My Travels

I have spent much of my life on stage — explaining where I come from and why it matters so deeply to who I am today. The story always begins the same way: a nine-year-old boy in a small Newfoundland outport, with only two television channels and no window to the wider world, whose mother placed a set of encyclopedias in his hands. Those volumes became my universe and ignited an explorer's nature that I now believe was there from birth.
At ten years old, I boarded a plane alone for the first time — invited by my Aunt Agnes to spend the summer in Goose Bay, Labrador. It was my first suitcase, my first flight, and the experience that fundamentally wrote the foundation of who I am. The courage to step into that plane drew the path of my entire life before me.
Then came National Geographic — my most trusted companion in charting the breadcrumbs I needed to follow. Between the encyclopedias and those iconic yellow-bordered magazines at Dr. Ruckle's office, every place I would one day visit was already alive in my imagination long before my feet touched its soil.
Today, my mission is to inspire people to travel the world — because the farther you run from yourself and your routine, the more you find the real you.
From the source of the Victoria Falls to the Great Wall, the Pyramids to the Alps, Mount Lebanon to the streets of Tokyo — a life lived without borders. 100+ countries and counting.