
“Some dreams wait patiently. Others push until you’re ready. The West Highland Way was both.”
‘The Dream That Sat on a Shelf‘
For years, I had romanticized the idea of walking the West Highland Way — a legendary long-distance trail stretching through the Scottish Highlands. During the pandemic, like many others, I started dreaming bigger while stuck indoors. I made a list of long-distance hikes, and at the top sat the West Highland Way. I even planned it out in detail… and then left it sitting on a shelf for two years.
Finally came the time I could make this dream a reality.
From Planning to Panic: When It Got Real
I had a freer week, the courage to commit, and a growing need to reconnect with something raw and real. I started planning seriously: mapping out the trail, calculating daily distances, booking time off work, and reserving campsites. The more tangible the plan became, the more real the challenge felt.
Suddenly, it wasn’t just a romantic idea. I was going to walk over 100 kilometers alone, carrying all my gear on my back. That realization hit hard. What would I pack? Could I handle the weight? Would I be safe on my own?
And there it was — the fear. Quiet, creeping, and relentless.
‘Wild Camping… Or Not Quite Yet‘
I had originally wanted to wild camp along the route. But the more I researched, the more unsure I became. Would I find a safe, discreet spot? Would I feel vulnerable alone in the wild? In the end, I filled even the final “let’s see what happens” night with a pre-booked campsite. I wasn’t ready to fully embrace wild camping — not yet.
Once I was actually on the trail, though, I quickly realized how many of those fears had been unnecessary. Still, facing the exposed landscape and unpredictable Scottish weather was no small thing. At the time, even staying in a tent at a site felt like a huge leap. But I also learned something important: it’s okay to take it step by step. Next time, wild camping will be part of my journey — I know that now.
‘Fear, Gear, and What-Ifs‘
The night before I left was the hardest part of the whole trip. My nerves were very present. Scotland might be my home now, but it’s still a land filled with unfamiliar corners — and I was about to walk through many of them, alone, for days.
I hadn’t pitched my tent before. I hadn’t tested sleeping in it. I had never hiked so far alone. And those questions started running wild:
- What if something goes wrong?
- What if I meet the wrong person?
- What if I can’t handle the weather?
- What if I just… can’t do it?
All the conditioning we carry — especially as women moving through the world alone — came rushing up. It wasn’t just fear of the unknown. It was the burden of a lifetime of “what ifs.”
It is not to say one shouldn’t be careful, but I realized something else that night: my mind tends to swing between extremes. I either overthink every single detail, or I leap in with barely a plan. With time, I’ve learned to find a middle ground — to prepare mindfully without letting fear take the wheel.
“I’ve learned that fear doesn’t mean I shouldn’t go — it means the journey matters.”
‘How I Deal with Fear (And Still Go Anyway)‘
So how do we move forward when fear shows up?
I’ve always felt deeply afraid before taking a leap. But I’ve also always jumped. That fear never fully goes away, but I’ve learned to listen to the quieter voice beneath it — the adventurous one, the curious one, the one who still believes in possibilities.
That night before my journey, I chose to listen to her.
Because she deserves to be heard.
Because she’s the part of me — and of all of us — that knows freedom.
And so, I went.
“We all carry fear. But we also carry the part of us that still wants to jump.”
You can find full story and more on my YouTube Channel -> @evainscotland
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