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Slow Travel Yay vs Nay: Chapter 2

Slow travel – slowly traveling from point A to point B. This series highlights the 5 pros and the 5 con of slow travel.

The single most challenging and yet seducing aspect of slow travel is being alone. Here is Chapter 2: slow travel while being alone.

Solo travel is like this beautiful oxymoron. It’s addictive. It is taxing.

The new travel trend these days is all about solo travel. Exploring the world on your own time. Yeah, it’s awesome. I find it to be one of the most intoxicating ways to explore. It ropes you in, allows you to be in charge of your life. It fills voids and deep desires to make your own decisions. At the end of the day, you are your own boss.

Solo travel is a perfect addiction for the traveler. A traveler always is seeking new opportunities to be just a little outside of their comfort zone. If you are a true traveler, you become almost dependent on this feeling of not knowing what’s next. It pushes you to be amongst communities and be a part of situations that make your heart beat a little a faster and your palms sweat a little more.

I could go on about the siren that is solo travel, but that’s not what this is about. In fact, chapter 2 is about the other side of the oxymoron, the side travelers struggle to upload to society. It isn’t sexy to feel lonely, but it is real.

Solo travel is also grueling, especially for slow travel. It’s easy to make friends in a city. Traveling in a city, you’re an expat. There is always room for an expat.

If you are truly slow traveling around a country or region, this can be much harder, especially as a traveler. It is hard for a traveler to be alone sometimes for long periods of time. A book can only hold a travelers attention for so long, a journal has only enough pages, day dreaming eventually becomes repetitive, meeting locals that don’t speak your language becomes draining.

Solo travel is a bit isolating and is not impossible to be constantly entertained, but requires more creativity. I’m never someone to be “bored” because I think life is too short to be bored, but there can be more downtime in solo slow travel.

Think of it like this, if you were in Italy, the Italians take couple hour siestas during the day. This forces you to sit inside and be alone during these long siestas every day. If you are in a rural country side for 3 weeks, taking long siestas every day, you may yearn for more interaction like you would get in a city. This is only natural if it is not part of your culture or incorporated in your way of life. What if they don’t have wifi and you can’t watch your Netflix shows during the siesta? Lot’s of things to consider here and all very important insights to consider when slow traveling.

Sharing experiences with someone is valuable. A camera is limited on the memories it can show.  In fact, even if you are traveling in couples, sometimes that can even feel alienating and lonely as well.  It is normal, don’t worry. You will get through it, and you will also likely agree with this series and lean in favor of slow travel.

Jumping around is much easier, but not as enriching as slow travel and getting to be a part of the traditions, a community, a culture, a country. The rewards of chapter 1, cultural experiences, in my opinion outweigh the downfalls of moments of loneliness.

Check out this post on traveling through homesickness for some tips on how to get out of any loneliness rut slow travel may bring. Key word here is may, not all travelers experience the same magnitude of loneliness, but expect a little.

Maybe you have moved on fast enough not to feel this sense of loneliness. That’s totally fine and then this con doesn’t necessarily impact your travels. But, if you are starting to feel a bit lonely, push yourself to find that adrenaline that solo travel also brings. Desire the addiction again – remember what it is like and meet someone new. Perhaps take a day trip away from your home base. Or even more simply, move on to something new.

Don’t be alone too long.

Slow Travel Yay vs Nay : Chapter 1

I recently was writing a freelance article all about slow travel in Italy. Beyond making me yearn for Chianti Classico and salivate at the thought of fresh pasta overlooking a vineyard in Tuscany, it also got me thinking and wishing I was back on another slow travel trip.

Slow travel can be defined in any way you would like it to be defined. I like to look at it as visiting a region for a period of time instead of several cities. This could be a two week trip in Tuscany instead of hopping around Italy for 2 weeks. It could be 2 months in Cambodia, spending a week at a time in each place. The point of slow travel is to immerse yourself in the culture and the every day life of the locals in ways that visiting a city for 3 days cannot do.

I decided to start a short series, the best parts of slow travel and the worst part of slow travel. Welcome to chapter 1, the first Yay to Slow Travel.

Slow Travel Pro #1 – Cultural Experiences.

My favorite part of slow travel is getting to know the people and the culture of wherever you are. Some of my most memorable experiences are getting asked by the locals to come join them for a family feast, or coming across a local dance where the community brings you and and teaches you the moves, or getting caught up with an Irishman at a bar and not understanding a single word he was saying.

No matter who it is, it is hard not to get excited about these opportunities. I think that no matter what kind of traveler you are, your most memorable experiences in your travels are ones that bring you into the culture of the place. At the end of the day, don’t we travel to escape reality?

Let yourself sink into the cultural experiences that will change your life forever. Yes, you can find these experiences by short vacations as well.  But to understand fully all the ins and the outs of communities around the world, slow travel will give you a much deeper experience.

Can you tell me a time where you felt connected to the locals on your travels? A time where you felt like you were part of the community, wherever you were? Or perhaps a time that you thought, I wonder what the locals do when they get off work?

Slow travel will give you these experiences. Get from point A to point B slowly and enjoy every step of the way.

Some of my favorite slow travel cultural experiences can be found on my personal blog. Here are my top posts that you may like!

Pinch me, I’m dreaming.

Lost In Translation

A Moment Of Peace