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Charity Schweiger

Be a Traveler. Not a Tourist.
  • Latest
  • PRINTS SHOP
  • Blog
  • Wanderlust: City Guides
    • Tokyo
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    • Tarragona
    • Berlin
    • Seattle
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    • Palermo
    • St Emilion
    • Bordeaux
  • About Me
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The Blog:

Honest thoughts about people, places, & things.

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Featured posts:

Featured
On Authentic Music
Nov 25, 2020
On Authentic Music
Nov 25, 2020
Nov 25, 2020
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Sep 28, 2019
Open Letter to American Girls Studying or Traveling Abroad
Sep 28, 2019
Sep 28, 2019
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Jul 8, 2019
What's Going in My Summer Beauty Bag
Jul 8, 2019
Jul 8, 2019
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Jun 30, 2019
On Boston Coffee Culture
Jun 30, 2019
Jun 30, 2019
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Jun 27, 2019
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Jun 27, 2019
Jun 27, 2019
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Jun 24, 2019
Tokyo Indoors
Jun 24, 2019
Jun 24, 2019
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May 16, 2019
On Loss
May 16, 2019
May 16, 2019
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May 16, 2019
On Traveling "Someday"
May 16, 2019
May 16, 2019
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Aug 26, 2018
On Canceled Reservations
Aug 26, 2018
Aug 26, 2018
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Aug 24, 2018
On Things
Aug 24, 2018
Aug 24, 2018
As we all try to move on from the pandemic, I want to shine a light on the fact that not all of us experienced Covid the same way.  I wrote a new piece (link in my bio) that I’d love to share about my experience with Long Covid. 

It has been h
Come see me this Thursday! I’m displaying a collection of images that is focused on visual storytelling in a pre-pandemic world. I am fascinated by human connection and want to reveal it through my camera lens. 

Come say hello! Thursday. 5 PM.
Well hello, Phoenix. ☀️

Beyond happy to spend a few days with my best friend @darienbrown7 enjoying good company and Vitamin D straight from the source.

#phx #phoenix #i❤️arizona #bestfriendenergy #lovetankfull #birthdaytrip #thisis36 #flyingtoseem
This is 36.  I genuinely didn't think I would see this birthday. And I am absolutely overwhelmed with gratitude for the lovely and amazing people in my life who have made me feel so special this week. 

A few things I've learned along the way that I'
Kicking off my birthday week festivities! This was the same bar where I held my birthday party in 2020. I didn’t know at the time what that year held in store. The total 180 my life was about to take. But the one constant in life is change. And
It’s been said that our pets teach us the concept of unconditional love. I believe that wholeheartedly. ❤️

She never left my side over the months I was sick in bed. Beyond grateful to have experienced the love and affection of my cat, Coco. I
Some snapshots from my time in Houston. It’s such a colorful city. 

It is always so fun to work with a photographer who can capture the different sides of you. Thank you @juans1u for these shots! 

#htx #girlswhotravel #outdoorportraits #houst
New friends in a new city. 🖤

An evening to remember. The view. The company. The music. The mezcal. There is nothing so beautiful as being invited to connect with a group of lovely humans when you’ve been flying solo in a new city. 

#mexicoci
Cruella. Seen on the streets of CDMX. 

Absolutely makes up for Halloween last year. 

#cruella #cruellacostume #halloween2021 #diadelosmuertos #cdmx #nightsinmexicocity #girlswhotravelsolo
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On Things

August 24, 2018 in On Things

I’ve lived in small spaces for the last decade. Well, scratch that. Maybe my entire life. 

Going from my parents’ house to college dorms to tiny studio apartments to renting rooms in houses with roommates, there hasn’t been much room to really spread out.  I’ve always told myself that I don’t own that many things, it just looks like I do because I’m an adult living in a 90 SF space.  But looking around my room, it’s obvious that I own more than your average cat.  Well, more clothes that is.

Why do I have so many clothes?  Am I a shopping addict? A fashion martyr? A hoarder?  Well, to answer that question, you’d have to get to know me a little first.  Back it up to where the story really starts. I grew up in a small town in Heartland, USA which meant that 1. Most people I knew wore cowboy boots and Levi’s and 2. The only time you got dressed up was on Sundays to go to church. To add to this, I was homeschooled and I lived in the actual middle of nowhere (think well water, no tv or internet, and lots of dirt … everywhere).  To expose myself to culture and fashion, I would get the recycled issues of Vogue magazine that the town library was throwing away and take them home on our weekly visits.  This meant I was reading magazine issues from 1992 in the year 1998.  But that didn’t matter to me. I was all about the glamorous and beautiful ladies depicted in them. Christy, Kate, Naomi, Nadja Auermann. I didn’t just want to read about them, I wanted to BE them.  And I would fantasize about growing up and doing exactly that.

Fast forward 15 years and I’ve got a job with enough spending money left over to buy the clothes I want and I now live in a city with lots of cafes and bars to wear them out to.   What’s stopping me from being a walking magazine spread every single day?  Well, nothing really. I had subscriptions to all of the top voices in the fashion world: Vogue, Glamour, W, InStyle, Harper’s Bazaar. And I had a regular route through Nordstrom, Zara, Urban, Vicki’s, Topshop and Anthro.  I knew what was available and I had filled my closet with all of the best things that made me feel glamorous and beautiful and sexy.  Or even really just things that were a good deal, or seemed practical, or that my friends had talked me into purchasing.

Looking back on it, I definitely can recognize the mindset behind it. I somehow had subconsciously confused the clothes and accessories I could buy with creating a certain type of life and look that I wanted. Perhaps a look that would make me sexier, more confident, more successful, and more enviable than the person I used to be.  I think a huge part of that is the struggle all young women go through as they “find themselves” and deal with the social pressures that are most certainly put on us to look and act a certain way.  But for myself, there was an added layer of trying to shed the so-called country girl I had grown up as and become a sophisticated, chic, beautiful, and cultured city girl.  Well, according to American cultural messages, the way to do this was to buy everything I could afford and shroud myself in this protective cloak of designer jeans, leather jackets, and suede booties.

After nearly a decade of this mindset, I am at a point in my life where I have been forced to take a cold hard look at what I’ve accumulated.  And why.  And what I will do with it now. How do my things, and more specifically my clothes, define me now?  Do all of these things add or subtract to my everyday life?

I will be absolutely clear that I will always want to look my best, to cultivate and display my personal style, and to project that image of a cultured, beautiful, confident woman in the way I present myself.  However, I am no longer convinced that an abundance of clothes will do that for me.  The RIGHT clothes will certainly project an image. But I don’t need a cascading flow of options for this to occur. Or, at least, I think I don’t.

Tags: Letting Go, De-Cluttering, The Things We Own, On Things, Clothes
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email: charity.schweiger@gmail.com
Instagram: @charityontheroad