
Life on the Road: Moving Through the United States
Driving through the United States feels like entering a space where distance matters, but not in the way you expect.

Driving through the United States feels like entering a space where distance matters, but not in the way you expect.

Cape Town is easy to admire at first. The mountain. The ocean. The light that changes constantly throughout the day. But that impression doesn’t last on its own.

Glass towers. Clean lines. Buildings that feel designed to stand out rather than blend in. Everything looks intentional. Precise. Controlled. Built to be seen.

In Marrakech, food isn’t separate from daily life. It’s part of it. Structured through rituals. Shaped by time. Shared between people without needing to be defined.

Istanbul is often described as a bridge. Between Europe and Asia. Between East and West. But that idea feels too simple once you’re there.

It’s built on history, shaped by change, and defined by the way those elements continue to exist together.

The pyramids sit just beyond the movement of the city. Mosques rise within neighborhoods that are still active, still evolving.

India doesn’t give you a single first impression. It gives you many, all at once. Color, sound, movement, heat, people — everything arrives together.

Dubai isn’t a city most people are from. It’s a city people come to. For work. For opportunity. For a different kind of life. And that changes the way the city feels.