Each Friday of the ITC we’re sharing the questions for the week and some of the responses we loved. If you want to be considered for the last round up, on Tuesday, be sure you’re using the hashtag: #doyouindie when you share your post on Twitter. That’s the only way we’ll know you’re in!
This week asked about:
Your ah-ha moment
Cristina, LooknWalk[/title3]
[section]In this moving post, Cristina gets very real about how travel helped her see clearly enough to change her life:
“Summer of 2010. My ex asked me to go with him (and friends) to a mountain cabin. I was paying for both, of course. Since I was trying to salvage what was left of a very broken marriage, I agreed. We have fought all the time. On the train to Bucharest to meet our friends, at the mountain cabin, on the train back….once we came back. For me it was the last straw: I decided this whole mess had to end before I lost my sanity. That’s not how I like to travel. That’s not how I liked to be treated.”[/section]
[section]
Sitting on The Great Wall I made a big dream a reality forever changing my view of what’s possible. #DoYouIndie pic.twitter.com/vCAuSgNcKJ
— Aleya (@audaciousaleya) November 19, 2015
[/section] [section]
My first day in the Dominican Republic I realized that the world is outside my bubble, and how much I had left to see. #MyAha #DoYouIndie
— Anna Taylor (@annactaylor15) November 20, 2015
[/section] [section]
[/section]
[title2]What you’ve learned[/title2]
[section]
[/section]
[title3]Angela Koblitz, Ange’s Voyage
Dani Blanchette, Going Nomadic
- 1. Always carry your own toilet paper
- 2. Breathe
- 3. Stop and sit once in a while. Don’t do anything. Just sit and enjoy.
- 4. Check all your batteries are charged the MORNING BEFORE you travel, not 5 minutes before leaving.
- 5. Spend the money on a good thin rain coat.
- 6. Always bring at least one pair of warm socks.
- 7. Listen to yourself first. If you want to travel with jeans, do it, and screw everyone else. Otherwise you’ll be wishing the whole trip for jeans, but you won’t be able to find any you like.
- 8. Get out of your comfort zone. Voluntarily. Otherwise the universe will do it for you, when you least want it to, and aren’t prepared.
- 9. Always prepare for spiders and/or cold.
- 10. Embrace changes. They’re going to happen. Don’t fight them. Shrug your shoulder, laugh, and roll with it.
- 11. Moneybelts are a waste of money, and uncomfortable. Local’s don’t use them so why should you?
- 12. Don’t “Give the Papaya”. (Colombian saying meaning “Don’t go around flashing stuff that will attract robbers.)
- 13. Do stuff that scares you. You’ll feel like a badass after.
#Travel has taught us to enjoy the journey rather than over-plan every little detail. #DoYouIndie
— Mojito y Cafe (@mojitoycafe) November 22, 2015
What you’ve learned the hard way
No matter what your religion, culture, or language, when you #travel you will make friends wherever you go. #LessonLearned #DoYouIndie
— Culturiously (@culturiously) November 23, 2015
After a serious car accident and 4 years of intense physical therapy, I graduated with a Master’s degree in Marketing…
Posted by Culturiously on Sunday, November 22, 2015
3 things learned: Don’t mess with altitude sickness. Choose your travel buddies well. Don’t buy shaved ice from street vendors. #DoYouIndie
— Mojito y Cafe (@mojitoycafe) November 23, 2015
Rand Blimes, Because Travel
Arie, Ramblings of a Readheaded Wanderer
- If you get into an argument, ask yourself, will this matter in 20 years? If the answer is no, then it is not worth your time. If the answer is yes, then do whatever you need to kindly and respectfully.
- Respect other people. They are human too, no matter how much you may not like them or think they’re strange. This definitely applies to travel, because people in places you’ve never been are usually different than you.
- Be kind! A little kindness goes a long way, and means a lot to others.
Slowing down
Sean Keener, CEO BootsnAll
- 1) Chuck the devices away for 1 day or for a weekend. Or if you are on the road for a longer trip, put them away for a week or a month. Trust yourself, you can do it.
- 2) I’m a lucky man, and have 3 children aged 5, 3, 3. When together – I learned to “hide” the devices, including mine. It’s not an option then, and we end up having fun and learning without them.
- 3) When I’m waiting, just seeing other folks around me phrozen to their phones, reminds me to be present and slow the mind down.
Over the past 20+ years, I’ve heard countless people say they don’t have time to travel the world or do the things that they want to.
I’ve realized, we have the time, it’s a choice. We are free to choose how we spend every minute of everyday.
Indie Travel 23: I #slowtravel‘d a bit in #Uzbekistan as wedding invites kept coming my way! #DoYouIndie @BootsnAll pic.twitter.com/fovwRAXGvh
— Stephen Lioy (@slioy) November 23, 2015
Day 23 #DoYouIndie slow travel is new 2 me. The beach is the best: i pray, breathe and count my blessings @BootsnAll pic.twitter.com/isiSQuENYN
— Nellie Umutesi (@Adven_Chica) November 23, 2015
Cooking on the road
My place doesn’t have a kitchen. I save money by eating like locals. #DoYouIndie pic.twitter.com/LQo2e1JApR
— Aleya (@audaciousaleya) November 24, 2015
Working on a Cruise Ship over #thanksgiving isn’t exactly a glamorous feast #TravelTuesday #DoYouIndie #travelerlife pic.twitter.com/pxSqkTZbzC
— Kelsey Ann (@WendAwayTravel) November 24, 2015
Learning to cook a proper leg of lamb in New Zealand. #doyouindie pic.twitter.com/A102s5JpOj
— Jenn Miller (@edventuremama) November 25, 2015
Kelly Mutchler, Wanderlust & Lipstick
“Other foreign elements were added in their stead. A rickety old table with one gamy leg became the centerpiece; tabbouleh replaced mashed yams and tea cakes took over for pumpkin pie; instead of a kitchen full of loud relatives, ours bustled with semi-strangers, close friends and eight different nationalities.
It was the best Thanksgiving ever.
Though nothing resembled the event I grew up with, the spirit of the holiday remained unchanged. We shared our forks and our blessings, appreciating full stomachs and strong relationships. Absent from our families, we found comfort in the presence of others.
Someone even wore a turkey headdress.
Thanksgiving, it turns out, is an emotion we all experience, and nowhere more so than crowded around a broken table, with smiling faces and Arab salad to remind us how lucky we truly are.”
Working & traveling
Danielle Bricker,Worldsmith
“Some people may balk at the idea of patching together just enough money to get by, but having graduated into a recession, I already have to do that. I might as well find a way to have a patchwork income and a life I love.”
Right now Ebay & Craigslist help us be location independent in the US. Trying to diversify to travel consulting, freelancing etc #DoYouIndie
— Mojito y Cafe (@mojitoycafe) November 26, 2015
I work to #travel, but I love that travel is part of the job…Entertainment knows no borders #doyouindie #dancer pic.twitter.com/HQ12xtFKz4
— Kelsey Ann (@WendAwayTravel) November 25, 2015
Staying healthy
Staying healthy tip 1: Follow the crowd! If locals eat there it’s well prepared food. #DoYouIndie pic.twitter.com/vmohQn2y8d
— Aleya (@audaciousaleya) November 26, 2015
My Quarter Life Epiphany
Photo credits: Alexander Raths , Alexander Image , aphotostory , nito , Dragon Images , justsolove , Jimmy Tran , Iriana Shiyan