Walking on Other Planets: My Personal Journey
A solo travel diary detailing a journey across salt flats and volcanic landscapes to find a surreal nature experience.
The call of the unfamiliar
There is a specific kind of silence that only exists in places where the earth feels unfinished. I spent a decade chasing that silence. For most, travel is about seeing monuments or ticking off cities. For me, it became a way to feel the scale of the universe without leaving the atmosphere. I wanted to know what it felt like to be an alien on my own planet.
This solo travel diary is not a guide on how to get from point A to point B. It is a record of the internal shift that happens when the horizon disappears and the ground beneath your feet stops looking like earth. I found these worlds in the high deserts of Bolivia and the volcanic fields of Iceland. In these places, the sensory experience is so strong that the boundary between the physical world and a dream begins to blur.
When I first decided to venture out alone, I was looking for solitude, but I found a version of myself that only emerges when there is no one around to mirror. Travel writing often focuses on the destination, but the real story is the friction between the landscape and the soul. To walk on a salt flat or a lava field is to accept that you are small and temporary. There is a freedom in that.
The white void: Salar de Uyuni
Stepping onto the Salar de Uyuni for the first time is like falling into a white abyss. The salt flats of Bolivia are the largest in the world, a prehistoric lakebed that dried into a crust of hexagonal polygons stretching for thousands of square miles. In the dry season, the white is so blinding that it erases the horizon. You cannot tell where the ground ends and the sky begins.
I remember standing in the center of the flats, miles from the nearest vehicle, feeling the crunch of salt crystals under my boots. The sound was a sharp, crystalline snap that echoed in the stillness. There was no wind, no birds, and no rustle of leaves. Just the sound of my own breathing and the salt.
As a solo traveler, the psychological weight of the void is heavy. When you are surrounded by a white expanse that looks identical in every direction, your brain plays tricks. I felt vertigo even though I was on flat ground. It felt as if I were floating in a sterile room or walking on a frozen moon. Words cannot capture the specific quality of that light. It does not just illuminate; it consumes.
The mirror effect
Then came the rains. When a thin layer of water covers the salt, the Salar becomes a mirror. The reflection is so perfect that the clouds are beneath your feet and the blue of the sky is above and below. Walking through this is disorienting. I felt as if I had stepped out of the physical world and into a digital render.
I spent hours walking in circles, watching my own reflection mimic every step. In that moment, the journey shifted from exploration to introspection. I was the only vertical line in a horizontal world. The solitude was no longer lonely; it was expansive. I felt a kinship with astronauts who look back at Earth from the void. They see a blue marble in a black sea, and I saw a white mirror under a blue dome. Both are experiences of isolation that force a confrontation with the self.
The sensory weight of salt
Everything in Uyuni smells of minerals and cold air. The air is thin at 3,600 meters, making every breath a conscious effort. I remember the taste of salt on my lips and the way the cold wind would whip across the plains and sting my cheeks. The physical discomfort added to the feeling of being on another planet. On Earth, we are used to the softness of grass or the grit of city pavement. Here, the world is hard and uncompromising.
I recall one evening when the sun began to set. The white void turned pale violet, then deep orange, and finally a bruised purple. There were no trees to block the view and no buildings to break the line. It was a pure transition of light. I sat on the salt crust and watched the stars emerge. Because there is no light pollution for hundreds of miles, the Milky Way looked like a thick, glowing river of milk spilled across the sky. I felt a physical pull toward the stars while knowing that I was standing on the closest thing to them I could find.
The black earth: Volcanic desolation
If Bolivia was the light, Iceland was the shadow. Moving from the salt flats to the volcanic landscapes of the North Atlantic felt like switching from a dream to a nightmare, though a beautiful one. Iceland is a land of contradictions where fire and ice exist in a violent embrace. To walk through its lava fields is to witness the earth in its rawest state.
I remember hiking through the highlands, where the ground is a deep, obsidian black. The volcanic rock is jagged and porous, looking more like frozen smoke than stone. In some areas, the earth is stained a neon green by moss that has spent centuries reclaiming the basalt. The contrast is jarring. It looks like a landscape from a science fiction novel, a place where life is an intruder. For those seeking similar vistas, Earth's Alien Landscapes guide explores more of these sci-fi sceneries.
The sound of steam and sulfur
In the geothermal areas, the air is thick with the smell of sulfur, like rotten eggs and ancient chemicals. Steam vents hiss from the ground, sending plumes of white vapor into the gray sky. I walked through these fields alone, the sound of the bubbling mud pots providing a guttural soundtrack to my journey. It felt like the planet was breathing, a slow respiration that vibrated through the soles of my shoes.
I found myself standing at the edge of a dormant crater, looking down into a lake of turquoise water surrounded by walls of black ash. The silence here was different from the silence of the salt flats. In Bolivia, the silence was empty. In Iceland, the silence was heavy, filled with the latent energy of the magma churning miles below. It was a reminder that the ground we trust is merely a thin crust over a boiling cauldron.
The psychology of the lava field
Walking across a lava field requires a different kind of attention. Every step must be calculated. The rock can be sharp enough to slice through leather, and the terrain is unpredictable. This forced me into a state of total presence. I could not think about the past or the future; I could only think about where my foot would land next. This is the hidden power of the scenery: it demands a specific mental state.
I spent three days hiking through the interior with nothing but a tent and a map. The solitude became a mirror. Without the distractions of society, my thoughts became louder. I began to process old griefs and forgotten ambitions. The volcanic landscapes acted as a catalyst. There is something about the scale of a volcano that makes personal problems seem trivial. When you are standing next to a mountain created by a cataclysmic eruption, anxiety about a missed deadline or a failed relationship feels absurd. The earth does not care about your deadlines. It only cares about the slow movement of tectonic plates.
The architecture of solitude
Solo travel is often framed as a way to meet new people, but for me, it has always been about the opposite. It is about the luxury of not having to perform. When you travel with others, you are always a version of yourself that is being perceived. You negotiate your experiences, agreeing on when to eat, where to stop, and how to feel about a view.
In my solo travel diary, the entries are honest because there was no one to impress. I recorded the moments of sheer terror when I got lost in a fog bank in the highlands and the moments of euphoria when I saw a rainbow form over a salt lake. This independence allows for a truly immersive experience. You are not just observing the landscape; you are merging with it.
The sensory bridge
I started to notice a pattern in these alien worlds. Whether it was the blinding white of the salt or the oppressive black of the basalt, both landscapes stripped away the non-essential. They removed the visual clutter of the modern world, such as signs, wires, and crowds. What remained were the primary colors of existence: light, dark, heat, and cold.
I remember a specific moment in the highlands of Iceland where I stopped to drink water from a glacial stream. The water was so cold it felt like needles in my throat. I could taste the minerals and the ancient ice that had been frozen for ten thousand years. In that moment, I felt a bridge forming between my small life and the deep time of the planet. This is the essence of the journey. It is the realization that we are not separate from nature, but a very small part of it.
Facing the void
There is a fear that comes with this kind of travel. It is the fear of the void. When you are in a place that looks like another planet, you realize how fragile the systems are that keep us alive. A few degrees of temperature change, a lack of oxygen, or a sudden shift in weather can make the landscape lethal. This fragility creates a heightened sense of awareness. You notice the way the wind changes direction before a storm or the subtle shift in the color of the clouds. You become a student of the environment because your survival depends on it.
This awareness is where personal growth happens. By placing myself in environments that were indifferent to my existence, I learned how to rely on my own intuition. I learned that panic is a luxury I could not afford. I learned how to find peace in the middle of a wasteland. The experience is not just a visual feast; it is a psychological training ground. For those venturing into such isolation, the art of disappearing provides a framework for ethical solo exploration.
The return to the ordinary
Coming back from these places is the hardest part. The transition from an alien world to a suburban street is a violent jolt. I remember landing back in a major city after a month of solitude and feeling an immediate sense of claustrophobia. The noise of the traffic sounded like a scream. The colors of the buildings looked fake compared to the raw honesty of the salt and the stone.
However, the journey does not end when the plane lands. The goal is to bring the perspective of the void back into the ordinary. I found that I could carry the silence of the Salar de Uyuni with me into the chaos of my daily life. When the world felt too loud, I would close my eyes and remember the feeling of the white horizon. I would recall the smell of sulfur and the sight of the neon-green moss on black rock.
Integrating the experience
I began to apply the lessons of the lava fields to my professional and personal life. The ability to remain present, to calculate the next step without panic, and to accept one's own insignificance are useful tools. I stopped sweating the small things. I started looking for the surreal in the mundane. I realized that you do not actually have to go to another planet to feel like a space traveler; you just have to change the way you perceive the one you are on.
Personal narratives are the only way to truly communicate the impact of a place. A list of coordinates and weather patterns is data. A story about the way the light hit the salt at 4 AM is an experience. By sharing the emotional journey, we invite others to look beyond the tourist brochures and seek out the places that challenge them.
The philosophy of the alien landscape
Why are we drawn to these desolate places? Why do we seek out the salt flats and the volcanic wastes? I believe it is because these landscapes represent the truth of the universe. The universe is mostly void. It is mostly cold, dark, and indifferent. Our cities and gardens are the anomalies. The alien worlds on Earth are the only places where we can glimpse the reality of the cosmos without leaving the safety of our atmosphere.
When I look back at my solo travel diary, I see a map of my own evolution. Each destination was a different lesson. Bolivia taught me about the beauty of emptiness and the power of reflection. Iceland taught me about resilience and the necessity of presence. Together, they formed a curriculum in humility.
The role of solitude
Solitude is the catalyst that turns a trip into a journey. Without the silence, the sensory details are drowned out. You do not hear the salt snap if you are talking to a companion. You do not feel the vibration of the volcano if you are coordinating a group itinerary. Solitude forces you to engage with the landscape on its own terms. It removes the buffer between the observer and the observed.
For anyone seeking a surreal nature experience, my advice is to go alone, at least for a portion of the trip. Allow yourself to be bored. Allow yourself to be slightly afraid. Allow yourself to feel the crushing weight of the horizon. This is where the real discovery happens. You do not find the alien world; you find the alien part of yourself, the part that is capable of wonder, endurance, and peace in the face of the unknown.
Practical steps for the aspiring space traveler
If you feel the pull of these landscapes, you do not need a rocket ship. You only need a willingness to leave the paved road. To find your own alien world, start by looking for the margins of the map. Look for the places that are described as desolate, barren, or inhospitable. Those are the places where the veil is thinnest.
Choosing your destination
Depending on what you need emotionally, choose your landscape. If you need clarity and a sense of infinite possibility, head for the salt flats or the high deserts. The brightness and the openness will strip away your mental clutter. If you need to feel the power of creation and destruction, head for the volcanic regions. The darkness and the heat will ground you in the physical reality of the earth.
Preparing for the void
Prepare your gear, but more importantly, prepare your mind. Accept that you will be uncomfortable and lonely. The discomfort is not a bug in the system; it is the feature. The friction of the environment is what polishes the soul. Bring a journal, not just for the facts of the day, but for the shifting textures of your mood. Record the smells, the sounds, and the way the light changes. This is how you turn a vacation into a project.
Embracing the silence
Once you arrive, the hardest part will be the first few days of silence. Your brain will fight it. It will try to fill the void with noise, anxiety, and the urge to check your phone. Push through that. Wait for the moment when the noise stops and the landscape begins to speak. That is the moment you have officially left Earth and arrived on another planet.
Summary of the journey
Walking on other planets is a practice in perspective. From the mirrored plains of Bolivia to the obsidian fields of Iceland, the experience is one of shedding the ego. By seeking out a surreal nature experience through solo travel, we confront the scale of the universe and our place within it. The result is not a feeling of loneliness, but a feeling of connection, a realization that we are made of the same stardust and minerals as the salt and the lava.
To replicate this journey, focus on solitude, sensory awareness, and a willingness to embrace the inhospitable. The alien worlds are waiting, and they have much to tell those who are willing to listen to the silence.
Practical steps for the aspiring space traveler
If you feel the pull of these landscapes, you do not need a rocket ship. You only need a willingness to leave the paved road. To find your own alien world, start by looking for the margins of the map. Look for the places that are described as desolate, barren, or inhospitable. Those are the places where the veil is thinnest. For those planning their own route, the psychology of the open road can help prepare you for the mental shift required for such journeys.
Choosing your destination
Depending on what you need emotionally, choose your landscape. If you need clarity and a sense of infinite possibility, head for the salt flats or the high deserts. The brightness and the openness will strip away your mental clutter. If you need to feel the power of creation and destruction, head for the volcanic regions. The darkness and the heat will ground you in the physical reality of the earth.
Preparing for the void
Prepare your gear, but more importantly, prepare your mind. Accept that you will be uncomfortable and lonely. The discomfort is not a bug in the system; it is the feature. The friction of the environment is what polishes the soul. Bring a journal, not just for the facts of the day, but for the shifting textures of your mood. Record the smells, the sounds, and the way the light changes. This is how you turn a vacation into a project.
Embracing the silence
Once you arrive, the hardest part will be the first few days of silence. Your brain will fight it. It will try to fill the void with noise, anxiety, and the urge to check your phone. Push through that. Wait for the moment when the noise stops and the landscape begins to speak. That is the moment you have officially left Earth and arrived on another planet.