RobertKK wrote: » It might make one realise, people everywhere are mostly the same as people elsewhere, and there is no us and them on this planet.
coinop wrote: » This is some hippy, dope-smoking, let's all hold in a circle and sing kumbaya, clichéd nonsense. I, as a Western male, hold vastly different beliefs to a bearded jihadi living in cave in Afghanistan or a Congolese pygmy shoving a bone through his nose in the jungle. We value different things and of course you can't ignore IQ differences between populations.
Smee_Again wrote: » Some people can travel for just a few weeks or months and come back a more enlighten person
coinop wrote: » Can you elaborate and go into specifics?
Padre_Pio wrote: » What do you want? You saw some stuff, had some experiences, what did you expect to happen?
coinop wrote: » When I was a teenager, the idea of "experience" was aggressively pushed onto me. The only way I could grow up and enjoy life, I was taught, was to get a lot of experience. It would make me a mature, responsible adult. I went on to rack up a lifetimes’ worth of experience all around the world, and now that I look back at it all, I see that it was a waste. In 2007, I backpacked for six months through South America. I started in Ecuador and snaked my way through half of the continent, eventually ending up in Rio de Janeiro to celebrate Carnival. During that trip, I met hundreds of people and saw countless exotic sights. I drank in dank bars and had deep conversations with dozens of Australians about nothing. I went through six years of experience in only six months. Where is that experience now? How does it help me today outside of the specific task of taking a road trip? Spare me the meaningless platitudes like "travel helps broaden your horizons". It's fun while you're in the moment, like playing a videogame, but where are the life-changing revelations I was supposed to receive?
coinop wrote: » Spare me the meaningless platitudes like "travel helps broaden your horizons". It's fun while you're in the moment, like playing a videogame, but where are the life-changing revelations I was supposed to receive?
johnnyskeleton wrote: » Some people get life changing revelations...
coinop wrote: » Poster above said he was "enlightened" by traveling. I'm asking him to explain what he means.
Chris_5339762 wrote: » Its an experience. Its something you do to break the monotony of the 9 - 5. And if you can do it for six months to a year before you get responsibilities (a job with limited leave, a partner, kids, the need to look after elderly relatives etc) then go for it. Cos when any of those things hit, you can never do it again.
Smee_Again wrote: » Are you from a low IQ country?
McGinniesta wrote: » Our travelling days are over. We'll need vaccines dripping out of our arseholes before we can think about getting on a plane.
eviltwin wrote: » One thing I noticed when my daughter lived abroad was how more mature and self reliant she became. I suppose you have to when calling mammy and daddy every time you're in a spot of bother is no longer an option.
coinop wrote: » What are the low IQ countries?
Smee_Again wrote: » I’ve no idea. You mentioned populations, populations of what if not countries?
Sam Hain wrote: » Living and working abroad is far more rewarding than travelling or backpacking or taking a year off.