything more. “Oh my god, you’d be perfect for the island.”

Relief courses through me — followed by a few solid waves of adrenaline, that surging sensation that always hits you when a dream takes its first wobbly steps towards reality. I explain that I’m leaving the country for three months, but we agree that I’ll come out to Seattle after I return and have my first look at Hat Island.

I then spent this past spring traveling across Europe — from the Lofoten Islands in Norway to the island of Guernsey in the English Channel to the Costa Brava region of Spain.

But I think it goes to show where my head and heart were at during that season of traveling because through it all, all I could think about was the yurt. I’d come back to my room each night and fall asleep reading, So, You Want to Live in a Yurt? I pored over endless articles on how mortgages work, crunched numbers, wrote up lists of the many permits I’d need to obtain. The more I moved around this spring, the more ready I was for roots. For a home of my own. For a place that I could not only leave and travel from, but begin returning to.

There was only one catch — somewhere down my endless rabbit trails of research, I came across the building covenant for Hat Island, and read that the island doesn’t allow yurts, given that they’re technically considered temporary structures.

And when I finally visit the island on an overcast Wednesday morning in May, Sherri the real estate agent confirms this. I try not to be too disappointed.

“Why do you want to build a yurt anyways?” Sherri asks as we drive to a marina on the mainland, where we’ll then take her boat to the island.

“Well, I lived in one last year and loved the simplicity of it. There’s just something magical about living in a circle.”

“Listen, honey,” she says. “I want you to keep an open mind today. There’s a cabin that just went up for sale on the island that I think you’re going to love.”

I give Sherri a smile that I’ve been perfecting since I was about four years old — one that says I’m acknowledging the idea you’ve just put forth, even if I can already tell you it isn’t one I’m going to follow. A smile that conceals layers of deep-seated stubborn independence.

I’m reluctant to let go of building a yurt, but resolve to try. Once we’ve settled into Sherri’s boat, we cut across the choppy silver waves of the Puget Sound, the sky a sheet of pewter stretched out overhead. We approach Hat from its southern end, where we pass a community of pretty wooden houses built on a low section of the island accessible only by boat, or a steep walk down the bluff. After docking in the marina, Sherri takes a call while I wander off for my first look at the island.

Just beyond the marina, I come to a small rocky beach, its shoreline covered with driftwood, some of the weathered pieces arranged into forts. I can hear the distant drone of a construction vehicle working somewhere on the island, but beyond that, there is only the sound of the waves at my feet, the scent of salt in the air, the shape of neighboring islands on the horizon. I’ve returned to a place in which the world is only sea and sky. Tears fill my eyes as something clicks into place inside me.

“Let’s go see your new home,” Sherri says from behind me, and the crazy thing is, she’s right. As soon as we reach the cabin, I’m in love. It’s that classic example of not knowing what I was looking for until I found it. Until I duck beneath the fir branches separating the lot from the road and feel as though I’m walking through the wardrobe into Narnia.

Until I stand in the front yard, entirely surrounded by cedar and fir trees, and realize I want to live in the woods; that the other open lots we’ll look at later in the day won’t hold the same mystery and magic, no matter how stunning their views.

Until I look up at the most charming cabin I’ve ever seen, with powder blue siding, white scalloped trim, and a steep A-frame roof, and at the totem pole positioned below the roof, at the outstretched wings of its carved wooden eagle, and feel myself being welcomed into a sacred space I hadn’t known existed.

Once I’ve walked through the house twice, I realize that despite the inherent differences between a cabin and a yurt — namely the lack of canvas walls and no fishbowl-shaped window in the roof through which to glimpse the sky — I could still have a similar set-up to what I’d had on Salt Spring. I could once again start my day with splitting kindling before making a fire, the view from my desk’s window would still be filled with fir trees, and there are even raised flowerbeds I can soon have overflowing with mint.

“I just have this sixth sense,” Sherri says as she drives us back to Hat’s marina. “A way of sensing what a person is looking for and helping them find it.”

I give her a different smile then, one that tries to convey thank you a thousand times over.

Perhaps what I’d been looking for wasn’t so much a literal yurt, but rather the simple-living, solitude-loving state of mind that often comes with being in a yurt. So what if I wouldn’t be living in the round? My days could still be built around the rituals I’d come to love from life in the Pacific Northwest — I could buy a kayak, pick blackberries in the summer, and watch the sky turn a thousand shades of pink at sunset. I could still drive away from the water and spot the Puget Sound in my rear-view mirror.

In the days after my visit to Hat Island, everything seems to fall into place.

I call Sherri, officially express my interest, get pre-qualified for a mortgage, submit my offer to the seller, and do an oh-so-subtle happy dance in my busy Seattle hostel when Sherri calls to say the seller accepted my offer.

And that’s when the second catch happens. I return to Hat Island for the home inspection, which subsequently turns up the world’s longest list of issues with the cabin, to the point that I feel I should lower my offer in order to have enough funds leftover for repairs. The seller doesn’t accept this new offer, and Sherri suggests giving him a few weeks before resubmitting it.

The next day, I catch a flight from Seattle to San Francisco, and a week after that, another flight to El Salvador. I’m spending the summer in Central America, the majority of it in a small house I’ve rented on the shores of Lake Atitlán in Guatemala.

On the chicken bus from Guatemala City to Antigua, I meet a fellow traveler from the Netherlands. He tells me he’s in the process of traveling for a year from Brazil to Alaska; I tell him about the book I’m working on, which is about my journey to settle down without settling, and how the book is most likely going to end with me placing an offer on a tiny cabin in the Puget Sound. We have dinner together in Antigua that night, and during a quiet point in the conversation, my new friend turns to me and says:

“There’s a question I’ve been wanting to ask you about your book. What about relationships and love? Because can’t a person be home for us as well? Like when a family moves a lot, the parents can still be home for their children.”

My hand immediately pauses in the air, my fork dripping with savory chicken and rice on its way to my mouth; my mind searches for an answer, but can’t come up with one.

I don’t know it then, but this question will mark a turning point for me, as though someone had suddenly appeared at the juncture of two tracks I could be heading down, and switched the points from one track to another, forever redirecting my course.

I spent the next six weeks in my little house on Lake Atitlán, and just as I’d compared Hat Island to Salt Spring, so too could I find many similarities between my arrangement in Guatemala to the one I’d have in the cabin on Hat.

There were plenty of good similarities — there was a sense of connection to the natural world, there was the view of the lake beyond my desk’s window, there was solitude and space to work. I loved my long work days, days when the power would cut off, my laptop would run out of battery, and I’d sit outside on my porch writing long-hand, feeling my book take shape and evolve into the story I wanted to tell.

But then there were the not-so-shining similarities, the hard ones, the days when the solitude felt more like isolation. Loneliness was never far off. I was alone in my little house, not plugged into community, and I couldn’t help thinking that while the seclusion was fine for a few weeks for the sake of my projects, it wouldn’t be healthy for me in the long run. Was this how I wanted my life to look? I only planned to be in the cabin for maybe half the year, but my time in Guatemala showed me just how long those six months might feel, living on an island with just 26 permanent residents, far from the people who know and inspire me.

Then I asked myself — did such a community already exist for me somewhere in the world?

This time, the answer came instantly. San Francisco. I’ve written here before that since attending the Book Passage Travel Writers & Photographers Conference in 2012, I began passing through the Bay Area a few times a year. I loved the writers I connected with there, and felt as though I’d finally found my tribe. I met artists and illustrators, too, fellow creatives who I soon counted among my best friends. But for whatever reason it never occurred to me to try and live near them — I always thought of San Francisco as being too expensive; in reality, I’d just never tried to make it work.

A series of steps soon unfolded that I could never have predicted happening when I first arrived in Central America. I wrote to Sherri and told her I’d decided not to resubmit my offer on the cabin. I found an affordable studio apartment to sublet in San Francisco for four months (because apparently, such magical unicorns do exist if you search long and hard enough on Craigslist) — and while I’d always felt that renting an apartment wouldn’t hold nearly as much weight as buying a home of my own, when I ordered the wire transfer to be sent from my bank, covering the total amount of rent for my time there, it felt just as momentous.

It occurred to me that a fitting metaphor for the community I’d found in San Francisco was that it was as though I had built a house for myself, but never taken the time to live in it.

Finally, the time had come to make that happen.

I’ve now been in San Francisco for almost four months, and I’ve since extended my lease so that I’ll be here through February, for a total of seven months. I haven’t shared much about this transition online because in many ways, it’s felt too big. I wasn’t entirely sure what I was embarking on at the start of this move, and I felt that I needed to give myself time to understand what was happening before attempting to put it into words for others to read.

Now, with just a tiny bit of hindsight behind me, I think that was happening — and indeed is still happening — is that I am learning what it means to come home after traveling. Although I returned to the U.S. often while traveling full-time, there was always another trip on the horizon; I always had one eye trained on the future. “Where are you going next?” is the question I have been asked incessantly for seven years, and for seven years I’ve always had an answer.

For the first time, my answer right now is, “Nowhere.” For the first time, I have both eyes fixed on the present. Nothing has ever felt more necessary for me to learn.

I am also learning what it means to transition from the rhythms of a traveling lifestyle into a more settled daily life situation. The kind of situation some might call more ‘normal,’ in which dishes always pile up in my sink, the trash always seems to need taking out, and my weekly visits to the laundromat keep coming around with a speed that scares me.

It isn’t that I’ve lived without these tasks while traveling — I still went to the laundromat every week on Salt Spring, and my kitchen sink in Guatemala was always brimming with dishes as well — but when there’s a concrete end-date in sight, the drudgery of daily tasks is kept somewhat at bay. With the end of my current lease so much further out in the future, these chores can easily feel like exactly what they are — a chore. And so, as Courtney E. Martin writes here for the wonderful On Being podcast, I’ve been trying to give these chores my full attention and intention.

To think of them not only as routine tasks, but rituals. To look for the eternal in the everyday.

All of these lessons that San Francisco has given me so far are things I want to explore more in future posts, but for now, the greatest lesson and what I want to share you with today is that I’m learning what it means to be in community.

I’m learning what it means to make yourself available to the people in your life — that sometimes I’ll have to let go of my love for long work days in order to have lunch with a dear friend, and that the conversations our lunch will hold matter just as much as ticking off items on any to-do list. I’m learning how to be vulnerable, how to share both the highs and lows of my life, and I’m learning just how much relationships thrive when we’re present.

I’m learning that finding a home doesn’t have to translate into finding an actual place of residence. Home can be four walls and a foundation, but it can also be so much more. When I think back to the question my new Dutch friend asked me in June — “Can’t a person be home for us as well?” — I have an answer for him now. Home can be a person, but on a greater level, home is all of the people in our life, those who gift us with the blessing of their friendship, their humor, their understanding, and whose combined presence forms an emotional foundation just as significant as any physical one.

There have still been low moments this fall, but as I recently put it in a conversation with my mom, “This is the least alone I’ve ever been.” I couldn’t be more grateful for that.

And I love that at the end of each day — whether it’s found me in the city, or meeting up with friends in Berkeley, Sausalito, or Pacifica — I do have a tangible home to return to. I love the anticipation I feel every time I climb the stairs to my apartment, I love turning the key in the lock, and I love placing my keys on the little wooden ledge by my door. As far as apartments go, my one-room studio isn’t much — my “kitchen” holds just a single-burner induction cooker, toaster oven, and blender — but I had an epiphany about it one day soon after I moved in.

The woman I’m renting from is Japanese, so all of the tables and even the bed are low to the floor. There’s a square table in the center of the floor, which means that to walk around the room, I inevitably end up walking in a circle — just as I would in a yurt. I thought about this, and about the high ceiling, which feels just as expansive as the domed ceiling of a yurt, and about how my apartment is mysteriously silent — despite living on a busy street in the center of the city, none of the standard city noises reaches me. My small urban abode somehow still offers me the same amount of silence, space, and solitude a yurt would.

Of course, that’s really where the similarities end. In place of a roof window, I have a faded yellow smoke detector in the center of my ceiling; and my sole window looks out not onto a sylvan scene of fir trees or the placid surface of Lake Atitlán, but the grimy interior courtyard of my apartment building, with just a few meager potted plants as a nod to nature.

But when I lie in bed beneath the window and look up, I can indeed glimpse a wedge of the sky; when I sit down at my low Japanese table to write, the air is quiet and ripe for thought; and for the first time, when I step out of my front door, I step out into a city in which I’m surrounded by community and friendships.

I keep a postcard on the little ledge by my door, that I look at every time I leave my urban yurt and head out into the city. On it is the quote from van Gogh I opened this post with:

“There is nothing more truly artistic than to love people.”

As a writer, as an artist myself, but most importantly, simply as a friend, I couldn’t stand by those words more.

58 Comments

  • Life certainly is a journey, isn’t it? Thanks for sharing your beautiful artwork and lovely words, stringing them together effortlessly for the reader. I am so happy you have a found a home, if temporary…since the journey continues, we never really know where we will end up.

    • Thank you so much for taking the time to read this and say hello, Cacinda! Life is indeed a journey – and as desperately as I’d sometimes like to know where it’s taking me, I also know the mystery is at least half the fun 🙂

    • Thank you so much, my friend – as you know so well, the sense of homecoming I think we’ve both found this year is incredible. Can’t wait to meet little Juniper in person one day – soon, I hope! xoxo

  • I enjoyed reading through your changes of mind and how you arrived in your community and was excited for each possibility you presented. Your writing and sketches made me float through the journey.

    • I’m so glad to hear you enjoyed this piece, Jan, and the sketches as well! I had a lot of fun weaving them together with the different stages of the story 🙂 Hope you and your family have a wonderful holiday season!

  • As I read this Candace I was thinking of the times in our life where we’ve had romantic plans to lock ourselves away in remote locations and thankfully circumstances led us down different paths. As I read this I was thinking “But you’ll be lonely. You’re so embracing of the world are you sure you want to lock yourself away?” This was a lovely journey piece and I’m so pleased that you found your own conclusion that brought community into your life and you into theirs. You can always rent that yurt and buy yourself some solitude. But you can’t rent friends and buy yourself a community. You have to give to receive and it sounds like you’ve found a beautiful creative base to do just that. So enjoyed this.

    • “But you can’t rent friends and buy yourself a community.” Margaret, I’ve done a lot of thinking about this transition over the last few months, but I’m not sure I’ve ever quite thought of it that way – and you couldn’t have put it more perfectly. More and more I’m coming to understand what a rare gift the community I’ve found here in SF is, and you’re so right about truly taking advantage of that and being intentional about investing my time in these friendships. Thank you for not only taking the time to read this piece, but for sharing such beautiful insights as well – sending a big hug your way!

  • Candace , what fabulous writing and fabulous journey. So happy for you for this phase and place you are in. And of course your drawings.
    Many blessings, Kaithe

    • Thank you so much, Kathe – as always, your support and encouragement means the world, and I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed this post. Please keep me posted if your path leads you through San Francisco soon!

  • Beautiful writing, beautiful illustrations. I have been traveling for six months and long for a small cabin in the woods too. Maybe it’s because of the traveling we are drawn to this seemingly safe place of comfort and quiet. I do know I would miss my friends and family though. So when I return, I’ll head back to my flat in Detroit… for now.

    • I love the addendum of “for now” at the end of your comment, Sheri – I was just talking with a dear friend tonight about how we’re often asked if the places we choose to base ourselves are our ‘forever places.’ I’ve been asked that so often about San Francisco this fall, and what I’ve come to feel is that while I don’t know if it’s my ‘forever place,’ I do know for sure that it’s my ‘for-right-now place.’ I believe there are seasons in our lives for being fully present in relationships and connected to our friends and family, and that there are also times when it’s okay to withdraw into that quiet cabin in the woods…whether it’s to rest and recharge, devote time and headspace to a creative project, etc. And really, one of the ultimate goals of life then becomes finding the right balance between those two desires – it can be a challenge, but one I’m enjoying navigating right now 🙂 Thanks so much for sharing some of your story here, and please know I’m wishing you all the best as you continue on your journey.

    • Thank you, Lola!! And happy happy Thanksgiving to you and your beautiful family as well – we’ve got so much to be grateful for this year, don’t we? Sending big hugs to Stockholm!

  • So glad you’ve found your tribe, Candace 🙂 Hope the Bay Area continues to treat you well! xx

  • I’m so happy to have been part of your journey, simply through being a reader.
    It’s so interesting to me how, as humans, we sometimes misunderstand our deepest desires… maybe it all comes down to that Into the Wild quote that happiness is only real when shared.

    Thank you for this beautifully written update and I can’t wait for more from the Great Affair.

    • Thank you so much, Jade – and I couldn’t agree more with you about misunderstanding our desires…as I was thinking through all of this over the summer, a good friend of mine really challenged me to think about what it is I want most in life. She said it sounded as though there was something deep and fundamental that wasn’t getting what it needed, and it was by pushing into that that I realized what I need most right now is community. While I will never stop exploring on my own and loving that freedom and aliveness you feel on the road, more and more I’m coming to believe that line from Into the Wild – that the shared happiness and memories we create with the people in our life is perhaps the richest source of joy. xo

  • You are so beautiful. This story is so beautiful. I am so beyond happy that you are in my life… and I can’t wait to come visit you in San Fran one day! Missing you xoxo

    • Oh my word, Brenna – getting to hang out with you here would be a dream! *Just* tonight, in fact, I got to have dinner with our dear friend Katie Nadworny, and you came up so often in our conversations – please come visit in SF 🙂 I couldn’t be more grateful for our friendship as well, and can’t wait to keep following along your own beautiful journey through life. xoxo

  • I’ve been wondering where you’ve been these last few months, and missing your writing and art. Thank you so much for writing again, and especially to share such an intimate post. I’m happy for you, Candace! You’re a thoughtful, present person, and San Fran is lucky to have you!

    • Brittany! It’s absolutely wonderful to hear from you here, and just before I started to reply, I naturally had to take a peek over at your own site and loved seeing that you just walked the Camino del Norte! Yet another fun connection for us 🙂 It sounds like I’ve got a world of things to get caught up on, but I firstly just wanted to thank you for taking the time to say hello – sending big hugs your way!

  • Loved hearing your thoughts, especially this line: “I’m learning how to be vulnerable, how to share both the highs and lows of my life, and I’m learning just how much relationships thrive when we’re present.” I’ve been going through some similar changes in my life, too. So proud to hear you have found “home” in community! Take care, -bnb

    • Thank you so much for sharing how this post resonated with you, Bethany. I truly feel that what we’re both living through right now are some of the most significant things we can learn in life – thank you for saying hello, and I’ll be thinking of you on your own journey!

  • I love that we’ve shared such similar posts at the same time. I’m falling into a routine in Berlin as well, and loving it. (Although I still consider it travelling.) Congrats on your new home!

    • Hello, my dear fellow Canda/ice in the traveling world! It’s lovely to hear from you here 🙂 And as soon as I read your comment, I ran to your site in search of your own post about finding home and routines and rituals in Berlin…I can’t even tell you how much it resonated with me (clearly!), and how thrilled I am for you that Berlin has welcomed you in as it has. I’m planning to be over in Europe again next spring and summer, and so hope there’s a chance our paths might finally cross in person. xo

  • Really wonderful to hear the full story, starting with a yurt in Canada and ending up full circle in San Francisco. The importance of community really resonates with me as well, and I definitely understand looking first for that and then figuring out the location. My light bulb moment came a few years ago watching The Happy Film at a producer’s screening in Bali and community connection was one of the big lessons from that film. After that we decided to spend the next summer in Berlin because of the people we had met there the year before and eventually ended up moving here, with our friends here being the primary factor for the decisions. Congrats and enjoy all the little routines. Know how nice that can feel 🙂

  • Candace my light bulb moment was when I first read one of your blogs which I found through National Geographic a few months ago. I was totally entranced by your utterly gorgeous Pen & Wash work. I am a bridal designer/ pattern maker but have now started to heed my Dad’s words when I was young, about possibly regretting my chosen path . Of course I have no regrets, fashion has served me very well, but your delightful art work and wonderful writings are such an inspiration that have finally set me on a path that fills me with total contentment, giving a bit of time to drawing.
    I thoroughly enjoyed reading this latest blog of yours and must admit I was waiting and waiting for it to arrive! Of course I forget how long it takes to do the sketches, writing and then collate everything into these gorgeous stories!! Francisco is a divine city, very different to where I live here in Sydney, even though they are both harbour cities. I notice you spent some time in NZ, that is where I am from originally.
    I bought your book ‘Beneath the Lantern’s Glow’ and all of my art friends have borrowed it. Absolutely beautiful work Candace and thank you for the very informative blogs, but especially for the stunning art work.

    Regards Victoria

  • Your style is so vivid and compelling that I didn’t want the update to end. Having recently separated from the corporate world, I’m slowly decompressing and look forward to discovering what I really want to do and if there is a community where I feel natural. I have my own version of a yurt, which we call the treehouse, that has given me the calm nurturing that I’ve needed under stress. Now that I have time and peace, I’m hoping it will fuel my creativity. Thanks for sharing your observations.

  • What an epic post! I feel breathless after reading all of that. It’s a wonderful feeling coming home* – I felt like that when I returned to England in 2007 – I wish you all the best!

    * of course, ‘coming home’ is relative – I’d never actually lived in Kent before but still felt like I’d arrived ‘home’.

  • I find your style of art very inspiring, as well as your writing. I’m a singer-songwriter who is recently discovering a passion for visual art. Like you, I love to travel, but I’m finding plenty of inspiration right here where I live (Santa Cruz Mountains). I look forward to your next post, as I enjoy looking at previous posts.

  • Hi there! Great post and completely agree with the sense of community. I know it’s a bit off topic but do you have any recommendations for San Francisco that are not as well known and perhaps any accommodation advice? We are there for a few days at the end of May! Thanks!

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