Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Friday, January 17, 2014

The 16 Reasons You Need To Drop Everything And Travel Right Now

There’s a characteristic of our generation that can only be described as severe restlessness. I am not specifically referring to the number of friends you have who are prescribed Adderall; although that’s definitely another cultural trend I could discuss in length. What I’m talking about is a restlessness of the soul, the wandering spirit, a culture of nomads.
We’ve been bred on this notion that we are going to do it differently than our parents; we’ll be adventurous, experience life to the fullest. We’ve sat over lunch with our friends choosing our post-graduation plans, always teetering over the line of what we knew as the safe choice and what we knew as the adventurous, spirited one. We talked about living in Brazil in a house by the beach, spending days on the hammock and driving taxis at night.
We thought about moving to London, buying expensive rain gear and renting a studio on Piccadilly Circus. Of course every woman dreams of giving it all up and finding a cozy flat with a view of the Champs-Élysées, spending weekends sitting in corner cafes and eating macarons by Place de la Concorde. But reality always sets in and ruins the daydream.
Many of us have chosen the road more traveled, giving into the societal pressures of securing a job and a 401k. We’ve resigned ourselves to desks with a window seat, looking out on the cold streets of our increasingly disillusioned present. Sometimes, in between deadlines and Facebook stalkings, we find ourselves thinking about that corner bistro in Paris or the cozy hammock in Brazil. We let our minds wander to the wet streets of London and the architectural beauty of Prague. Then we begin to wonder, “What the hell am I still doing here?”
Whether you have this realization once a month, once a week or even once a day, it’s one too many. Your life is fleeting, and your youth will pass even quicker. You are too young to be settling for the nine-to-five, and there should be nothing holding you back from doing what your innermost urges tell you. So stop whining to all your friends and be the adult you claim to be; buy yourself the next ticket to anywhere.

You’re young

Life moves fast and there is no better time to pursue those inner urges than in your 20s. This is the freest you will ever be, unshackled by the chains of mortgages, insurance policies and general responsibility. You are responsible to no one but yourself and your own whims. Now is the time to stay up until 5 am as the waves of the Moroccan beach spray your tanned, toned body. Now is the time to eat whale testicle at a local dock in Seoul. Now is the time to fall in love with everything and anything.

You’re more willing to take risks

With less to lose, there’s more to gain. Life is about moving outside your comfort zones, about embracing the present moment, even if it scares the sh*t out of you. Right now is the time for you to meet Spanish strangers at a café and let them whisk you off to a party in the Latina quarter of Madrid. Only now will you rent a moped in Thailand for five dollars with absolutely no idea where to go. It’s these years that you’re supposed to make mistakes, get into trouble and learn to live life as openly as possible.

To be inspired

There’s a reason that some of the most influential and greatest artists of American literature spent their most creative years in Europe. There’s nothing more inspiring or life-changing than being engulfed in the beauty and culture of another world, another life. The colors, the smells, the people, the architecture, the squares of another city are enough to renew your soul and ignite your inhibitions. Besides, how else are you supposed to write your novels?

To humble yourself

It’s a valuable life lesson to live as the exile, the foreigner. In no other time or point in your life will you feel the cutting chill of being the outsider as you will living in a country that isn’t your own. You’re the new guy, the tourist no one takes seriously, and that will not only humble you, but give you a sense of empathy you never had before. It’s this grounding that will make you a better person, a more well-rounded person who will come home with a larger sense of what it means to be alive.

For the stories

A wise person once told me that life is a collection of experiences. Your life, and the legacy you leave, will be as full or as empty as you make it. Don’t you want to be one of those older people with countless stories of their youth spent traveling through the Arabian desert or hitchhiking from France to Spain? Don’t you want to tell your friends about the six months you spent living with a Spaniard, sipping sangria and learning to salsa dance?

For the friends who will play ambassadors

The people you meet abroad will play foreign ambassadors for the rest of your life. You will find yourself developing relationships in obscure corners of the world, conversing with people with different ideals, languages and cultures. You will find yourself with connections all over the world, coming back home only to know you now have friends all over the world. Next time you go to Sweden or Australia, you’ll not only have a place to stay, but a friend to show you the real parts of that country.

For the romance

If you’re in a sexual rut, there’s no better reason to pack up and head for somewhere new. Only in Europe can you play out your wildest fantasies of moonlit dinners at bistro cafés by candlelight. Only in South America can you go dancing with a man who whispers sweet nothings in your ear in a language you only understand through the longing of his words. Only somewhere else can you be whoever you want and let your inhibitions fall to the wayside. Shack up with an Italian for a few weeks and let yourself enjoy the idea that it doesn’t matter what, or who, you do while you’re “just visiting.”

For the food

Is there any better reason to travel than for the food? Seriously, how many days are you going to settle for Chipotle before you realize you could get four Spanish burritos that actually taste like “the original”? Don’t you want to try a real croissant? Who knows, maybe you’ll learn how to make paella or find some Italian cookies you’ll have imported to the US for the rest of your life. (Then you’ll be able to tell people you found the most delicious cookies in Sicily, and now you just have to get them shipped.)

To find yourself

There’s no better way to find yourself than to disappear from the daily grind and get lost somewhere along the Atlantic. Only once you remove yourself from the familiar can you find the truth. Only when you are abroad can you see your past life, your home, with a renewed sense of clarity. Going abroad gives you the time, space and moments of solitude you need for self evaluation and exploration.

Because once is never enough

Even if you went abroad in college, or spent two weeks in Europe after graduation, those memories will never be enough to satiate the longing in your soul. There is only so much you can take in, so many things you can do when you’re with your family on vacation or gaggle of friends. You need to see everything, do everything, again. It’s time to do it the right way, on your own. Because it could take a lifetime to be truly fulfilled by everything the world has to offer and those few times you went abroad should only make you thirsty for more.

For the perspective

A change of perspective is like taking a long deep breath after a long day. It’s important to change things up in life, to look at things from another angle, another way. Only going abroad will give you the distance you need to see your life from a renewed lens. Seeing another way of life is a great way to learn to appreciate your old one. Spending six months trying to communicate in another language will teach you to appreciate your own language and the capacity of those words. Because it’s not until you’ve begun missing home that you truly start appreciating it.

For your soul

Hemingway described Paris as a “moveable feast” and “wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you.” The notorious writer set the standard for embracing life abroad, letting it become part of you. Because even when you go home, part of you will forever be changed by the experiences and renewed sense of self that comes with leaving everything behind and starting anew.

To gain strength

Strength comes from overcoming fears, inhibitions and facing situations that aren’t always within your comfort zone. Only once you’ve left the familiar can you begin to challenge yourself. They say that the strongest people are the ones who faced adversity head on and came out the other end. Only once you’ve been in a situation where you had to dig deep down and find a strength you didn’t know you had can you call yourself a stronger person.

To be an explorer

Why can’t you be the one who sets the trends, the one with the unique style who always has those one-of-a-kind pieces? Why can’t you find that pair of lambskin boots in the mountains of Switzerland from a local farmer’s wife or that spice that’s only grown in the farms of south east Asia. Life is about tasting, trying and finding new things, new experiences and new lessons.

To fall in love

Life is about falling in love with everything. It’s about finding a sense of comfort in a local café or that overwhelming sense of comfort that comes with connecting with a painting at the Prado. It’s about seeing and loving everything as if it’s the first and last time. Only when you’ve left and sought the comforts of another place can you experience the overwhelming joy of falling in love with everything around you for the first time.

To appreciate the moments

Only when you’ve sat at a café in Paris for two hours, watching the people and reading your favorite book that you learn to appreciate the small moments in life. It’s the rolling mountains and the busy outdoor markets of Barcelona that should take your breath away. It’s the miles of rice patties beneath the soft glow of the setting sun that should assuage the aching in your restless soul and introduce you to the simple pleasures that life can bring. Only when you’ve learned to live in the moment, seeing and taking in every second of the now, can you truly say you’ve lived life to the fullest.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

The Top 25 Places People Checked In On Facebook In 2013 Shows The Most Popular Destination In The World

The Top 25 Places People Checked In On Facebook In 2013 Shows The Most Popular Destination In The World
Going on vacation seems to be less and less about having a good time and more for checking in somewhere on social media to improve clout to those who follow our lives online.
To prove this, Facebook has listed the 25 most checked-in places on the massive social network, from Disneyland in Anaheim, California, to the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront in Cape Town, South Africa.
From sporting arenas to popular city squares, the list shows some of the most famous places all over the world.
Of the top 25 places, the common theme seems to be Disney, as four Disney theme parks made the list, from California,ParisTokyo and Hong Kong, proving people want to see Mickey Mouse and friends all over the globe.
One thing that stands out about the list is there isn’t a check-in from New York City on the list, and this may be due to the fact that there isn’t one central location in which people would check in.
Here are the top 25 places people checked in during 2013, according to Facebook:
Argentina: Puerto Madero, Buenos Aires
Australia: Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), East Melbourne, Victoria
Brazil: Parque Ibirapuera, São Paulo
Canada: Rogers Arena, Vancouver, British Columbia
Egypt: Sharm el-Sheikh, South Sinai Governorate
France: Disneyland Paris, Marne La Vallée
Germany: Reeperbahn, Hamburg
Hong Kong: Hong Kong Disneyland
Iceland: Blue Lagoon, Reykjavík
India: Harmandir Sahib (The Golden Temple)
Italy: Piazza San Marco, Venice
Japan: Disneyland, Tokyo
Mexico: Auditorio Nacional, Mexico City
Nigeria: Ikeja City Mall, Ikeja, Lagos
Poland: Temat Rzeka, Warsaw
Russia: Gorky Park of Culture and Leisure
Singapore: Marina Bay Sands
South Africa: Victoria & Alfred Waterfront
South Korea: Myungdong Street, Seoul
Spain: Las Ramblas, Barcelona, Catalonia
Sweden: Friends Arena, Solna
Taiwan: Tainan Flower Night Market, Tainan City
Turkey: Taksim Square, Istanbul
United Kingdom: The 02, London
United States: Disneyland, Anaheim, California
Via: CNN, Top Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

The Famous Hand-Holding Couple Of Instagram Is Back With New Adventures Around The World (Photos)

The Famous Hand-Holding Couple Of Instagram Is Back With New Adventures Around The World (Photos)
The couple that plans to travel the entire world is back with another amazing photo collection. Photographer Murad Osmann and his girlfriend are known for being anywhere but home and having the photos to prove it. Osmann takes photos of his girlfriend facing where they are, but never shows their faces in any of the photos.
The project is called “Follow Me To.” Destinations in the latest edition include Monaco, the Versace mansion in Miami and the Crystal Palace in Madrid. Check out the photos below.

Eze, France


Corrida, Spain


Times Square, NYC


Kings Cross Station, London


Crystal Palace, Madrid, Spain


Alhambra, Granada


Benidorm, Spain


Madrid, Spain


Barcelona, Spain


Central Park, NYC


Blue Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey


Monaco


Leandro Erlich Installation, East London


Versace Mansion, Miami, Florida


Casa Mila, Barcelona, Spain

H/T: WhuDat, Photos courtesy of Instagram/Murad Osmann

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Give Your Instagram A Vacation Too: Why You Don’t Need To Post Every Second Of Your Trip Online

Give Your Instagram A Vacation Too: Why You Don’t Need To Post Every Second Of Your Trip Online
Greetings from a grey, cold and rainy New York City. Wish you were here! Not. If there’s one thing more miserable than simply being stuck in your city over the holidays, it’s the extra punch in the stomach you get from looking at everyone’s vacation photos.
These portraits are in the same vein as the horrible, annoying images of your food, except the only audience who can savor your photography skills is yourself.
Thank you for the reminder that we are definitely not in Maui or Aruba or wherever it is you are with your toes in the sand.Hot dogs or legs? I could give zero f*cks whatever those burnt-to-a-crisp pieces of meat are because I actually have real things to contemplate, like the extra work I have to do in order to make up for your absence from the office.
Vacation photos feel especially gratuitous over the holiday season when the focus is on family and being grateful. Instagrammed pictures of palm trees and ski lodges are borderline competitive — each user trying to one-up the other with even more exotic locations. Meanwhile, for those of us stuck at home, this surge in scenic photography is a constant, painful jab that the only place we can afford to travel to is the corner bodega that doesn’t even sell sunscreen during this time of year.
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If I wanted to look at your vacation photos, I’d start following National Geographic, not the amateur abusing stock filters and frames. It doesn’t matter how many photos you post of yourself enjoying the beach and tube tops; I still won’t remember if you went to Puerto Rico or Puerto Vallarta, and I will never actually care which is the correct destination. Oh, you’re a jetsetter? Go f*ck yourself.
What’s cool? Sharing snapshots that are thoughtful, interesting and different to look at. There is nothing enjoyable about coming across a “candid” of you kissing your boyfriend through your ski masks on the chairlift. It just makes me want to take my poles and stab you with them… not to be graphic or anything. That, along with the family portraits in the desert, should be kept for your own personal archives.
I would argue that my blatantly obvious photos of myself looking fly and fierce are more compelling — at least you’re privy to my positive energy (and not to mention, you get to admire this beautiful mug all day). If you’re going to flood my news channels with shots of you on vacation, at least try to be clever about it — maybe a cultured snap of the Big Buddha inHong Kong or the sprawling landscapes of Marrakech.
I hate being the one to break this to the hundreds of privileged Millennials whose grandparents live in Florida, but posting a photo of you dressed like a mini-Miley in Miami on New Year’s Eve does not count as a novel, special or particularly fascinating Instagram. There. Glad we got this settled. Now, excuse me while I go take a mirror selfie in the dressing room…
Would you appreciate perusing through snapshots of me in winter boots, walking to work in frigid temperatures and fighting an influx of tourists on the sidewalk? (You might, actually; I’m wildly entertaining and cute in my snow bunny suit, if I do say so myself.) But, if I do the courtesy of not sharing those moments with you, do you think you could spare me the lame pictures of you holding Panda bears? I already have Google images for that, thanks.
And, a quick shout-out to the girls in bikinis who were running outside in bitter December temperatures all in preparation for this big moment on Facebook: here. Here is your recognition for your killer body — all nine words of it. Go put that in your hamburger and not eat it.
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To be honest, unless you were 30 pounds heavier over last year’s holiday vacation, you really don’t need to post your middle-of-the-winter six-pack achievement. For one thing, the jealous girls in your sorority are already making sure it’s the only thing being talked about in conjunction with bulimia, and for another, nobody else cares. That being said, if you’re hunking out down south in Miami, please feel free to send me pictures of your biceps.
What’s even worse than having to browse hundreds of postcard pictures? Having to hear every staggering detail from each returning friend over the course of the entire month of January. “I really want you to tell me about your vacation!” said no one, ever.
Do us a favor: Stay on the island you came from and don’t post photos for help. Unless, of course, you’re planning on taking us next time.
Photos courtesy: RKOI

The Best Places For Introverts To Feel Comfortable Socially

The Best Places For Introverts To Feel Comfortable Socially
For many introverts, going out to a loud club or bar is horrifying. While it’s popularly accepted that introverts don’t enjoy socializing, nothing could be further from the truth.
Maybe some people just need a bit of down time to recharge between events and don’t enjoy the overstimulation of loud, crowded venues. While getting out there and trying new things is a healthy ideal to embrace, sometimes an introvert just wants to engage in an activity that’s a bit more low-key.
Check out the list below for introvert-friendly social venues:

1. Cafés

A café is the ultimate respite for an introvert. If you need to get out of the house but want to be left alone, this is the place to go. No one will bother someone who is using a laptop or reading a book at a café. Additionally, it’s a great place to meet up with one or two people to talk or play cards. Besides, it’s a great value: buy one beverage and sit all day.

2. Movie Theater

Sometimes theaters can be crowded, but even so, the environment is relaxing and independent. But still, if you get a ticket to an older film or go to the theater on a weekday, you’re likely to find solidarity. This is also the ideal activity for introverts who are socializing in a large group. Once the film begins, all that’s required is to sit back and enjoy. Plus, you’ll have a built-in discussion topic for when the film is over.

3. Bowling Alley

Yes, bowling alleys can be loud and busy. But there’s a beauty to the bustle: you rarely have to interact with anyone outside of your lane, and it’s a fairly affordable activity.

4. Restaurant

Going out to eat is one of the simplest ways to have some low-maintenance socializing. Whether it’s alone or in a group, dining out gives you the chance to try new foods and get out of the house. And there’s no set time schedule — go at your leisure.

5. Hiking

Hiking has two main benefits: it’s a peaceful activity that evokes solidarity and it forces some endorphin-releasing exercise. It’s unlikely that you would go on a hike with a huge group of people.
Hiking alone can be a great way to see nature, spend some time with your thoughts and get away from technology for a couple of hours. Bring along a friend and hike a tougher trail so that you’ll have company, but won’t have to engage in conversation. Or, choose a relaxing trail so that you and the friend have the chance to catch up.

6. Museums

Museums are both intellectual and entertaining; they’re public, but most patrons tend to keep to themselves. Take your time to explore the exhibits. Actually read the displays and absorb the information. Before you know it, a few hours will have passed.

7. Libraries

It might seem clichéd, but if you enjoy reading, a library is truly the perfect place for an introvert. It’s quiet, not often crowded and the walls are literally lined with endless entertainment. Browse sections you love, but branch out and try a new genre as well. Sit at a table in the back and read for a few hours and if you get tired, just hop on a computer for a bit. Best news of all, library entertainment is totally free!
So there you have it: a list of introvert-friendly venues. Whether you feel like going out with others or spending some time alone, these places will get you out of the house without subjecting you to the draining effect that bars and clubs provide.