I've always been something of an agnostic on the virtues of travelling (I'll stick with the Queen's English). It was never a big priority for me, I ended up doing a reasonable amount anyway, and I remain nonplussed. The experiences were generally good, a couple were quite unique, i.e. not things I could have done at home, but I concluded that I really couldn't justify the cost for what I was getting out of it.
Most of it was at company expense with plenty of time and money to burn. For the life of me I can't see how they got their money's worth out of it either.
I see other people doing exactly the same things they'd do at home, i.e. drinking, eating, dancing, and shopping, and paying a lot more for the privilege of doing it in a different location. It's made all the more questionable thanks to the cultural homogenisation of developed and developing countries. Not to mention the uneasy feeling I have that some people are travelling with the explicit goal of making their FB profile look more impressive?
No doubt there's a small proportion of brave adventurers who are fvcking, fighting, flying and climbing their way around the world.
So, we arrive at my point. I'm suspicious of people who make a really big deal about travel, people who define themselves through it. And I can't help noticing that the more well-travelled a woman claims to be the less interesting she tends to be in conversation. It's as though a well-used passport is supposed to be an acceptable substitute for an engaging personality. Anyone else feeling me on that?
And then there's the relentless emphasis in their dating profiles on finding a travel companion. Whoa, whoa, whoa. While I'm unphased by travelling on my own terms, I know through personal experience that the quickest way to fvck up a promising vacation is to bring a girlfriend along. I directly know of two other break-ups brought on by holidays.
I think a little "compare and contrast" is in order for this subject.
Most of it was at company expense with plenty of time and money to burn. For the life of me I can't see how they got their money's worth out of it either.
I see other people doing exactly the same things they'd do at home, i.e. drinking, eating, dancing, and shopping, and paying a lot more for the privilege of doing it in a different location. It's made all the more questionable thanks to the cultural homogenisation of developed and developing countries. Not to mention the uneasy feeling I have that some people are travelling with the explicit goal of making their FB profile look more impressive?
No doubt there's a small proportion of brave adventurers who are fvcking, fighting, flying and climbing their way around the world.
So, we arrive at my point. I'm suspicious of people who make a really big deal about travel, people who define themselves through it. And I can't help noticing that the more well-travelled a woman claims to be the less interesting she tends to be in conversation. It's as though a well-used passport is supposed to be an acceptable substitute for an engaging personality. Anyone else feeling me on that?
And then there's the relentless emphasis in their dating profiles on finding a travel companion. Whoa, whoa, whoa. While I'm unphased by travelling on my own terms, I know through personal experience that the quickest way to fvck up a promising vacation is to bring a girlfriend along. I directly know of two other break-ups brought on by holidays.
I think a little "compare and contrast" is in order for this subject.