100+ Facts about Traveling & Cool Tips to Amazing Destinations - Deepstash

100+ Facts about Traveling & Curated Tips to Amazing Destinations

From the joys of exploring new destinations to the unique challenges faced while traveling alone, Deepstash offers a unique series of flashcards-like ideas that distil journals, podcasts, videos, documentaries, and even personal experiences into simple, minute-long travel facts you can flick through in minutes. Compiled by seasoned travelers, backpackers, and even healthcare professionals on the move, these idea cards reveal fun facts about traveling, insights into travel and the transformative power of tourism on individuals and communities. Whether you're planning your next vacation, curious about curated travel tips, or interested in the life of a backpacking digital nomad, Deepstash offers genuine bursts of knowledge about fun travel facts in a fun microlearning approach.

Explore over 2000 Idea Cards on Facts about Travelling and Wanderlust

Deepstash charts a course through the rich landscape of travel experiences, offering fascinating travel facts that highlight the beauty and diversity of our world. Discover the allure of distant cultures, the thrill of time travel facts, and the impact of tourism on global and local scales. Each idea card is a passport to knowledge, equipping you with interesting travel facts and fun travel facts that enrich your understanding and appreciation of the journey. From the practicalities of being a digital nomad to the dreamy possibilities of solo travel, this collection is your guide to the endless adventures that await.

Flick through our ever-increasing number of fun facts about traveling & interesting tips

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Take a Vacation and Fully Unplug

Vacations with loved ones will help entrepreneurs avoid burnout. It's important to put on an out-of-office message, too, and not respond to emails. Another benefit of taking a vacation is you set a good example for hard-working employees.

—Jesse Pujji, Ampush

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Travel and Change Your Environment

Travel and Change Your Environment

Traveling is the best way to avoid burnout. Take your laptop and spend one to two months working from somewhere else, preferably internationally. With the internet and cloud tools like Dropbox and Skype, there's very little that can't be done from abroad. The change in environment sparks your creativity and allows you to bring new energy into your work.

—Leah Neaderthal, Start Somewhere

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Seth Godin

“Instead of wondering when your next vacation is, maybe you should set up a life you don’t need to escape from.”

SETH GODIN

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Tips To Prepare For Vacations

Tips To Prepare For Vacations

  • Give yourself enough time to complete the work you have committed to before you leave and don’t take on new projects.
  • Delegate important tasks to someone capable and trustworthy.
  • Practice relaxing before you leave by researching about the destination and having relaxing evenings.
  • Don’t plan on working while you are on your vacation.
  • Don’t over-plan your vacation. The planning itself and having to follow a bunch of schedules and rules can bring stress.

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Tips For During Your Vacation

Tips For During Your Vacation

  • Scan your email occasionally to reassure yourself that nothing catastrophic is happening in your absence.
  • Try some activities, maybe something new, so you can have so much fun you forget all work related stress.
  • Turn off your phone and email notifications so you’re not constantly reminded of work. 
  • Don’t be tempted to work. You are taking a vacation to get a break. Working during the break will add stress to your trip and resentment when you return.

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Tips For Your Return From Vacation

Tips For Your Return From Vacation

  • Get to your inbox first as it will allow you to prioritize your tasks properly.
  • Try to keep away from the office or commitments at least for your first day so you will be able to focus on catching up.
  • Try to incorporate the stress relieving tactics you found during your vacation to your routine.
  • Don’t work late. As tempting as it may be, work your normal hours when you return.

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10 Tips To Really Enjoy Vacations

10 Tips To Really Enjoy Vacations

  1. You’re more likely to relax if you take more frequent vacations/year and dial down the expectations on each one.
  2. Family visits are more likely to result in a feeling of exhaustion. Prioritize your top 10 relationships for the year and find ways to interact with them year-round. 
  3. Getting more adventure on your daily life will take the pressure from your vacations to be adventurous making it more relaxing. 
  4. Spending some time outdoors reminds us how small and insignificant most of our problems are.
  5.  A staycation – a vacation from work without the travel - will help with regulating your sleeping schedule.
  6. If you’re traveling don’t hop from place to place, instead try to immerse yourself in them more. 
  7. Plan in transitions. Leave home later and come home early, to ease back into your routine over the weekend. 
  8. Nearly all deadlines are arbitrary. Map out what needs to be done on your return and extend the deadlines around your holiday instead of trying to meet them all before you leave.
  9. Don’t over-plan and over-extend your vacations. 
  10. Find the time and space prior to it to focus on work without interruption so you can fulfill your workaholic needs and not feel like you left too much unfinished.

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Utilize vacation time

Studies show that certain activities that foster a truly unplugged environment, such as hiking in nature, can actually boost creativity by up to 50 %.

Encourage your employees to use all of their vacation time despite work pressures so that they come back to the office refreshed and full of new ideas.

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Travelling is your best teacher

Travelling is your best teacher

Contrary to popular belief, traveling can teach you more than a classroom, job, or relationship ever will.

The real world means packing up and leaving your comfort zone, the familiar, your safe place, and experiencing unknown things - a new place, new people who may not understand you, unfamiliar customs, the list goes on.

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Lessons that travelling will teach you

Lessons that travelling will teach you

  1. To be more patient when things do not go as planned - and it happens on every trip. 
  2. To leave your comfort zone. It's exhilarating to forget what's familiar for a bit and expand your horizons.
  3. To be more curious. Being in new territory will probe new ideas and curiosities.
  4. To appreciate other cultures. 
  5. To live simply. You can survive with very, very little.
  6. To make friends with strangers as travelling make you desperate for human interaction.
  7. ...but to also embrace your solo travel experience.  You will come home with a new sense of independence.
  8. To try new things as what you do at home doesn't always work when you travel.
  9. To think creatively. Sometimes it takes a little thinking outside of the box to get by.

  10. To find beauty in small things that you did not notice before you started your trip, like a home-cooked meal.

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Pushing limits

Pushing limits

Traveling forces you out of your comfort zone.

You know and feel comfortable with all the people in the school: the teachers, the friends, the parents, and other school workers.

Traveling means new foods, cultures, language, people, and places to explore. It helps you grow as a person.

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Travelling and time management

Travelling and time management

Traveling teaches you better time management skill

In your travel adventure, getting late will cost you lots of money. After all, you can’t ask the plane to wait for you.

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Reinvent yourself

Reinvent yourself

Travel can give you the blank white sheet – the chance to start fresh and explore the other sides of your personality.

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Traveling and confidence

Traveling and confidence

Traveling helps you build confidence. With travel, come challenges. And the more challenges you take on, the more confident of yourself you become.

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Travelling and planning skills

Traveling will improve your planning and organizing skills.

There are lots of things you need to plan to have a great travel experience. You need to organize your trip so that you have a place to stay and transportation taken care of etc.

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Traveling makes you more interesting

Traveling makes you more interesting

Maybe you were almost bitten by a lion while doing a safari in Africa. Or that time when you were almost killed by a bull in “Pamplona’s Running of the Bulls”? 

Most of these amazing stories and memories will enrich your personal charm.

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Traveling teaches you gratitude

Traveling teaches you gratitude

Traveling to a poor country can make you realize just how much you actually have. You will meet (and make friends) with people who have so little in their life, but are living their life happily.

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Travelling and social skills

Travelling and social skills

You will learn social skills much better while traveling, because you will meet lots of new people at hostels, guided tours, bars, cafes, monuments, and buses while traveling. And that will definitely improve your social skills. 

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Travelling can teach you new skills

Travelling can teach you new skills

There are lots to learn when visiting other countries. 

Open yourself up to new experiences – stay in a local homestay, volunteer with a community charity, get to know the people and the culture of each new place you visit – and you’ll find that you return home, not only with lots of great memories but a lot of new skills too.

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Life skills you'll learn from travelling

  • Confident Communication. You will be forced to communicate with strangers on a daily basis.
  • How to Cope in a Crisis. Travelling come with its fair share of tricky situations that requires you to work through them.
  • A New Language. Immersing yourself in a culture is a great way to learn a foreign language.
  • How to Prioritise. When you’re travelling you need to determine what is essential and what you can do without.
  • Different Ways of Life.  Travelling, you get to see how people around the world choose (or are compelled) to live their lives.

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Travelling can help enhance your life

Travelling can help enhance your life

  • Discover yourself:  It leads you on to that path of self-discovery about what your strengths and weaknesses may be.
  • Appreciation: you appreciate even the most seemingly inconsequential things in life, which we all take for granted.
  • Opens your mind: It enables you to learn new cultures, new ways of life and new simplicities.
  • Meet new people. You will learn to break down the barriers and communicate.
  • Develop new skills: decision-making skills, learn to communicate better, improve your social skills and organisational skills.

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Travelling

Travelling takes you out of the environment you’re familiar with, and throws you into the unfamiliar. 

You get exposed to new places, new cultures, new customs, and of course, new people. And in this sea of novelty, you adapt and you grow.

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Visiting vs. Living in a new place

Try visit the place you're interested in moving to if it's feasible. Because working in a country or city is not the same as vacationing there. 

While hitting the tourist hot spots is great, try to explore neighborhoods where the locals live, visit grocery stores, and sit in restaurants. Then you can do one better and speak to other expats who live there to get a sense of what day-to-day life is like.

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Travel Alone

Although it may sound a little awkward, solo traveling brings several benefits:

  • uplifting your confidence level
  • letting you enjoy quality “Me Time”
  • making you a better trip planner
  • helping you become a better observer. 

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Mental time travel

A common decision-making problem is failing to have enough imagination with regards to what could go wrong or falling victim to simple overconfidence. 

Envision the future. There’s evidence that this exercise can broaden your outlook and highlight problems that might not come to mind otherwise.

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6. You Vacation Together

6. You Vacation Together

We don’t usually choose to spend several uninterrupted days or weeks of a vacation with people we don’t like a lot. You’re also making memories that last for a lifetime.

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Travelling And Philosophy

Recreational and exploratory travel has two main motivations; travel for 'change' for new experiences, leading to inner transformation, and travel to 'show', which revolves around displaying your experiences to others.

Exploratory travel, seeking out unknown, exotic and unexplored places, has its mental equivalent in philosophy, which is also about exploring the unknown, internally.

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The Same Journey

Travelers and philosophers are pushing the limits of their knowledge, seeing how the world works. There is an undeniable link in exploring the oceans and even other planets, and in crafting radically new questions delving into the mind's uncharted territory.

The tools may be different, but the essential journey is the same, with travelers affecting philosophy and philosophers affecting travel.

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Don't Skip Your Vacantion

Don't Skip Your Vacantion

Studies show that working for extended periods of time without a break has an adverse effect on one’s overall performance.

Going on a (relaxing) vacation has immense benefits like greater creativity, lower stress and improved productivity. Taking a mental time off from work while on vacation creates a creative space inside our heads, making us work better once we are back.

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Planning For A Vacantion

  • Poorly planned vacation time can diminish the positive aspects of a vacation, making it something out of a horror movie. Planning ahead makes us look forward to a vacation and adds an atmosphere of growth to our lives.
  • Instead of planning an elaborate far away vacation, plan for something nearby that is a short drive from home.
  • We need to have a realistic look at our options and identify the type of experience that would be ideal for us. Each of us has our own preferences of what nourishes us and helps us rejuvenate. Some like walking in nature, others may like adventure sports or to be at the beach, soaking up the much-needed sunlight.

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Work Vacations

Almost 65 percent of Americans work while on vacation. The main part of the vacation, unplugging our brains from the work routine is lost if we bring our work to our vacation, and makes us hate both work and our activities that are supposed to be fun.

This affects our intrinsic motivation and transforms our vacation into another stressful chore.

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Benefits of vacationing

Benefits of vacationing

Studies show that those who go on vacations are more likely to have:

  1. A decreased risk of having a fatal heart attack for men;
  2. An improvement in heightening one's reaction time
  3. An improved quality of sleep; and
  4. Women are less likely to develop heart disease

Vacations allow us to wind down from our stressful reality and let go of responsibilities for the mean time to improve our well-being. We often become happier after a vacation because of the excitement and anticipation we experience.

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Relax And Travel

  • Travel to those places where you would not find everyone else. Try to take the road less travelled and learn new things while on the road by having new experiences and talking to new people.
  • Embrace silence and learn how to be mindful and self-aware. Stop the chatter in your brain and the mindless talks we keep having and go to places that are quiet and beautiful, like the forest or the mountains.
  • It is also a great idea to simply relax and not to hunt for any information proactively every day.

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Create Space: Travel Spontaneously

The more things we have, the more rooted, anchored or grounded we become to where we are.

When we are worried about our stuff lying somewhere we are unable to travel with ease and cannot be on the road spontaneously.

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Travelling Solo

Travelling Solo

Travelling alone can be the ultimate in self-indulgence: You can do what you want to do and rest when you want. Your mistakes are your own, and your triumphs are more exciting.

But without a companion to watch your back, you are more vulnerable. But, a little preparation and common sense can save you money and give you the ultimate experience.

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General Safety When Traveling Alone

  • Do your homework. Know how long it takes and how much it costs to get from the airport to your hotel.
  • Arrive during the day. Areas around bus and train stations can be scary or deserted, and small towns tend to shut down early.
  • Book a hotel with a 24-hour front desk if you'll be arriving late.
  • Check your maps and transportation schedules before leaving your hotel/rental car.
  • Register with the State Department. U.S. citizens travelling internationally can consider signing up for the free Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP). It could assist you in case of an emergency.

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Personal Safety When Traveling Alone

  • Stick to open and public places, especially at night.
  • Trust yourself. If it doesn't feel right, don't do it.
  • Appear confident. Walk confidently and with direction. If you are lost, walk into a shop or restaurant and ask for directions. Don't let on that you are alone.
  • Leave a copy of your itinerary with a family member at home, and keep regular contact via phone, text, etc.
  • Trust everyone and no one. While you might want to meet new people, it makes you more vulnerable. Be open-minded, but keep your guard up enough to ensure your safety.

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Tips for Solo Dining

Many solo travellers find dining alone most unpleasant.

  • Chat with the service people.
  • Choose the right eatery. Sitting alone with a book in a cafe isn't as unusual as a table for one at a restaurant.
  • Bring reading material.
  • Eat in if you can't endure another public meal alone.
  • Eat well.

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When You’ve Had Enough of Single Travel

The constant sensory input and vigilance of travelling alone can wear you down. Don't be afraid to back off a bit.

When travelling abroad, seek out an expat bar where you can hang out and speak your native tongue. A night in your hotel room can often give you enough of a reprieve to send you out ready the next morning.

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4) Travel to other places.

4) Travel to other places.

Expose yourself to an entirely different point of view through a new cultural experience. 

Keeping your sense sharp allows the synapses in your brain to think in new ways.

By engaging with the local art, cuisine, and people, you allow yourself to really learn new ways of thinking that you can later apply to your own ideas.

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Kazakhs – Kazakhstan

Kazakhs – Kazakhstan

The Kazakhs are a semi-nomadic tribe who have been travelling through the mountains and valleys of Kazakhstan since the 15th century.

Along with taming wild horses, one of their most famous ancient traditions is hunting with eagles. It is seen as the highest form of art and dedication. The annual Golden Eagle Festival sees wolf-skin clad Kazakhs take to the mountains on horseback and golden eagles soar into the skies in celebration of this unique heritage.

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Rabari – India

Rabari – India

India is a land of mystery, magic, and incredible culture. The Rabari, who are believed to have migrated from Iran more than a millennium ago, have roamed Western India for almost 1,000 years.

Their intricate embroidery, magnificent brass jewellery, and tattoos are legendary. For hundreds of years, the women have adorned their bodies with magical symbols that are considered both decorative and religious. The men often wear white with elaborate jewellery and turbans.

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Loba – Nepal

Loba – Nepal

The ancient “Forbidden Kingdom” of Mustang, which was a lost kingdom of Tibet, is a remote and isolated region of the dramatic Himalayas in Nepal . It is a place shrouded in mystery and mysticism and home to the Loba people (or Lowa).

They practice an early form of Buddhism and are known for their flamboyant religious festivals. The Tiji Festival is a three-day festival consisting of rituals known as the “chasing of the demons”. Many of the Loba still believe the world is flat.

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Gaúchos – South America

Gaúchos – South America

Galloping across the wild prairies of Argentina , Paraguay , Uruguay , Southeastern Bolivia , Southern Chile , and Southern Brazil are the gaúchos.

These bombacha wearing free spirits are the cowboys of South America . They are bound to their horses and devoted to chasing the call of the wild (and wild cattle). They are famously brave, notoriously unruly, and renowned in legends and folklore. Gaúchos have existed for thousands of years and are one of the most romanticised cultures in the world.

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Theories On Travelling To Your Past

  • In 2013, physicists Benjamin K. Tippett and David Tsang published a paper proposing a theoretical means of creating an actual retrograde-capable time machine: a way to travel to your own past. 
  • Tippett and Tsang describe a bubble of spacetime containing a time-traveler entering a Closed Timelike Curve (essentially the same as an Einstein-Rosen bridge). Within that curve, the traveler can go anywhere on his or her own timeline, while within the bubble time seems to pass normally.
  • The two physicists even theorized that timelike curves could be split and connected, opening up the possibility of traveling not just along your own timeline — but anywhere in time and space.

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Travel & Tourism :

Travel & Tourism :

The travel industry stalled in 2020 & 2021, but that doesn’t mean that it’s gone. With so many stuck inside their homes to get out, the future of travel looks bright. But the niche audiences within the industry are changing, and there’s a gap to fill those needs.

Even the way consumers approach traveling is evolving. In fact, travelers are becoming more environmentally conscious.

This gap represents a massive opportunity for brands to step up to the plate and support eco-friendly initiatives through sustainable products. And travelers are seeking more than just green options.

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The First Travel Firm

The world’s first dream makers were Cox & Kings, established in the UK in the year 1758, and later setting up their headquarters in India as a holiday and educational travel group.

Richard Cox, son of a lawyer, was the first travel agent and apart from travel tickets, arranged wine, food and logistic support to his patrons in the early 19th century.

The oldest ‘arrangers’, the company has recently celebrated its 250th anniversary.

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Time Travel

Time Travel

You get better with money when you get better with time.

Write letters to your future selves, making this older version of you into a real three-dimensional character can make this sort of self-conversation easier to recognize the benefit of something, like an automatic savings account.

Time can be a tool to start new habits and end bad ones. The start of a school year, new year, birthday, or even new month could be the self-nudging of well-chosen fresh starts.

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Traveling is a great stress buster.

Traveling is a great stress buster.

The stress of work and daily demands can distract us from what we find to be actually meaningful and interesting says Dr. Tamara McClintock Greenberg, a San Francisco-based clinical psychologist and author of Psychodynamic Perspectives on Aging and Illness.

Thus, taking a break from the daily hustle and bustle is essential for your mind to relax, recharge and rejuvenate.

Traveling promotes happiness and helps you take your mind off stressful situations. This leads to lower cortisol levels, making you feel more calm and content.

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It helps you reinvent yourself

It helps you reinvent yourself

Experiential traveling, particularly to a foreign country, can help you re-evaluate and reinvent your life. If you allow it, travel has the ability to expand your mind in a way you never realized was possible.

Moreover, the valuable lessons that you learn along the way broaden your perspective, making you more aware and open to new things.

Exploring new places can also give you a fresh start if you're recovering from a major transition in your life.

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PATRICK ROTHFUSS

A long stretch of road can teach you more about yourself than a hundred years of quiet.

PATRICK ROTHFUSS

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Traveling boosts happiness and satisfaction.

Traveling boosts happiness and satisfaction.

When traveling, the new events and experiences you encounter will help rewire your brain, hence boosting your mood and self-confidence.

According to a Cornell University study, the anticipation of a trip can increase your happiness substantially, even more than the anticipation of acquiring something tangible, like a new car.

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It makes you mentally resilient

It makes you mentally resilient

Going and living somewhere where you feel excited and intimidated at the same time can help you toughen up mentally and emotionally. 

Also, facing difficulties in an unfamiliar environment, among new people, forces you to learn and adapt to a life that's out of your comfort zone. This makes you more flexible, patient and emotionally strong. 

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Traveling enhances creativity

Traveling enhances creativity

According to Adam Galinsky, a professor at Columbia Business School, visiting a foreign place and immersing yourself in their local environment increases your cognitive flexibility. 

It also enhances "depth and integrativeness of thought," consequently giving a boost to your creativity. However, traveling stimulates creativity only when you engage with the local culture of that place. Merely visiting a new city or a country isn't going to cut it.

Additionally, extended traveling also improves your productivity, problem-solving skills thus can increase your chances of getting promoted at work!

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Budget for your vacation

For freelancers, time off work is time not making money. However, it doesn't mean you shouldn't take a vacation - it means you need to budget for it.

For example, it could mean raising your rates and taking on more assignments in the months leading to your vacation.

Set up a business account for your freelance income, then schedule regular automatic payments to your personal account so that you have a regular "paycheck". Build some savings in for a cushion.

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The Premise

The Premise

Traveling the world while working online from your laptop has been a dream for millions of self-proclaimed digital nomads.

However working from foreign countries while traveling on a tourist visa is technically illegal in most places.

Tourist visas also usually expire after 30-90 days, and it’s not always easy to renew them. What if you want to stay longer?

That doesn’t stop digital nomads from working while traveling, but it can make things complicated, and with travel restrictions due to COVID-19, it’s much more difficult to work & travel internationally.

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Countries Creating Visas For Remote Work Tourists

Countries Creating Visas For Remote Work Tourists

Some countries have recognized the need for so-called “digital nomad visas”, “remote work visas”, or “freelancer visas” specifically to entice foreigners to come work & contribute to their economies.

Many of these destinations are hoping the remote work visas will generate income to help make-up for lost tourism revenue due to the pandemic.

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Digital Nomads vs Freelancers

Digital Nomads vs Freelancers

Digital nomads are basically remote workers who travel to different locations on a regular basis. They use modern technology to work from coffee shops, hotels, co-working spaces, or libraries with a WiFi connected laptop or smartphone from anywhere in the world.

Freelancers are self-employed, working for themselves or other companies as independent contractors. Freelancers can travel while they work, or just work from home while living in one place on a long-term basis.

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Antigua & Barbuda

Antigua & Barbuda

The Caribbean island nation of Antigua & Barbuda has announced a digital nomad visa called the Nomad Digital Residence (NDR). It’s for remote workers who can show the means to support themselves and any family members joining them.

This visa is good for 2-years, and visitors will be required to maintain their own health insurance plan while staying within the country and enjoying its 365 different beaches.

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Bali

Bali

The beautiful island of Bali, Indonesia has long been a popular location for remote workers to base themselves. And while there are no formal details just yet, Bali has just announced they are looking to implement a brand new digital nomad visa sometime later this year.

The Bali remote work visa would be good for up to 5-years, and holders of the visa would NOT have to pay taxes on any income earned outside Bali.

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Barbados

Barbados

Barbados has also opened its borders to digital nomads and remote workers who are looking to escape the pandemic while basing themselves in a beautiful island destination.

The “Barbados Welcome Stamp” is a special 12-month visa for remote workers, which can also be renewed for even longer. Why not live next to the beach and work from home in Barbados!

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Bermuda

Bermuda

Bermuda joined the remote work visa club! Their recently released “Work From Bermuda” digital nomad visa is just an expansion of an older residency program, which allows digital nomads and remote workers to stay in the country for up to a year.

Aimed at professionals who normally work from home, they hope the new visa will attract long-term travelers who want to base themselves from an island destination.

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Cayman Islands

Cayman Islands

The Cayman Islands launched a special visa for digital nomads called the Global Citizen Certificate (GCC). It allows travelers to stay in the islands for up to 2 years.

The income requirements are much steeper than other countries in this list though: individuals must provide proof of an annual salary of at least $100,000, or $150,000 for couples.

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3. Time travel via suspended animation

3. Time travel via suspended animation

Another way to time travel to the future may be to slow your perception of time by slowing down, or stopping, your bodily processes and then restarting them later.

Bacterial spores can live for millions of years in a state of suspended animation, until the right conditions of temperature, moisture, food kick start their metabolisms again. Some mammals, such as bears and squirrels, can slow down their metabolism during hibernation, dramatically reducing their cells’ requirement for food and oxygen.

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why travel alone ?

why travel alone ?

travelling alone can be ultimate in self-indulgence ; you can rest whenever you want and pour it on when you’re feeling ambitious . 

you can do whatever you want ! always wanted to explore korean culture ? go for it ! it’s time for you to make the rules

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Blue Zones definition

Blue Zones definition

Blue Zones refer to geographic areas in which people have low rates of chronic disease and live exceptionally long lives.

They are called Blue Zones because author Dan Buettner, who was studying areas of the world where people live very long lives, drew blue circles around these areas on the map.

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The five known Blue Zones

The five known Blue Zones

  1. Icaria (Greece): These people eat a Mediterranean diet rich in olive oil, red wine and homegrown vegetables.
  2. Ogliastra, Sardinia (Italy): Some of the oldest men in the world live here. They commonly work on farms and drink lots of red wine.
  3. Okinawa (Japan):  You can find the world's oldest women here. They eat soy-based foods and practice tai chi, a meditative form of exercise.
  4. Nicoya Peninsula (Costa Rica): The Nicoya people regularly do physical jobs into old age. Their diet includes beans and corn tortillas.
  5. The Seventh-day Adventists in Loma Linda, California. They are strict vegetarians.

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People who live in Blue Zones eat a 95% plant-based diet

People who live in Blue Zones eat a 95% plant-based diet

Most groups are not strict vegetarians but eat meat about five times per month.

Diets include:

  • Vegetables, which is a great source of fibre, minerals and vitamins.
  • Legumes include beans, peas, lentils and chickpeas, which are all rich in fibre and protein.
  • Whole grains, which are rich in fibre.
  • Nuts: Nuts are great sources of fibre, protein and polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats.

Other dietary factors for Icaria and Sardinia are eating fish regularly. Fish is a good source of omega-3 fats.

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Core idea curated from:

Everyone Else Is Married And I Am Still Single!

Everyone Else Is Married And I Am Still Single!

Have you felt sometimes that most of your friends are travelling around beautiful places and having a good time while you are struggling in a city managing work and home?

Or you might feel that everyone in your age group has got married and settled down and you are still searching for a partner and nothing is working!! Why am I single while everyone else is married and possibly living happily ever after?

This might be a Majority illusion.

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Core idea curated from:

Solo Travel

Solo Travel

Travelling alone requires some special attention to safety. Whether you're a beginner or experienced, everyone can benefit from some solid solo travel safety tips.

After all, you alone must:

  • prevent problems from arising
  • be aware of when they could or do arise
  • decide how to manage them if they do arise.

When it comes to travel safety, prevention comes first.

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Core idea curated from:

Choose Your Destination Carefully.

Choose Your Destination Carefully.

We all have different ideas of safety. Some would never consider a country like Pakistan as a destination for safety reasons but others would. Make sure the safety level of your destination meets your personal travel safety needs. This will involve checking the Destinations section of Solo Traveler, guide books, and your government's travel site.

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Core idea curated from:

Arrive In Daytime

Arrive In Daytime

The first stop for most travellers in a new destination is their hotel or hostel. Arrive in the mid-afternoon so that you can really see what kind of area you're staying in. A safe area will always look better in daylight. An unsafe area is more obviously so in daylight. But there are more very practical reasons to arrive during daylight. You will be able to find your accommodation more easily and if you don't like it, you will have time to make other arrangements.

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Core idea curated from:

Know How You Will Get to Your First Accommodation

Know How You Will Get to Your First Accommodation

Your arrival in any new country, especially one where you don't know the language or the local transit system, is important. Research how you'll get from the airport to your hotel or hostel and give yourself lots of time. You will need it as you learn how their system works. If your flight arrives late in the day, you may want to avoid the transit system and splurge on a taxi to be on the safe side.

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Core idea curated from:

Solo Travel Safety: Tips for Those Traveling Alone