Quote:
Originally Posted by darklord700
Well, I can't live without running water, modern plumbing, internet connection and other creature comfort that my life has afforded me so far. Actually rather than I can't it's more like I'm not willing to give them up in exchange for someting else.
|
You can easily travel the world without giving this up entirely. You might pay a little more but it doesn't mean you have to stay at the Ritz or local Westin. Think of coming to Calgary and staying at a Travelodge. I'd recommending doing this for your 1st trip to put your concerns at "ease". Might lead you to going cold turkey - at a minimum it's still getting you out to see the world....
Quote:
One of my favourite things in life is travelling to a far away place, experiencing that culture shock and having it set me and my priorities straight when I get back home.
|
I think this is one of the best things about travel. In Hanoi I met a woman working at a restaurant who worked 7 days a week, 12 hours a day for about 50 cents per day. But she did it with a smile, and was fast and efficient - but boy did she work hard doing pretty much everyhting. When you see people like that it puts Calgary and the wealth we have into perspective... you learn to become happier with with you have instead of lusting for the best of the best and trying to keep up with what you "think" is necessary.
I've often thought that people in the world must think that that "westerners" are so damn SOFT! Wanting special water and food, air conditioning, and all these amenities.... You kind of feel embarassed when you buy a bottle of Nestle La Vie water for the same price that feeds a local for 3 days... Or you go to a hotel room that an entire family would normally cram into.
Travel (especially to non 1st world western countries) truly does change your perspective on things - as long you're the contemplative type. I have a friend who's idea of travel is Phoenix/Vegas when you travel for a "good time" and whom fine dining is Montanas. Pretty closed minded as to what the world and life should be. The concept of being a traveller is completely lost to him and frankly, wasted on him. You can see that in some of that in earlier comments in this thread....
Quote:
Yeah, reverse culture shock is definitely a thing. I went to Australia to visit a friend 2 weeks before coming home. I think this helped a lot since I was in a western country with expensive prices and English speakers everywhere, but I was still away from home. So this "transition country" helped. I think I would have been way more messed up coming straight back from Cambodia or Thailand to Calgary.
|
LOL, I had a friend that went through this (unfortunately with work I've never been able to get away for more than 4 weeks). "Argumentative" is the word he used to describe it. He said coming from asia he found himself constantly trying to haggle prices when he came back. He'd walk into a store/restaurant like Starbucks and automatically want to pitch a price 20% less because that's what he was used to doing in Asia. That and the storekeeper was always trying to hose the whitey with the tourista premium.