Student Traveler
Aug 2 2006, 03:12 PM
Why do you travel? For me, it's a matter of learning and experiencing things.
It's been said that people tend to die within the same 25-mile radius they grew up in. I don't know yet if this will apply to me, or if I want it to. What I do know is that besides what find out in school and from various media outlets, I'm basically ignorant. I could study a culture or history of a country my whole life and still not know a whole lot about it. I wouldn't know what it's like to live there: to hike the beaten paths, catch the metros or interact with the people. This is why I travel.
Learning makes life a richer experience, however short or long it might last. Being knowledgeable about other worlds - even my own - instills a sense of satisfaction that can't be obtained from simply spectating through the Internet or by reading about them in books. Getting out and traveling is the only way to do this.
Where ever I wind up when I'm older, I hope that I will have learned a lot through that point. And even though I could take classes until I'm dead, sometimes you just have to be there to know. Any one else? Why do you all travel?
ScottWoz
Aug 2 2006, 10:19 PM
Hey there Student Traveler,
Seems to me you've got it pretty accurate, and I really hope you make it happen.
Ok, here's my two cents...
You're absolutely right. 'Being there' will give you the experience, the insight, and stimulation of the senses that you'll never get in the classroom. You'll feel the awe, the wonder, you'll get first hand experience of the sights, the smells, the tastes and you'll feel the whole atmosphere envelope around you. At times you'll feel overwhelmed and at times you'll be appalled. You'll look deep into the eyes of others and see their joy, or their suffering. You will grow, in unthinkable ways.
But all this isn't to say that there is no substitute for travelling. Many people don't travel. Many simply can't, for whatever reason, but they still get a hell of a lot from learning about other cultures and countries and sharing in the joys and wonder that it all brings. And we must never forget those who get to learn life's most valuable lessons and become wise and wonderful giving people - without ever leaving their own backyard. Then compare this to the people who've travelled the world over and still just don't 'get it'.
The 'lesson' is
life, and our only hope is that we can learn as much about it as we can so that we can contribute and improve other people's...
Jessica_CDN
Aug 3 2006, 10:05 AM
Hmm...if I die in a 25 mile radius of where I grew up....well, I don't think that's geographically possible!
I grew up travelling - we moved every three years - was born in Germany, moved all around Canada, and then down to the states for a bit - back to Germany in there of course...it was a great experience! I don't think there's been a year in my life when I haven't left Canada. Truly a great life!
I learn SOOO much while travelling. I always look at myself and think that I could use more "life lessons". Got loads of education in me, but am still learning life's lessons - and what better way to do it than in different cultures???
I love meeting new people - it's life-affirming to find out time and again that we're all fundamentally the same....the same things motivate and scare us - we have the same feelings, and often the same dreams. Kinda makes you wonder why we can't all just get along???
uncle_davros
Aug 5 2006, 01:06 AM
Because there is more to life than what is in your own backyard
And
The grass is always greener on the otherside
whereshegoes
Jul 30 2007, 01:01 PM
I am a traveler who goes just to see. I like to explore the unknown.
And they best reason when one asks me why I do anything in life...Why not?
anywherebuthere
Jul 30 2007, 05:54 PM
I travel because I need proof that other countries exist. by travelling I validate their existence.
Until I see or touch something I never know 100% if it is real or not.
When I was younger I would never leave an important/famous building without using the facilities. It is like signing the guest book.
occidenoir
Jul 30 2007, 06:30 PM
QUOTE(ScottWoz @ Aug 2 2006, 10:19 PM)

The 'lesson' is
life, and our only hope is that we can learn as much about it as we can so that we can contribute and improve other people's...

I think that nails it for me. You can learn far more - about yourself, about others, about the nature of the human condition - from traveling than any other classroom I can think of.
Of course, I think the challenge for the modern traveler is not only to remain open-minded and humble enough to learn from the experience, but to find the experience itself. But for its benefits, capitalism has really mucked up how we travel. I firmly believe that jets and airlines have sucked the soul out of traveling, but the problems don't stop once we get there. Once we've arrived, we have to get past all the tourist traps and glossed-over bits to find the real essence of a place. It's always been that way (
Even Herodotus & Pliny had their problems with bad tour guides, I think), but I think it's an even bigger challenge for the modern traveler.
Not that traveling really sucks beans. Traveling is still great, and nothing could stop me from planning my next trip. Except maybe ludicrous gas prices.
Of course, travelers have been having that conversation for a really long time, but it's always good to remind oneself of the joys of traveling. At the very least, it inspires some planning for the next adventure.
introducinlyric
Jul 30 2007, 08:21 PM
QUOTE
I travel because I need proof that other countries exist. by travelling I validate their existence.
i love this by anywherebuthere its so true, love it!
to answer the question. i travel simply for the ebb and flow of it : motion, be it simple meandering or planned
introducinlyric
Aug 1 2007, 11:11 PM
to escape
charlamae
Aug 3 2007, 09:13 PM
I originally started travelling because I come from a very boring city, where everyone knows everyone. I didn't want to end up staying there my whole life, so I started to find reasons to escape.
Now I travel because it allows me to find such joy in everyday things. I am much more accepting of people and their differences now than I ever was. I am able to laugh anything off because my travelling makes me see that in the big scheme of things, the miniscule things that could go wrong in my life pale in comparison to what some people face every day (and seemingly always with a big smile on their face). The whole thing just gives me this very zen-like feeling. Difficult to explain ...
And I love meeting people! My husband and I just did the biggest trip we've ever done and sometimes we would be alone for days, and I would start to be very sullen (I am normally quite bubbly and happy). I explained that I needed my "battery charged", and the only way for me to "charge my battery" was to have thoughtful, mind-broadening experiences with other people. He was so cute on our trip, asking every day if my "battery had been charged enough". So sweet!
I'm probably not explaining this very well, but i hope someone understands what I was trying to say!
kitkatgo
Aug 4 2007, 04:02 PM
Well, at a fundamental level, I travel because I am given the opportunity to do so (my dh travels for business). But on a much deeper level, I travel because it is such a broadening experience and because I love adventure.
While you can learn facts and figures from books, there's nothing like tasting the food, or hearing the language spoken or seeing the sights yourself! When you are THERE every sense is awakened to that culture and you can't help but be enriched by it.
~Kit
ScottWoz
Aug 6 2007, 02:03 AM
..because every waking day is a revelation. Every day is different. Every day is a new adventure. Every day is a gift. Change keeps us alive, so why settle for less? Life passes us by in an instant, if only more people would realise it. When my time is up I want the grim reaper to fall asleep while my life flashes in front of my eyes. That's exactly why I do what I do..
whereshegoes
Aug 6 2007, 09:41 AM
Hey Sam! Good to see you here again and in a good tone of voice
So, did you read the last newletter? I wrote specifically about this topic so it may be of interest for you.
July NewsletterI travel to learn. That's the best answer I can give. And I thought what Scott said was very pretty. I can write like that when I am traveling too. I find it harder when I am not traveling. So another reason is that traveling makes me a better person.
introducinlyric
Aug 6 2007, 11:31 PM
isn't there a topic exactly like this one called "why do you travel"
wakingdream
Aug 7 2007, 01:00 PM
To unwrap the layers of life. Staying on the surface cultivates nothing but discontentment. We all seek our true meaning whether we know it or not and looking for it is part of life's sojourn. Our destiny is not to stay in one place, rather, to discover what's out there and learn from it.
bsuarez
Aug 13 2007, 07:02 PM
I've always been travelling in my life to go back to see family and in fact I was born in a different country when my parents were doing a short stint working abroad. I had to fly at six months just to get back home.
I used to travel "to see new things" but I've since realized that those original trips to Europe were done because I wanted to get away from home and be my own person. I thought I was travelling to find myself, but I know that I never needed to leave home to do such a thing. I was escaping through travel and would wait the entire year just to have the feeling of being someone different.
I am more comfortable with my own skin and I've become more passionate about things. I continue to travel, but I am doing so to experience different cultures. I've learned a lot about politics and modes of communication through my latest travelling experiences and I've met a lot of amazing people - travellers and locals. I can also be spontaneous when I travel and I love the thrill of making wrong turns and getting lost.
And now I travel for photography now that I have a decent camera.
exploreamerica
Aug 17 2007, 01:36 PM
There is a huge difference between traveling in your own country vs an entirely different continent. I am sure I share most everyone's sentiments that in traveling aborad you experience a culture, opinions and traditions that are different than your own. if you enjoy traveling then you welcome these things and in turn learn more abbout yourself and grow. I love that and am constantly excited to make another overseas trip to a new country to learn more about others and in turn more about myself. Furthermore I am an avid history buff and I LOVE to SEE thousands of years of history.
Now, I feel sad for people who think traveling means leaving their own coountry. I think that includes almost everyone. Ask someone where they want to go and they will tell you a place in another country. It can be just as meaningful and rewarding to see your own country (in entirely different ways than your overseas experience). Being from the U.S. I see this all the time. I just returned from a 13,000 mile road trip here and would talk to the locals who never visited or sometimes even heard of the things in their own backyard. Being a fan of history I try to visit every one of the 400 national parks/sites/battlefields/etc, and those are the sites that many people have never even seen. They tell the story of our own country (even if it is just a hiccuup of time compared to Europe, Asia and Africa). How does someone say they have seen the U.S. just because they saw Callifornia and New York? And for beauty I think the U.S. is one of the best. Yellowstone, Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Olympic National Park, the Channel Islands!!!
So, why do I travel? To learn about cultures in other countries as well as mine. To see nature's beauty in other countires and my own. To view and learn aboout history of the world and my country.
helloall
Aug 24 2007, 03:00 AM
I travel because it gives me a welcome break from day to day routine life. Also, it helps to see and mearn more about interesting sites.
spspecial
Aug 24 2007, 03:17 AM
Completely agree with Scott..
Travelling among people with different cultures ,customs and rituals gives life a new meaning.. To communicate with people who can't understand your language ... its all a thrilling feeling!
To go out and meet new people is always a challenge. To sum up, traveling gives me a chance to discover myself
semi-backpacker
Sep 21 2007, 04:03 PM
I travel because every new place I visit and every new person I meet enriches me in a way that staying at home just can't. Every time I travel, I feel I am living life to the fullest and doing exactly what I'm supposed to be doing at this time in my life.
http://www.travelpod.com/members/semi-backpackerEven though I am relatively new at blogging, I have been traveling all my life.
rbisset
Sep 25 2007, 11:13 AM
To escape the mundane 9-to-5 life at home! Got so bored last night I came up with a plan of action for escaping Blighty!
wakingdream
Sep 25 2007, 12:23 PM
QUOTE
Got so bored last night I came up with a plan of action for escaping Blighty!
Right on Rich! Sounds like something really awesome came out of your boredom!
rbisset
Sep 25 2007, 12:54 PM
Lets just say it'd be a hardcore (mainly) overland epic if it comes off! At least it set me a target date to aim for, sadly that start date wasn't until April 2009!! I really need a raise at work!!
Also I may actually be able to travel pretty cheaply with this plan as alcohol would be out of the question for almost 6 months!!!!!!!
laorfamily
Sep 25 2007, 01:10 PM
The same reason a dog licks its balls ... because he can
rbisset
Sep 25 2007, 01:12 PM
QUOTE(laorfamily @ Sep 25 2007, 07:10 PM)

The same reason a dog licks its balls ... because he can

We have a winner!!!
toekoms-hoop
Sep 25 2007, 01:26 PM
Although I haven’t travelled yet, I am travelling to Ghana in under two weeks what motivated me was to push my boundaries to stop living with contentment and to search for happiness and fill my days with challenges and to learn more about the cultures that fascinate me.
em
koreaismagical
Dec 11 2007, 06:09 AM
Because of the beautiful place.
and oh the culture.
rbisset
Dec 11 2007, 10:10 AM
Umm sitting around in a broken down car on the A3 today for 3 hours in freezing temperatures waiting for the bloody AA to turn up, looking at the planes flying overhead and dreaming I was somewhere warmer. Sadly I had to fork out £90 for a tow and no doubt £500 for an old banger of a car!! No travel for me for a while
sianeth
Dec 11 2007, 05:23 PM
Ahhh mate - it may not be as bad as you think. My car broke down in the middle of this massive junction coming out of uni the other day - blocking all the traffic, and I sat there freezing for 2 hours waiting for the AA to come and rescue me... turns out it was only the fan belt and they fixed it for 30 quid... I was well impressed! Rubbish car aswell, but I'm still on the road, hurrah!
ScottWoz
Dec 11 2007, 09:45 PM
Rich, I feel ya man. I pulled up yesterday in Fremantle (just 15k's short of my 5,000k+ mission) and noticed I'd got a nice shiny screw embedded right in my rear tyre. Would you believe it? Four hours and a world of hassle on the phone to RACV and I eventually get towed to a motel in the middle of nowhere, then a second tow in the morning to a Suzuki dealer for a brand new $270 tyre. The joys of being on the road..
toddsangel
Dec 12 2007, 10:20 PM
to get out and have fun
travelmonster
Dec 16 2007, 01:06 PM
Because it makes me feel alive.
branefatboy
Dec 24 2007, 05:45 AM
becasue i have a promise given to myself that i will visit atlist 5 continets
by the way i have not started my jurney yet
luckyscout
Feb 13 2008, 09:55 PM
Love to travel just to do it!! See quote on my blog. Also enjoy being in new interesting places where I don't always know what will happen next. The world is small and also because it is there so therefore I travel!!
starlagurl
Jun 4 2008, 09:10 AM
We've all got reasons for traveling, what are yours?
donyan
Jun 4 2008, 10:00 AM
QUOTE(starlagurl @ Jun 4 2008, 09:10 AM)

We've all got reasons for traveling, what are yours?
Good morning in this morning, Starlagurl:
I started with my family on railroad movements in ocupied France

then it became a mater of survival, then economics took over and finally it became a habit.
Now I am adicted

: not so much as an international traveler but more of a local traveler: visiting jungles, litle towns & villages, working with my mobile automotive shop
(beimg a barefoot mechanic on wheels
) and it's my destiny it seems: this is the travel of my life! no

yet
(I hope!)I like small human comunities, travelers, voyagers
(tourists NO!) and retired foreigners, exiles...all derelicts, drifters and "primitive"
(very poor name!) cultures
I guess, my main reason is:
I LIKE IT!!!
donYanPD.-I was armchair adventurer: now my WANDERER status is BEST!
starlagurl
Jun 4 2008, 10:02 AM
Hey cool! My best friend's dad is a portable machinist! Almost the same job. He goes to Central and South America all the time, making gobs of money.
travelmonster
Jun 5 2008, 02:27 PM
It's an integral part of who I am - I cannot imagine my life without it.
starlagurl
Jun 5 2008, 02:35 PM
Very interesting. Why is that? When did that feeling start?
travelmonster
Jun 5 2008, 02:49 PM
Well, I'd like to say that its always been there - and maybe it was on some level and I just hadn't discovered it - but the first time it REALLY hit me was in I think 1997.
I went to Kenya with my first husband - we stayed in this hotel on the Mombassa coast - I really wanted to go on safari and talked him into a three day safari going from the hotel we were staying in. When we got on safari, he wasn't really interested at all - choosing even not to go on some of the game drives. I loved absolutely every minute of it and we went back to the coastal hotel at the end of it and I managed to talk him into another 2 day safari later in the holiday. We went again and he said he had an upset stomach and stayed in the lodge all the time, so I had the safari guide to myself for the two days and went alone. I don't know what happened to me on those two days - but that was it, that's when it clicked. We went back to the hotel again and there was a one day safari a few days later - which again I managed to talk him into doing - we went on it, but I spent much of the time thinking 'this is all wrong' - I couldn't imagine my life talking someone into doing something all the time. When we came home I knew that I was never going on another trip like that again with him and I just had this great yearning to do more, see more, experience more - don't know where it came from, but its never gone away!!!
I have always maintained from that day forward that I was going on another safari to do it 'properly' and finally in October this year I will be doing just that!!!!
starlagurl
Jun 5 2008, 02:58 PM
That's really cool.. and now you have a new husband, who I'm going to assume likes the safari...
travelmonster
Jun 5 2008, 03:02 PM
Yes, I left that husband a few months after we got back!!! There you go - who says travel doesn't change you

Yes, now I have the most wonderful husband who - although he had never travelled before he met me - has caught the bug and loves it every bit as much as I do. If he hadn't shown signs of it early on - he never would have made husband status - that may sound harsh, but its true.
He hasn't been on safari before, but I just know he's gonna love it - he's open to anything I suggest and thats so important to me.
starlagurl
Jun 5 2008, 03:04 PM
Wow...interesting because I did the same thing. Went on a trip, which sucked, I realized me and my ex were totally different people, we came back and then I left him too! ... weiiiird
travelmonster
Jun 5 2008, 03:08 PM
Yeah strange. I couldn't be with anyone who doesn't like the same things in travel as I do - it has to lead to someone being frustrated with what they are doing and that can never end happily.
starlagurl
Jun 5 2008, 03:10 PM
Yeah seriously. I need to date more hippies.
travelmonster
Jun 5 2008, 03:13 PM
Why?
starlagurl
Jun 5 2008, 03:15 PM
Hahaha because they like to travel in the same way that I do. Which usually means, walking everywhere. I mean EVERYWHERE.
travelmonster
Jun 5 2008, 03:20 PM
Does that mean you like to stay in one place if you go somewhere? As in go to a city and just walk in every direction?
starlagurl
Jun 5 2008, 03:21 PM
Ummmmmm no not necessarily... but yeah, that is a nice way to do it. Leave your bags at the place where you're staying and then walk all day.
travelmonster
Jun 5 2008, 03:41 PM
Whats your reason for travelling anyways?
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