Woke Up in the Fog
It’s Day 0. The trail hasn’t started yet, but I have. I woke up at 6:00 a.m., rolled out of my tent at 6:15, and stepped into a foggy Icelandic morning—51 degrees and misty. A little pain in my knees when I stood and surprisingly no stiffness anywhere else. That’s rare. Normally, pavement walks ruin me. But today? I feel… good.
I finished charging my devices, with them both off to charge faster, sipped coffee and ate leftover mapo tofu and tried to pack while racing the clock. My bus to Landmannalaugar was set for 7:45 a.m. I arrived at 7:37 a.m., thanks to the internal video producer clock I’ve never been able to turn off. My pack was a disaster, but who cares? I’d be hiking with just a daypack today. And ending the day in a hot spring.
Doing the Math
While scarfing down breakfast and sorting my gear, I found myself reflecting on how many Europeans I’ve met out here—and how often I’ve had to convert units just to keep up in conversation. Distance, elevation, temperature… it’s a whole different language. So here are my quick-and-dirty shortcuts for trail talk:
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Celsius to Fahrenheit: Double the Celsius and add 30. It’s not perfect, but it’s close enough for weather chat.
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Kilometers to Miles: Divide the number by 10, then again by 2, and add the two results. For example, 100 kilometers is 100/10= 10 and 100/2= 50. Then 10 + 50 = roughly 60 miles.
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Meters to Feet: Multiply by 3 for a rough estimate.
It’s not perfect but good enough to hold your own in an international hiking crowd.
The Bus Ride: Fog Outside And In
About 45 minutes outside Reykjavík, the fog rolled in so thick it erased everything outside the bus window. Which left me alone with the inside of my head—a place that was suddenly loud.
What if I get too cold? What if I lose the trail in the fog? What if my hands freeze? What if I get injured?
If your brain does this, too—spiraling just when you’re on the brink of something exciting—you’re not alone. That’s what fear does.. It just comes up at the worst possible time.
But somewhere in that foggy, frantic moment, my mind reached back to a hike I did with my friend Amanda a couple months before. Seven miles in the pouring rain. It was soaking, squishy, miserable—and the perfect mental training for what I’m doing now. Funny how the brain buries those moments until you really need them. This is what preparing for something big is all about: not just the gear and the fitness, but the quiet work of building up resilience when no one’s watching.
Still, as the miles ticked on and the fog didn’t lift, my thoughts drifted to something even heavier.
A year ago—July 2024—I wasn’t out hiking or prepping for any grand adventure. I was glued to YouTube, binging long-distance trail videos and running 5k’s. I felt… stuck. Flat. Not like myself. And I started to notice a pattern: when I wasn’t hiking regularly, my energy dipped. My joy dimmed. I wasn’t depressed exactly, but something was off—and I knew it.
I knew I needed something to look forward to. Something that would nudge me back to life. Something to train for—not just physically, but emotionally. But there was a catch: my partner wanted a milestone birthday trip to Japan in 2025. That had always been the big plan. And I supported it fully.
So I quietly tucked my Iceland idea into the “someday” file and focused on being supportive. On being realistic. But the truth is, I was also silencing something vital in myself. And at the time, I didn’t realize how much that would matter.
Torn Between Two Dreams
By November, I had strategically saved enough money to cover flights to Japan for both of us. I was serious about showing up for her plan. But I still felt pulled—by the Icelandic Highlands, by the trails, by the version of myself I hadn’t seen in a while. I started researching the Japanese Alps, hoping maybe there was a way to make both things work: her vision and my need to hike something hard and beautiful.
It almost worked. I thought I’d found the perfect compromise. But then the dates shifted. First we looked at May, then September, then maybe March. All totally understandable—there were a lot of moving parts to juggle on her end. But each change made it harder for me to keep the momentum I’d built. My anxiety started to climb. I felt tat I was going to miss out on a hike I knew I needed.
Iceland’s hiking season is brutally short. And every new timeline made it feel like my window was closing. I finally asked if March was the plan, and when she said yes, I made a decision. Hiking the Japaneses Alps in March is not an option and I needed something locked in—something I could plan around, train for, and keep my focus on. Not to mention, it was February. So, I booked my July trip to Iceland.
That meant letting go of Japan. Letting go of the plan. And no matter how necessary it felt, it didn’t sit easy.
Gratitude and Guilt
Now, as the bus winds toward the Highlands, I’m flooded with mixed feelings. I’m deeply grateful to be here. This place already feels like exactly what I needed. But guilt? Yeah, that came with me, too.
After everything was booked and training was underway, my partner decided on Japan in October. It’s a gorgeous time to visit—but a tough season for hiking the Alps. That’s me trying to make it feel like less of a loss. But it still stings.
I feel guilty she’s not here.
Guilty I won’t be there.
Guilty that I needed this so badly, I prioritized it over her needs and wants.
Here’s the thing: guilt often shows up when we’re doing something brave and self-preserving. It likes to confuse the two. It makes us question whether honoring our own needs means we’re failing someone else. But that’s rarely the truth.
It’s easy to say, “You should never lose yourself in a relationship.” But it’s much harder to know when and how to speak up for what you need. Maybe that’s just a me thing.
This trip doesn’t mean I’ve stopped supporting her. It means I chose to support myself, too.
And I think that’s okay. Even if the guilt still rides along sometimes.
The bus keeps rolling forward. The fog’s still thick. But I’m learning that it’s possible to carry conflicting emotions in the same backpack: gratitude and guilt, excitement and sadness, clarity and confusion. You don’t have to have it all sorted before you take the first step.
Sometimes, you just go anyway.
When the Highlands Whisper Back
Something shifted the moment we turned off the main road and onto Iceland’s rugged F-roads. The bus bumped along through thick fog and past jagged lava fields, and with each mile, the grip of guilt began to loosen.
For the first time in a long time, I felt present.
The sun burned off the fog and the black and green mountain started to appear and my world was now focused on jaw dropping beauty. Scenery I had never seen before. In that moment, the Icelandic Highlands whispered louder than the voices in my head. And I finally allowed myself to listen.
Camp Conversation
After setting up camp at Landmannalaugar and inhaling a quick lunch, I met Todd and Katya—an adventurous couple from Toronto who got engaged in Patagonia on the O Trek (which is my 2027 hike). We quickly went from trail talk to real talk: healthcare, racism, politics. When I invited them to visit me in the Smokies, they politely declined—at least until our current president is out of office. It was the kind of honest, open exchange that reminds you how different—and similar—our lives can be across borders.
Just a “Quick” Hike
Later that afternoon, I headed out for what was supposed to be a mellow 4-mile loop—just enough to stretch my legs after the long travel day. I followed trail markers out of Landmannalaugar, winding through a surreal landscape of steaming vents, jagged ridgelines, and neon-green moss. The terrain looked like a mash-up of Mars and Middle Earth.
Following the Sound
The silence in Iceland is insane. No bugs, no plans and at the moment no wind. After a while, I heard it—the unmistakable roar of glacial runoff echoing through a nearby valley. I trusted my ears, dropped into the valley, and hiked about a mile and a half until I found a perfect spot by the water to have a snack. Just me and the rush of ice-cold melt water carving through stone.
Into the Mist And Fog
On my way back, I spotted two hikers and headed toward them—then noticed a sign pointing to a mountain trail. Naturally, I climbed. As I reached the top, the fog closed in like a curtain. No visibility. No trail in sight. Just white. I paused, unsure of my next move—until a group of local hikers appeared like ghosts out of the mist. They knew the way and pointed me in the right direction. With their help, Gaia GPS, and a little faith, I found the path down. Five minutes into the descent, the fog cleared like it had never been there at all.
A Longer Welcome Than Expected
The trail led me through a lava field, along another glacial river, and finally back to camp. What was supposed to be a quick loop turned into a 9.5-mile adventure—and the perfect way to meet Iceland on its own wild terms.
Tent Time
Back at camp, I made a decision: no more socializing tonight. I cooked in the vestibule (boiled water counts as cooking, thank you very much) and ate a quinoa bowl topped with crunched Takis and Icelandic chocolate for dessert. Not gourmet, but it hit the spot.
I let my phone charge while I wrote a bit in my journal. I popped a sleeping pill, set no alarm, and gave myself permission to rest.
Tomorrow is a seven-mile day. I know I can do that. There’s no pressure. The sun never really sets here, so I’ll walk when I’m ready.
Right Where I’m Supposed to Be
Today’s hike was longer than planned, but also exactly what I needed. I didn’t think about work or bills or anything outside this mossy, volcanic wonderland. I was just here. In my body. On this land. Moving forward.
Day 0 reminded me that the trail begins before your first step. It starts in your doubts, your daydreams, your bank accounts, your dinner conversations. It begins when you say, “I think I want this,” and someone replies, “I know you will.”
And now? I’m here. On the edge of a journey I’ve been building toward for months. And it feels really, really good.
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