Travels in 2025 — Notes from a Medico-Anthropologist
As each year draws to a close, I am seized by a familiar and slightly irrational feeling: that I have not travelled enough. No matter how many borders were crossed or itineraries carefully assembled, the world always seems larger than the year allowed. And yet, when I pause and look more closely, I realise that travel is not only about accumulation, but about depth.
If there is one city I truly came to know in 2025, it is Istanbul. No longer a point of transit between continents, it became a place of return and quiet familiarity. Istanbul revealed itself slowly—through ferry rides on the Bosphorus, long conversations in cafés, and the sense of standing at a civilisational crossroads. Through Istanbul, I felt closer to Iran—culturally, emotionally, intellectually. It is one of the few places where friendships with Iranians living in Iran can still be sustained, where conversations interrupted by borders can be resumed, and where continuity quietly resists politics.
France appeared repeatedly on my map this year, and with each visit my affection deepened. France has a way of rewarding familiarity: the more time one spends there, the more it reveals its layers. Its landscapes, its food, its attention to the everyday rituals of life, and its deeply humane approach to healthcare and social care continue to move me. I even found myself toying—only half-jokingly—with the idea of a resident visa, imagining a life structured around long meals, thoughtful conversations, and a medical system that treats dignity as a social right rather than a privilege.
Mexico remained a place of grounding and renewal. There is something about Mexico that allows both work and reflection to coexist without friction. In the final days of 2025, Mérida offered me a rare combination: peace and productivity. Days unfolded gently, without urgency, allowing space to think, to write, and to inhabit time more humanely.
India called twice this year, both times drawing me back to Kerala. The journeys themselves became part of the narrative. Once, I flew all the way from Miami via Doha with Qatar Airways; the second time, I followed a less familiar route with Azerbaijan Airlines, travelling from Istanbul to Bombay via Baku. Even destinations we know well can feel new when approached from a different angle.
Other chapters of the year unfolded across Morocco and Tunisia, with a brief pause in Qatar en route to India; in Jamaica, whose rhythms still feel strangely familiar; and in Porto, where quiet beauty lingers without demanding attention. I also rediscovered the pleasure of train travel in Europe—through Belgium and France, and on a short but memorable journey from Frankfurt to Strasbourg—moments of slowness that feel increasingly precious in a hurried world.
Among many flights, those with Air France and Qatar Airways stood out—not merely for comfort, but for the subtle continuity they offer between cultures and continents.
Looking ahead, January gestures toward Guatemala and Mexico; February, perhaps back to Turkey and Kerala once more. Beyond that, the map remains open. There are many places I still long to see—and just as many that gently call me back.
Travel, I am learning, is not measured by distance alone, but by how deeply one arrives.











