America Road Trip 2026 Update
For years, this trip has lived in my head.
Not as a vague idea, not as one of those “maybe one day” thoughts people throw around, but as something real. Something structured. A route I kept refining, places I kept adding, moments I kept imagining.
North Carolina. South Carolina. Tennessee. Washington, D.C. New York. Boston. The Midwest. Colorado. Monument Valley. Arizona. Vegas. California.
I’ve driven it a hundred times already.
Late May 2026, that changes. I land in North Carolina, pick up the car, and for the first time, the version of this trip that’s been playing in my head for years finally meets reality.
And that’s the difference.
There comes a point where thinking isn’t enough anymore.
It’s easy to plan something. It’s easy to sit there and map routes, look at distances, imagine the drive, the stops, the conversations, the silence.
Acting on it is different.
Booking the flight. Committing to the time. Deciding you’re actually going to do it, properly, without shortcuts. That’s where most people stop.
This isn’t about ticking off cities or chasing photos. I’m not interested in rushing through places just to say I’ve been there. That’s not what this is.
Driving through a country that, for all its noise and contradictions, still carries something significant. Scale. History. Power. Identity.
You don’t understand that from a screen.
You understand it from the road.
The Route That Built Itself
Over time, the route stopped being random and started making sense.
Starting in the South, easing into it. Letting the pace build instead of forcing it.
Then into Washington, D.C., where everything carries weight whether you agree with it or not.
Up to New York and Boston, where energy meets history.
Across the Midwest, where the noise drops off and the reality of distance sets in.
Into Colorado, where the landscape reminds you how small you actually are.
Then the West. Monument Valley. Arizona. The kind of places that don’t need explaining.
Vegas for contrast. California for the finish. Coast to coast.
It didn’t come together overnight. It built itself over years of thought.
That’s why I’m not rushing it now.
People will look at this and say it’s just a road trip.
It’s proof of something simple: if you sit on an idea long enough, it either fades or it becomes something you have to act on.
It stayed. It grew. It demanded to be done properly.
I know it won’t be perfect. Long drives, tired days, wrong turns, things not going to plan. That’s part of it.
Because the real value isn’t in everything going right. It’s in actually being out there, dealing with it, moving forward anyway.
That’s what makes it real.
Six weeks. Twenty-one states. Thousands of miles.
A trip that’s existed in my head for years is finally happening in real life.
No more planning it endlessly.
Now it’s time to drive it.
Full tank. No rush. Keep moving.