5 Travel Lessons You Can Use at Home 207 Comments

Topics: Mini-retirements, Travel

Rolf Potts is one of my favorite writers, and his book Vagabonding was one of only four books I recommended as “fundamental” in The 4-Hour Workweek. It was also one of two books, the other being Walden; Or, Life in the Woods, that I took with me during my 15+-month mini-retirement that began in 2004.

The following is a guest post from Rolf on the art and lessons of travel, all of which you can apply at home.

Enter Rolf:

Last fall I spoke at the excellent DO Lectures, which brings innovative thinkers from around the world for a series of talks in rural Wales (Tim was a speaker in 2008). My talk, which is available in full via the video link above encourages people to make themselves rich in time and to become active in making their travel dreams happen.

The talk itself contains essential advice and inspiration regarding travel — but what struck me on re-watching it was an improvised moment at the beginning of the talk, when I pointed out how “these aren’t really travel-specific challenges — these are things that can apply to life in general. Think of travel as a metaphor for how you live your life at home.”

Indeed, travel has a way of slowing you down, of waking you up, of pulling you up out of your daily routines and seeing life in a new way. This new way of looking at the world need not end when you resume your life at home.

Here are 5 key ways in which the lessons you learn on the road can be used to enrich the life you lead when you return home…

1) Time = Wealth

By far the most important lesson travel teaches you is that your time is all you really own in life. And the more you travel, the more you realize that your most extravagant possessions can’t match the satisfaction you get from finding new experiences, meeting new people, and learning new things about yourself. “Value” is a word we often hear in day-to-day life, but travel has a way of teaching us that value is not pegged to a cash amount, that the best experiences in life can be had for the price of showing up (be it to a festival in Rajasthan, a village in the Italian countryside, or a sunrise ten minutes from your home).

Scientific studies have shown that new experiences (and the memories they produce) are more likely to produce long-term happiness than new things. Since new experiences aren’t exclusive to travel, consider ways to become time-rich at home. Spend less time working on things you don’t enjoy and buying things you don’t need; spend more time embracing the kinds of activities (learning new skills, meeting new people, spending time with friends and family) that make you feel alive and part of the world.

2) Be Where You Are

A great thing about travel is that it forces you into the moment. When you’re celebrating carnival in Rio, riding a horse on the Mongolian steppe, or exploring a souk in Damascus, there’s a giddy thrill in being exactly where you are and allowing things to happen. In an age when electronic communications enable us to be permanently connected to (and distracted by) the virtual world, there’s a narcotic thrill in throwing yourself into a single place, a single moment. Would you want to check your bank-account statement while exploring Machu Picchu in Peru? Are you going to interrupt an experience of the Russian White Nights in St. Petersburg to check your Facebook feed? Of course not — when you travel, you get to embrace the privilege of witnessing life as it happens before your eyes. This attitude need not be confined to travel.

At home, how often do you really need to check your email or your Twitter feed? When you get online, are you there for a reason, or are you simply killing time? For all the pleasures and entertainments of the virtual-electronic world, there is no substitute for real-life conversation and connection, for getting ideas and entertainment from the people and places around you. Even at home, there are sublime rewards to be had for unplugging from online distractions and embracing the world before your eyes.

3) Slow Down

One of the advantages of long-term travel (as opposed to a short vacation) is that it allows you to slow down and let things happen. Freed from tight itineraries, you begin to see the kinds of things (and meet the kinds of people) that most tourists overlook in their haste to tick attractions off a list. A host of multi-million-dollar enterprises have been created to cater to our concept of “leisure,” both at home and on the road — but all too often this definition of leisure is as rushed and rigidly confined as our work life. Which is more emblematic of leisure — a three-hour spa session in an Ubud hotel, or the freedom to wander Bali at will for a month?

All too often, life at home is predicated on an irrational compulsion for speed — we rush to work, we rush through meals, we “multi-task” when we’re hanging out with friends. This might make our lives feel more streamlined in a certain abstracted sense, but it doesn’t make our lives happier or more fulfilling. Unless you learn to pace and savor your daily experiences (even your work-commutes and your noontime meals) you’ll cheating your days out of small moments of leisure, discovery and joy.

4) Keep it Simple

Travel naturally lends itself to simplicity, since it forces you to reduce your day-to-day possessions to a few select items that fit in your suitcase or backpack. Moreover, since it’s difficult to accumulate new things as you travel, you to tend to accumulate new experiences and friendships instead — and these affect your life in ways mere “things” cannot.

At home, abiding by the principles of simplicity can help you live in a more deliberate and time-rich way. How much of what you own really improves the quality of your life? Are you buying new things out of necessity or compulsion? Do the things you own enable you to live more vividly, or do they merely clutter up your life? Again, researchers have determined that new experiences satisfy our higher-order needs in a way that new possessions cannot — that taking a friend to dinner, for example, brings more lasting happiness than spending that money on a new shirt. In this way, investing less in new objects and more in new activities can make your home-life happier. This less materialistic state of mind will also help you save money for your next journey.

5) Don’t Set Limits

Travel has a way revealing that much of what you’ve heard about the world is wrong. Your family or friends will tell you that traveling to Colombia or Lebanon is a death-wish — and then you’ll go to those places and have your mind blown by friendliness, beauty and new ways of looking at human interaction. Even on a day-to-day level, travel enables you to avoid setting limits on what you can and can’t do. On the road, you naturally “play games” with your day: watching, waiting, listening; allowing things to happen. There’s no better opportunity to break old habits, face latent fears, and test out repressed facets of your personality.

That said, there’s no reason why you should confine that sort of freedom to life on the road. The same Fear-Industrial Complex that spooks people out of traveling can discourage you from trying new things or meeting new people in own your hometown. Overcoming your fears and escaping your dull routines can deepen your home-life — and the open-to-anything confidence that accompanies travel can be utilized to test new concepts in a business setting, rejuvenate relationships with friends and family, or simply ask that woman with the nice smile if she wants to go out for coffee. In refusing to set limits for what is possible on a given day, you open yourself up to an entire new world of possibility.

Naturally, this list is just a sampling of how travel can transform your non-travel life. What have I missed? What has travel taught you about how to live life at home?

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Footnote from Tim: Are you planning, in the middle of, or returning from a long journey? If so — and if you’d like your travel blog or lifestyle-design website to be featured as one of Rolf’s Vagabonding Case Studies — drop him a line at casestudies [at] vagabonding.net and tell him a little about yourself.

Posted on February 25th, 2010

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207 Comments

  • Mike TolliverFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:14 pm

    Tim,

    These are absolutely phenomenal! Number 3 (Slow Down) especially, considering it’s so easy to get caught back up in the mix almost immediately after returning from a mini vacation (at least for me it is)

    For me I must constantly focus, breathe, and take it easy.

    Thanks for the new post, glad to see you back, can’t wait for the new book!

    -Mike T

    Reply
  • David TrotterFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:16 pm

    My family (wife and two kids – 7 and 10) traveled to India for 2 weeks over their Christmas break, and now we’re planning to go back for 4 weeks. We started a children’s home there last year, and we’re feeling more and more drawn to traveling as a lifestyle rather than a “vacation.”

    Great thoughts – thanks for the inspiration!

    Reply
  • Chris RoaneFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:22 pm

    Excellent article!

    I find it hard sometimes to hold back on buying “things”, because I get caught up in the excitement of owning that item. But when I get that item, I realize that is not what I really wanted, or at least that it was not as good as I was hoping for.

    That is not the case with experiences that you can’t put a price tag on.

    All these elements relate to the 4HWW, which is why I love that book. The biggest roadblock to achieving our dreams is our ourselves.

    Reply
  • David TurnbullFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:26 pm

    Hey Rolf,

    I watched that video when it was posted on vagablogging.net and I just wanted to say how much I enjoyed it. I read your book after Tim recommended in the first edition of 4HWW, and beyond just the notion of travel is really changed the way I viewed the world. I often sit down about every 2-3 months to read a particular chapter (the “Keep It Simple” chapter is my favorite) but often end up breezing through the entire book and discovering another little nugget that I previously overlooked.

    So yeah, thanks for being awesome. :-)

    Also, I’m yet to head off on a trip anywhere yet (mostly because I only finished school just over a year ago) and while I’m pretty keen on volunteering at the end of the year, whenever I tell my mum/sister about heading over to somewhere like Thailand they bring up the ethical implications of supporting economies that involve considerable exploitation. Do you have any advice? Because I do feel guilty myself that I want to find enjoyment in places where people suffer, even though I’m not the type of person whose going to go into a country, buy cheap alcohol, step all over their customs and then bugger off.

    Reply
    • Pavel — February 24th, 2011, 10:30 am

      Thailand people are not such an unhappy people. Sure they live much simple life and get a little money for their labor. But I think they happy with what they have. And it’s not exactly correct to judge about that from the distance. You have to come and look for yourself. And please do! Thailand is a wonderful country :)

      Reply
  • Coty GonzalesFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:29 pm

    Excellent post Rolf and Tim! The part that hit me the hardest was from point 1:

    “By far the most important lesson travel teaches you is that your time is all you really own in life. And the more you travel, the more you realize that your most extravagant possessions can’t match the satisfaction you get from finding new experiences, meeting new people, and learning new things about yourself.”

    Great perspective. I find that I feel this exact way whenever I travel – it keeps me hungry for more travel opportunities.

    Reply
  • David TurnbullFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:29 pm

    Tim: I’m using Google’s Chromium browser (the developer build of Chrome) and for whatever reason the stylesheet doesn’t seem to be loading. Perhaps it’s just because this version is unstable, but I thought I’d let you know because all other websites seem to be fine.

    Here’s a screenshot: http://img31.imageshack.us/img31/9630/screenshot20100226at427.png

    Reply
  • RonnieFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:31 pm

    I’ve been waiting for a post like this Tim, and it seems like perfect timing as I’m now reading Vagabonding, finally. The whole book is full of great thoughts and ideas.

    I love the chapter of Don’t Set Limits. Especially when Potts wrote; Vagabonding is about not merely reallotting a portion of your life for travel but rediscovering the entire concept of time.” Also, “Traveler, there is no path. Paths are made by walking.” – Antonio Machado.

    I can tell that this book had great influence on 4HWW and how you seem to approach day to day agendas. I would love to hear some of your personal experiences you have from vagabonding – or perhaps specific situations/experiences that have influenced you the most (kinda like the Chinese scam lessons you touched on with Kevin in an episode of Random”).

    Thanks for the grea post.

    Reply
  • MDFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:32 pm

    I just returned from a brief stay in Varadero, Cuba. Friends always accuse me of throwing money away for traveling and going to random places at random times. I see this in a very different light. Before I ramble on, here’s the main thing that I’ve learned from all of my trips (never been on a long journey yet):

    You never know what someone is truly like until you see them out of their elements. We may think we know our friends really well but we don’t. A true test of character and personality is when you see how a friend reacts outside of their comfort zone.

    This is just my opinion and I was wondering if you guys have ever noticed this?

    Reply
  • Brendan WenzelFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:33 pm

    Wow, what great timing. Just got Vegabonding in the mail from amazon and had my travel bug fed by the stories a dude at the bar about how him and his family traveled to Vietnam for a month.

    I certainly understand number 3 and how it really helps you appreciate what’s around you. I’ve been in Boston since October and it’s so much fun finding places you can never find in a week of visiting. Thanks for the guidance Tim!

    Reply
  • Brendan WenzelFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:38 pm

    And by the way, welcome back. It’s been a while…

    Reply
  • Chris HughesFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:38 pm

    I’m going to need to pick up Vagabonding asap.

    Keep it simple is something that I have been struggling with lately and I’ve got to keep reminding myself to be where I am.

    Time = wealth means that we’ve all got the same opportunities :)
    I’ve gotta start doing something more extraordinary! Thanks Tim.
    -Chris Hughes

    Reply
  • David TurnbullFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:44 pm

    Bah, I’m not sure if one of my comments went through, the one directed at Rolf. If it did, and I’m just impatient then feel free to delete this comment.

    Anyways, Rolf: just thought I’d let you know your book Vagabonding changed the way I thought about life quite substantially, and I saw the video embedded above when it was originally posted on your blog and thought it was a brilliant summary of your ideas (still need to show it to my family who are too lazy to read the book and “get” where I’m coming from).

    Also, one of the reasons I’m still yet to travel after being out of high school for a year is because my family guilts me into not traveling to places I can afford like Southeast Asia. I’m not the type of person to exploit poorer countries and I’d probably leave a lighter footprint than most other people, but there’s still that feeling that I may be contributing to the exploitation of workers by participating in tourism.

    What is your opinion on that? Obviously you’re fine with travel, and it’s something I’ve wanted to do for a long time, but there’s still that sense of guilt that keeps being brought up to keep me at home.

    Reply
  • Kevin RoweFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:45 pm

    you weren’t messing around with the comeback. This is a long one.

    Reply
  • Scott KostolniFebruary 25th, 2010, 10:52 pm

    Thanks Tim and Rolf! That video was great. I decided this year to set my life up for traveling, and after I finish working on a few low maintenance revenue streams I’ll be taking a month long trip to Egypt which has been a dream of mine for years. Reading Vagabonding and watching this really keeps me motivated.

    Reply
  • Brian Walker — February 25th, 2010, 10:56 pm

    Beautiful and thoughtful post Tim. I find myself nodding my head and muttering uhuh…uhuh in agreement at these truths that I have been experiencing myself so often lately in my travels.

    Thank you for saying it so well.

    Reply
  • Johnny — February 25th, 2010, 11:00 pm

    Ok everyone, head for Colombia and Lebanon!

    Reply
  • Michael BayardFebruary 25th, 2010, 11:03 pm

    Tim / Rolf,
    I am currently in the middle of reading Vagabonding and can hardly put it down. For me, the biggest challenge is finding financial freedom to travel. My wife and I have 2 kids (4 and 2 year old) and live in place that is great for us, but in all honesty is keeping us tied down. I have a job, which is in a cubical, but for our family is currently a necessary evil.

    Between reading Tim’s new version of the 4HWW and now your book Rolf. Sorry Tim, I should have read Vagabonding the first time I read 4HWW. I am now at a point where my desire to have more time consumes me and has resulted in forcing action. I can say my gears are turning to automate towards financial freedom using 4HWW principles. Recently I’ve been able to make some changes that allow me more time with those that are most important at home. We can’t wait for our first mini-retirement, I will definitely write about it and hopefully inspire someone else to take one.

    It is good to hear from you, shoot me an email if you are ever in Los Angeles.

    Reply
  • kevin — February 25th, 2010, 11:04 pm

    Welcome Back Tim! Glad to see you’re writing again.

    Reply
  • mwsFebruary 25th, 2010, 11:11 pm

    good stuff!
    people almost always think time=money but it does NOT.

    you can always get your money back – you’ll never get back your time… nice quote here. “By far the most important lesson travel teaches you is that your time is all you really own in life. And the more you travel, the more you realize that your most extravagant possessions can’t match the satisfaction you get from finding new experiences, meeting new people, and learning new things about yourself”
    and, if i may -more on time here: http://bit.ly/cKbQ0b
    thanks for getting back on it – recognize you’ve been a little pre-occupied!

    Reply
  • Marc Tytus — February 25th, 2010, 11:22 pm

    I read the article before watching the embedded video. I think the article is more coherent, and it’s great. It will be a struggle to learn to savour my daily 45-minute car ride to work though.

    Reply
  • Brad McEntireFebruary 25th, 2010, 11:30 pm

    Great post.
    I picked up VAGABONDING several years back right before I was about to leave Asia to come back to the States (back home to Texas). After reading it I immediately changed my travel plans to “wander” back through Europe, the UK and New York on the way. The six week “return” was almost as memorable as the 14 months before, living and working in Hong Kong. Since then, I’ve been recommending the book to friends as a must-read before travels…

    Reply
  • Brian Walker — February 25th, 2010, 11:35 pm

    …or rather – thank you Rolf for saying it so well!

    Reply
  • GregFebruary 25th, 2010, 11:40 pm

    I completely, 100% agree. I’ve traveled up and down the East Coast of America, and I’ve been to Canada, but I flew to Ireland with my parents, and I was the one who was always saying “Stop”. The pictures I took while there were always “off the beaten path”, and I experienced the country and country-side that way. My image of Ireland, which has many meanings to me, and as far as my own family history is concerned, is very deep and detailed, but when I saw the country, it was very different.

    Ultimately, it was beautiful and the images I have in my head can not compare to those photos, even as incredible as they were. Not to mention the cities we visited in the 2 weeks we were there, Ireland is somewhere I can say that I’ve experienced. I have no need to go back, but I hope that everywhere else I go, I will see with the same open, perspective.

    This guy has great advice for traveling.

    Reply
  • Ben WestonFebruary 25th, 2010, 11:46 pm

    I like the idea of not limiting the playfulness and freedom of traveling to just times in which you are actually traveling. We can still take that mentality and apply it to our daily lives.

    Reply
  • MichaelFebruary 26th, 2010, 12:05 am

    Thanks Rolf for that thoughtful post. I have been checking out your website and will order your book soon. Perhaps I will end up buying as many for friends and family as I did the 4HWWK

    Reply
  • MarkFebruary 26th, 2010, 12:09 am

    Well said. I found #5 recently so true. My wife and I went off on to a trip to Jordan, Lebanon and Syria last October. As we are American citizens, I am sure you can imagine most of the advice we received before the trip. Hard to describe what a wonderful time we had and what a life changing experience it was to talk to people as we moved from town to town. Looking at Afghanistan for 2011! Tim, thanks for the recommendation re: the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.

    Reply
  • David ParsonsFebruary 26th, 2010, 12:22 am

    wow, thanks for the advice. Especially about slowing down. I find that when i am in a relaxed state, that i end up doing much better overall. Also the idea that time equals money also makes scene to me. Thanks again for the advice, looking forward to your next post.

    Reply
  • Jose Castro-FrenzelFebruary 26th, 2010, 12:42 am

    I myself just got back from a 3 week trip in Buenos Aires…. If I could I would explain how much I got out of the trip. I will send a video clip……

    Tim, thanks for keeping it real & the best to you, bro!

    Jose

    Reply
  • IvanFebruary 26th, 2010, 1:43 am

    Thanks,fantastic Lessons

    Reply
  • Gian GallegosFebruary 26th, 2010, 1:45 am

    Hi Tim,

    Two years ago, I did what people thought as a crazy idea. I packed up my bags and began a travel journey. It was a journey to discover about myself and about life. I began my travels in New Zealand, then to Fiji, then to Australia and now I am in Southeast Asia doing another leg of discoveries. The funny things is that I only had enough to sustain me for a few months but because of that decisive step, I was never lacking. I found ways to sustain myself usually from working on farms, to doing odd jobs, etc. I may not be wealthy to enjoy beautiful hotels or fancy restaurants but I do feel so rich because nothing beats seeing the sunset rise on top of a mountain or swim the crystal clears beaches or drinking beer with new friends you made along the way.

    After reading the 4 Hour Work Week, I felt relieved that I was doing something most people would dream of doing. Thank you very much and keep us inspired!

    Cheers,

    Gian

    Reply
  • Martin HarrisFebruary 26th, 2010, 2:16 am

    I like the idea of the playfulness too, there is so much we miss out on, which the 4 hour work week helps solve. Great book. fantastic writing.

    Reply
  • MichaelFebruary 26th, 2010, 2:20 am

    I spent 2 years simply wondering around Asia (China, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Lao) and it was the most exciting and also the most calming experience.

    With a place that is new and time to graze you really are their in the moment. On my return back to London i had that and noticed the architecture, the people, the accents and all the wonderful things that make London great.

    After a year that has subsided but i think i’m going to buy the Lonely Planet guide to London and be a tourist for a bit.

    Great blog post.

    Reply
  • AllenFebruary 26th, 2010, 3:47 am

    A former professor of mine is bicycling through south east Asia right now. I almost went with him. He’s got a pretty good blog. Http://www.dwightworker.com.

    I think his biggest challenge for him was was simply his farm, spending too much time doing maintence, or really improvements rather than enjoying his time. It came down to bighting the bullet, and getting rid of a lot of stuff he didn’t need, and realizing that as cool as the farm is, it’s more time efficient to do one hours work to buy a years worth of chicken, than it is to spend a year raising chicken. Even if you enjoy what you do, sometimes freedom results in a bigger payoff.

    Reply
  • RichFebruary 26th, 2010, 4:14 am

    This is a STUNNINGly good post! A little counter-intuitvely it seems there’s some zen-ish lessons embedded in there which might not have initially been anticipated.

    I love travelling…

    Your time is all you own, be in the moment and slow down… Travel gives you a kind of disattachment to the straw-man lives most people pursue – big houses, big cars, tons of possessions…

    Travel gives you that over-sight to see that these things are not only not necessary, but much of the time they create attachments you can do better without.

    Point 5 seems to offer both a perspective of open-mindedness, but also a lesson of courage.

    You travel to the other shore and realise that it’s nothing like you could have imagined, or like the conventionals back home think. On top of that, you’ve learn to get out there, to take the risk, and to plunge in.

    Damn this is good stuff! :)

    Rich

    Reply
  • Boyd SmithFebruary 26th, 2010, 4:29 am

    Great Post.

    2009 was a year that did not allow for easy success in my business. I was at the point that all of my energy was being used to push back the negativity to maintain a positive attitude.

    I checked out went to Cambodia and Thailand to visit orphans that we sponsor though Asia’s Hope. Made the trip with some good friends. 10 days checked out from the business in SE Asia transformed my spirit. I came back with a renewed fresh perspective.

    The economy did not change, my business did not change, but the change in my spirit unlocked new energy. In the 6 weeks following the trip the business went from the negative to the positive side of the P&L in 2009.

    The positive trend is continuing in 2010

    The combination of spiritual seeking and service encapsulated in travel is an elixier that I’ll turn to again. Checking out was the best way to push forward.

    Reply
  • Michelle Nardine R.D.February 26th, 2010, 4:53 am

    Thanks Rolf and Tim. I enjoyed vagabonding immensly. I’ve just started blogging and have begun to seek freelance consulting gigs as a dietitian with the home that eventually I can be completely mobile.

    You’ve both been an inspiration to me.

    Reply
  • Iain KingFebruary 26th, 2010, 5:26 am

    Hi Tim,

    What an amazing post. “Being where you are now”, is such a profound statement and something that we can all learn from. I think we shoudl all take time to experience life in the here and now.

    Must get a hold of the vagabonding book as well.

    Also checked out the http://www.dolectures.com/ website where the video is from – some other amazing videos as well.

    Thanks,

    Iain

    Reply
  • Annabel CandyFebruary 26th, 2010, 5:28 am

    Keep it simple. When you travel it’s so humbling to realise how very wrong we in the “developed” world have got it wrong in terms of prioritising material wealth over family.

    Thanks Rolf for writing and sharing this with us and to Tim for hosting it too.

    Reply
  • Nick — February 26th, 2010, 5:53 am

    What do I miss out on having thrown out my TV and by leaving the iPod at home on trips? Nothing.

    Reply
  • Joss — February 26th, 2010, 5:58 am

    Perfect timing! :D

    Reply
  • MattFebruary 26th, 2010, 6:24 am

    Awesome post. I’ve read both 4HWW and Vagabonding numerous times, they are both easily two of my favorite books.

    I’m currently on my first mini-retirement in Italy for three months and planning my second for an entire year in Spain. These two books have changed my thoughts on life and travel and I’ll never sit behind a desk again.

    Thanks Tim and Rolf for the valuable advice, your stories and successes are an inspiration to all.

    – Matt

    Reply
  • Dave SFebruary 26th, 2010, 6:45 am

    Good stuff… I appreciate the part on being where you are

    Reply
  • Daily Fuel – Friday, February 26th « Live RelentlessFebruary 26th, 2010, 7:30 am

    [...] Lessons on traveling to apply to your everyday life. This post comes from Rolf Potts, one of my favorite authors, and is my favorite of the week. Take it to heart. [...]

  • Cathy SFebruary 26th, 2010, 7:33 am

    In addition to all the benefits that Rolf mentioned, travel always sparks my creativity. The new routine, environment, things to learn, etc. can be very stimulating. I’ve learned to thoroughly research a destination (its history, culture, interesting stories, etc.) to get the most from my visit. I also carry a small notebook or sketchpad with me to jot down new ideas. Lastly, I take a lot of photos to capture the visual images of the adventure. Many of the people we profile on our blog, who are reinventing their lives in interesting ways, have travel as a cornerstone of their lifestyle.

    Reply
  • RolfFebruary 26th, 2010, 8:04 am

    Thanks everyone for the great feedback!

    Thanks also to all of you who have inquired about the Vagabonding Case Studies. I’m looking forward to making that feature a key part of my blog. My hope is that vagabonders will use it to share their experiences, inspire others, and create a community that mixes travelers (and would-be travelers) of all experience levels, sharing ideas and inspiration.

    Glad to see so many people here with such clear-headed travel ambitions (and awesome travel experiences) who are really giving thought to the idea that travel can be an ongoing way of life instead of an “escape” from life. Travel is a great way to realize that the “experiential” is so much more important than the “material” in day to day life. We’re all born equally rich in time; it’s just a matter of how we choose to actualize that wealth.

    I love Boyd’s example of how travel unlocked the kind of energy that made his work life more fruitful when he got home. I’m reminded of that T.S. Eliot line (which I quote in Vagabonding): “We shall not cease from exploration / And the end of all our exploring / Will be to arrive where we started / And know the place for the first time.” Travel allows us to see (and live at) home in a rejuvenated way.

    @MD: I hear what you’re saying about travel being a litmus test for interacting with family and friends outside of a certain comfort zone. I’ve known many couples whose key test of compatibility was a multi-month journey around the world (and some of those people went on to get married).

    @David: I appreciate your question (and your occasional comments over at my blog) — it’s good to consider ethics and economics as you travel. That said, the people who live in SE Asia would probably be bemused at the idea of your “guilt” at exploitation. The people of a given country are always far more savvy than we give them credit for, and often the “guilt” issue is often a dialogue among well-meaning (but slightly paternalistic) Westerners. It’s essential to travel mindfully and ethically (see ethicaltraveler.org for tips in this regard), but this is pretty easy to achieve when you’re traveling slowly, taking the time to listen, and patronizing the local “mom-n-pop” economy (where your money will go to local families instead of far-off corporations). So your parents need not worry — and if they do, point them to ethicaltraveler.org (or Vagabonding) for more perspectives on mindful and ethical travel.

    @Michael: Great to hear that you’re using 4HWW and Vagabonding principles to make things happen for you and your family. I hear from a lot of readers who’ve put their travel and time-wealth dreams into action with the family in tow. Do any of you family-vagbonders reading this post have tips or encouragement for Michael?

    @Mark: Just hearing you mention Jordan, Lebanon and Syria made me jealous to go back to those places. One of my favorite chapters in my newest book, “Marco Polo Didn’t Go There,” is about the insane, gregarious hospitality that you find in Beirut. Amazing part of the world.

    @Gian: Great to hear you’re doing big things on a small budget on the far side of the world. Sounds like you’re making yourself rich in experiences, budget notwithstanding. Any tips for readers on finding work (and saving money) as you go?

    Reply
    • Gian — June 24th, 2012, 9:32 am

      Hi Roy,

      First of all, sorry for responding so late – 2 years to be exact. LOL. I did not realize people like yourself would take time to read comments of people. I really appreciate it.

      Yes, I have always been passionate about challenging the norm especially when it comes to traveling. Every one dreams of doing but only a handful actually do it.

      I always tell people that traveling need not be expensive. In fact, the best experiences you can have is traveling on a budget because you will go outside of your comfort zone and experience the culture of the places you visit.

      Finding work is never easy but I always found going to online writing jobs work for me. In addition, I help create websites for small businesses. So, wherever I am, I can take my work with me. Paypal that is linked to my bank account with an ATM card works well for me. As I can transact on any bank of the countries I visit.

      I guess my advise to people is to plan your itinerary. Research online. Talk to other travelers for best spots (this helped me and my friends discover an off the beaten path island of whale sharks not found in your common travel guide books. Sweet!). Travel alone as this will help you make friends and be more daring.

      Well, I guess your book says a lot already and I really stoked that you actually read my comment. But, most of all, thank you for inspiring people like us to pursue our dreams and passion. Thumbs up to you! Keep safe always. Hope to hear from you soon!

      Cheers,

      Gian

      Reply
  • Roy JonesFebruary 26th, 2010, 8:09 am

    Oh how I miss travelling!

    Reply
  • Joseph Restivo — February 26th, 2010, 8:14 am

    Tim,

    This was a great post and hopefully I can provide a personal experience which can express how important this idea is.

    Growing up in Long Island, NY, both my parents were Principals in inner city schools (NYC). There is something to be said about the teaching profession. Aside from providing a stable income years past retirement, teaching (or administration in my parents case) provides vacation times that obviously coincide nicely with a child’s days off from school.

    In the case of my parents though, the administration profession usually requires principals and assistant principals to work through the summer programs. Due to this, my parents were rarely around during my “Boys of Summer” years. Work truly consumed their lives. They would wake up at 5:00AM, leave for work at 6:00AM, arrive home at 6:30-7:00PM. As my father and mother began to notice, their relationship with me began to suffer, especially when I was 13 or 14.

    My parents maturely choose to take the next summer off completely. Those three months of “freedom” were going to be used as a tool to bring the family back together. My parents brought my two sisters and myself in a room and asked where WE would like to go. This was a family decision. In the end the choice was made for Europe.

    To make a long story short. For three months I experienced countless new cultures, meet so many unique individuals and saw sites that most people DREAM of. But, in the end I was there with my family every step of the way. The bonds of fellowship we had through those three months are ones that still to this day tie us together. All it took was removing us all from our day to day grind, place us together somewhere new and unique and let nature take it’s course.

    I am now 24 and have started to yearn again for this feeling. I’ve started to take the first steps to truly make myself part of the NR; both in the mental and physical realm. We all want something more then what we currently have but I challenge you, try wanting for what you already possess. Look around you and take stock in the relationships that you’ve let slip. Rekindle the fire of friendship in the lives of those closest to you. In the end we are our experiences, not our “things.”

    Yours truly,
    Joseph Restivo

    Reply
  • Matt KarstenFebruary 26th, 2010, 8:19 am

    Good stuff guys. I recommend both your books to anyone who will listen. :-)

    I’m following the advice and leaving to vagabond around the world for a year this fall.

    My question to either of you is: What is the one thing you wish you had done differently when you first started traveling?

    Reply
  • _Jon — February 26th, 2010, 8:33 am

    I don’t have a desire for travel, so I can’t compare the feelings of being to these far-away places.

    But I can confirm that I use these philosophies in my daily life here at home and they are excellent suggestions for enjoying life.

    Reply
  • Christine HueberFebruary 26th, 2010, 8:43 am

    Excellent reminders that life is to be enjoyed now & the new experiences are what make it a pleasure … thank you!

    Enjoy,
    Christine Hueber

    Reply
  • IdaiFebruary 26th, 2010, 8:53 am

    It all sounds really reasonable – but I suspect there is a huge leaning towards single young people – with no children – in this story? I’d say the advice was useful when I was a university student, but is somewhat impractical now.

    I’m certainly not going to consider trading-in time with my kids to spend years travelling. I’d like my kids to go to school and to set themselves up for their adulthood as well through the interactions that brings (home-schooling would dampen the spirit of the vacation, in my view – so it’s not an option).

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissFebruary 26th, 2010, 3:24 pm

      Hi Idai,

      Search this blog for “Cold Remedy Case Studies” and you’ll see a bunch of families who travel and also handle schooling overseas with no problem.

      Hope you like them,

      Tim

      Reply
  • Ian CoburnFebruary 26th, 2010, 9:00 am

    What I really liked about this post is that it doesn’t tell people they have to travel; rather, it shares key benefits of traveling that can be applied at home. Lately, I’ve been seeing a lot of entrepreneurs and life coach-types telling people they have to travel to fulfill their lives. (I’m not talking about travel blogs or travel entries; I’m talking about self-improvement or entrepreneurial blogs and/or entries.) While I certainly like to travel, as do many people, this is really opinion. There are many people who have no desire to travel. Unlike many other messages about traveling, those people can benefit more easliy from the message here because the applications at home are clear. Nicely done!

    Reply
  • Wilson UsmanFebruary 26th, 2010, 9:03 am

    awesome man we missed you…anyway I gotta say that point five really connected. Especially because I am from colombia, well not really but my mom and dad are. And yes so many people always say that it is what you said, but it’s funny because there are so many foreigners that go there man just to like get married and stuff. I lived there half my life and here I am alive and kicking and I can’t say I had a bad or dangerous experience and we didn’t live and the best neighborhood.

    So for anyone that is thinking about visiting another country that you believe to be dangerous, I say find someone from there and ask them about it instead of just assuming things.

    Also this is awesome timing for this blog post Tim I am already planning my trip around august with my girl, hoping to be in san jose, costa rica visiting my dad that I haven’t seen in a long time and begin my 4 hour work week. Currently working on my muse I find it a little hard but hey…no body said it would be easy right?

    Good stuff man I appreciate the post

    Reply
  • SarahFebruary 26th, 2010, 9:05 am

    This whole post seems to be in perfect keeping with the lifestyle design approach of this international wealth management advisor:

    http://lifestyledesigngroupintl.com

    He seems to be a cross between Tim and “Simon Black”.

    Reply
  • allenburtFebruary 26th, 2010, 9:32 am

    Tim,

    I had a chance to grab a few drinks with Rolf about a year an a half ago when he was in Chicago for a book reading. Awesome and genuine guy. Both of his books helped inspire my 6 month mini retirement around the world in 2009.

    Cheers.

    Reply
  • ArchieFebruary 26th, 2010, 9:59 am

    Hi Tim,

    Thanks for the article. Its funny, I literally had Vagabonding come through letter box yesterday and I’m half way through already.

    Rolf Potts is a truly inspirational guy, I can certainly see why you brought it with you on your monstrous trip!

    Take Care

    Archie

    Reply
  • Tyler TervoorenFebruary 26th, 2010, 10:04 am

    Alright then, looks like I’ve got another book to add to the list.

    I really connected with what Rolf has to say and offer this perspective:

    The people that understand and embrace the kind of travel that you speak probably do so because they embrace that kind of lifestyle at home. It’s a natural extension of their current life.

    The people with big homes full of things they forgot they owned and constantly connected to their blackberry/iphone/whatever are more likely the ones you see at the airport with 6 bags and a cellphone to their ear as they haul themselves off to some exotic place for a week where they’ll sleep off their jet lag for most of it before coming home and starting all over again.

    How do we relay the message to that audience? Must we plug ourselves into their world and try to foster change from the inside?

    Maybe we don’t bother at all, looking to connect only with those that already agree, hoping that the influence will eventually permeate.

    Reply
  • Valerie CudnikFebruary 26th, 2010, 11:12 am

    As always, your posts hit the nail on the head! I am actually doing real work on the computer this afternoon, making sure that the posts for my garage sale mapping web site actually got posted to both my twitter and my facebook pages. Really, Tim, you should install the Su.Pr plugin on this blog. That way not only do your blog posts automatically post — with your own URL as the shortener, you would get the nifty stumbled upon bar at the top for people to give you a thumbs up without having to log into stumbled upon. That and all the tweeting, and re-tweeting, etc., it all gets a bit much.

    Anyway, as far as being were I am… I wouldn’t want to live any other way. Yes, I occasionally have to take my computer with me on vacation (not to exotic places, but say, when I’m visiting family for a week). I haven’t yet built a business, I own a job at the moment. Need to rectify that and am making progress.

    Reply
  • KaiFebruary 26th, 2010, 11:15 am

    A compelling read, thanks for sharing. I’m reminded of Mark Twain, arguably one of the most well-traveled Americans in the 19th century, who summed it up well:

    “Travel is fatal to prejudice.”

    Reply
  • mac — February 26th, 2010, 11:20 am

    I share the ideas and values expressed in the talk, but – to be honest – I was very surprised so many people found the content of it so “phenomenal”, “amazing”, “great”, “life-changing”, etc…

    In a way – paraphrasing the words of your declaration of independence “I hold these Truths to be self-evident”. But maybe this is just because I am European? Within the EU the importance of “slow travelling” is so common understanding that governments pour millions into programmes to have EU citizens spending time abroad (study abroad, volunteering abroad, learning languages abroad…).

    I am in no way trying to diminish the feeling of surprise and enlightenment people expressed in this conversation, nor I am trying to diminish the importance of what the speaker shared with the audience. To the contrary: I totally support and share the same values and ideas.

    What I wanted to share is my own sense of surprise for discovering that there are parts of the western world where travelling (in the true sense of the word) is somehow still a mysterious art…

    Happy travelling to everybody then! :)

    Reply
  • L. C. — February 26th, 2010, 11:59 am

    Excellent posting!!!! I just found the 4HWW a few months ago and I am slowing turning my business (I own it) into a self sufficient model. Thank goodness I have great employees. The changes have allowed me to live in a different state from my employees. Technology rocks!

    Now I need to buy Rolf’s book …

    Reply
  • HueyFebruary 26th, 2010, 12:56 pm

    Great post Rolf,

    Using a combination of Vagabonding and 4HWW I’m currently living in Mexico and heading for Chile and Argentina in a few months:)

    Could you put this question to Rolf please Tim (or answer it yourself)?:

    How can some people travel round the world and come back transformed while others are the same person they were when they left?

    Best wishes
    Huey

    Reply
  • A few things done - finally | Tyson WilliamsFebruary 26th, 2010, 1:08 pm

    [...] I am talking travel, if you visit Time Ferris’s blog post called “5 Travel Lessons You Can Use at Home“, there is a great video lecture from Rolf [...]

  • HughFebruary 26th, 2010, 1:25 pm

    Rolf,

    Fantastic Post! This really applies to me, as I am a guy who loves to travel (as you know), but I don’t have enough time for extended travel right now (working on that). One of my favorite aspects of travel is returning back home with a mind opened to meeting new people, experiencing new things, and overall a lot more laid back.

    Overall, the biggest lesson that travel has taught me is: don’t sweat the small stuff. It’s amazing how we let the little aspects of everyday life annoy us and worry us. When I return from travel, I have a new perspective on things, especially these things I used to worry about. Unfortunately, it takes a lot of effort to maintain this perspective in the face of hectic everyday life, but I think I’m getting better at it.

    In closing, I particularly love point #2 – Be Where You Are. This tip alone can change a person’s life. Not much worse than being with a good friend who can’t stop checking his Crackberry or iPhone.

    Thanks again for the tips

    Reply
  • AlistairFebruary 26th, 2010, 1:38 pm

    just finished Vagabonding, very inspiring book! I’m glad to read rolf’s tips again :)

    Reply
  • KlausFebruary 26th, 2010, 1:45 pm

    #1 and #2 are my favorites.

    Life is definitely not about becoming rich,
    it’s all about what you do with your time. Experience life.

    It took me a while to figure it out.

    Thanx for an inspiring post!

    Klaus

    Reply
  • Joshua BlackFebruary 26th, 2010, 1:50 pm

    Speaking as someone that likes to check his email 30-40 times a day for my on-line business, It’s getting to the point where I need a real kick in the drawers to wake myself up and realise that there is so much out there to see and do. That’s what turned me on to the 4HWW in the first place.

    I wholeheartedly agree that all of this, everything that we do in order to make more money or anything else, is all about buying more time.

    So I think that your point about time=wealth is the critical takeaway. The entire reason I’ve developed an info-empire is so that I can get more time back. Now if I can just convince myself that those emails will still be there at the end of the day, or even next week…

    We are so wrapped-up in the virtual “us” that we are quickly becomming just like the movie “Surrogates” (which everyone should see if they want a wake-up call to the information age. It’s time to go outside and do ANYTHING.

    -Joshua Black

    Reply
  • Rhys TrenhaileFebruary 26th, 2010, 2:53 pm

    Tim,

    Just got back from 18 days in Australia last night. Got to see ACDC in concert in their home city of Melbourne (I’m a die hard man, I mean come on how awesome was that), caught up with old friends in 3 different cities and scuba dived the Great Barrier Reef for 3 days off a boat. This article resonates with me as the greatest memories I’m going to take from that trip were the new friends I made from all over the world, many of them scuba divers from the trip that we hung out with for days afterward (culminating in a random karaoke bar in Cairns where I belted out Hey Jude to my throng of new friends, including some wonderful Swiss girls we met that night, god bless ‘em). This is going to lead to more trips to more countries, and that’s how I find my travel cycle goes.

    And FYI, by hammering your principles into place I only worked about 2 hours while I was gone and yet still made great income through my largely automated system, and week to week while in town I work approximately 16 hours a week, soon to be 8 hours a week once another agent is brought online, and dropping (teaching my VA to do my emails right now which should get me down to the vaunted 4 hour work week) — this from 70+ hours a week and a lot of burnout for the same pay just two and a half years ago — sound familiar?

    With the new time I’ve taken up acting and screenwriting which has gone extremely well and extremely quickly; I owe the speed of it to now being able to deconstruct the most important parts of each occupation 4hww style, and smashing ahead with that only; I love it. I’m actually a main character in a movie upcoming for a nationally distributed director, and I’ll know by next week if it’s me or another guy hosting a show for the Discovery Channel. No way any of this happens without your indirect guidance.

    You may want to email me back in regard to a couple of life skills I have deconstructed using your methods; I see your struggles with sleep, and I believe I have a much, much better solution than what your blog post proposes. As well, remind me to share an easy “delivery guy” trick with you as well which has rid me of daily errands, Christmas shopping etc. — sort of related to the “finding someone to cook for you” bit in your new edition.

    Thanks for everything pal, I owe you a beer or three. I understand you’re American so we’ll keep it to the light stuff.

    Cheers from Canada near Detroit,

    Rhys.

    Reply
  • Josh CrockerFebruary 26th, 2010, 3:08 pm

    Tim,

    Yet another great post and a perfectly-timed one for where I’m at in life.

    I’m very happy to tell you that after your post on the “Cold Remedy” and watching all the videos that I decided to apply your principles and ACT on what you book says (not just read it and then shelf it). It’s been one month now since I’ve left my job and freed up my time to be home with my 2 young daughters and wife.

    Lifestyle design is NOT hard, and after actually writing down the worst-case scenarios of doing what you suggest, I (like many others) realized that there’s nothing to be afraid of!

    Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!

    - Josh

    Reply
  • KimberlyFebruary 26th, 2010, 4:03 pm

    Hi Tim,

    Love love love the post. Great video! I am in love with travel. About three years ago I took off with my friend for six and a half months to Thailand, Australia, NZ, Fiji, Singapore and Beijing. It was the most amazing experience and changed the way I look at the world. My friend actually ended up going home after about four months so I got to experience travelling alone, which as you said, is a completly different way to travel. I had so much more opportunity to mingle with locals and really see the places I was visiting. It took me a while once I was back to get my money sorted out but four months ago we took off again, this time to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. Three weeks in, my friend caught dengue fever and was hospitalized until she was well enough to get on a plane back home. Yet again I would be embarking on my adventure alone. It was the most amazing thing that I have ever experienced. I have decided to change my lifestyl in such a way that enables me to travel the globe full time. I started a blogsite about places I’ve been or would like to go to, for now I’m sticking to SE Asia. Hopefully I will be fortunate enough to gain the level of success that you have, and perhaps someday we may cross paths in some obscure shanty town, I could always use an english lesson or two.

    Happy travels, and I’m glad to have come accross your site:)

    Kimberly

    Reply
  • Darren MichaelsFebruary 26th, 2010, 4:34 pm

    Tim,

    I was just sitting here in my remote office thinking that I am long overdue a technology break and a mini retirement. I loved the article; it was a good reminder to get things rolling.

    My first book is out and has been available on Amazon.com for a bit, and I am working hard on book 2 already. I am now well aware that my forced breaks and mini retirements greatly contribute to my writing process and creativity, thereby helping the process as a whole.

    Thanks for the continued inspiration.

    Reply
  • Doc KaneFebruary 26th, 2010, 4:41 pm

    …loved this video. I picked up Rolf’s book a few months ago from the library after reading Tim’s praise of it and enjoyed in completely. I actually wanted to keep it longer because of all the tips in the back of each chapter but someone recalled it from the library. Dang them!

    Hey Rolf, two questions: Is there video of the Q&A? Those are often the best parts of a lecture. And, two, how did you manage to get to Cuba? Via a non-US airport? Is it okay for us to do this (hopefully not a silly question?)

    Cheers,
    Doc

    Reply
  • Sean — February 26th, 2010, 5:27 pm

    Hey Tim,
    Great post as usual. Thanks to your advice and Rolfs, I’m vagabonding right now and funding it with a 4hww inspired muse. Just got back from costa rica (met Nick in Tamarindo, he said ya’ll went to St. Pauls together) and headed to the bahamas next. Hope you enjoyed south africa and can’t wait for the new books.

    Peace,
    Sean

    Reply
  • Scott DinsmoreFebruary 26th, 2010, 5:59 pm

    Bien venidos Tim! I bet SA was amazing. Can’t wait for the stories.

    What a post by Rolf. I was thinking of him this morning as I plan my next mini retirement. I’m getting married in August and something tells me we may be looking at a non traditional honey moon…perhaps a little flat in Italy while we dance around the country for 6-12 months. So stoked!

    The message in those 5 points and the ones you hammer home in 4HWW are so right on. Reminds me of Slow Dance a bit–which my fiancee printed and had framed for me due to the effect it’s had on me. Hats of to Rolf for the new reality he has created for travel (and you as well).

    btw, we just moved our NR muse office into downtown SF on Market Street at The Hobart Building. If you’re ever down town and have a few spare minutes, Guinness is on us. You put us here Tim!

    -Scott

    Reply
  • Toshi O.February 26th, 2010, 6:13 pm

    i’m in “hurry up and slow down” mode, seems i’ve been in this state of mind for quite some time.

    time = money/welth
    any thoughts on the amount of time upfront that is required to setup muses.

    btw i just set up this webiste and have made $5 from adwords, not much but it will do as a start.

    to.

    Reply
  • Stephen WiseFebruary 26th, 2010, 9:28 pm

    @David T.

    It’s great to be aware of particular exploitation potential in certain countries, but do so rationally. Go ahead and go where you wish, as long as you know you aren’t leaving any substantial negative footprint. Perhaps you can even make your trip there a positive thing by leaving a positive imprint on your journeys by making a few people happy, meeting them, perhaps sharing stuff with them from the united states or just making them smile. This way, you’ve created a kind of balance, and have no reason to have any guilt. All pride my friend!

    Reply
  • DanielFebruary 26th, 2010, 10:39 pm

    Thank you for the post and video guys. I arrived at Incheon airport in South Korea on Feb. 14 and will begin teaching English in public schools in Seoul come March 6.

    In 2009 I built an ebook business that made me an extra $6000 as I combined my fav. computer game and business skills I learned from Tim’s book.

    I’m currently working on bringing my teaching in Korea experience and my ebook business together as I spend a year abroad, possibly longer. Touring Asia has occurred to me a few times, and hearing from you, Rolf is very encouraging.

    I’m seeing some parallels between Tim, Rolf and myself that make me smile (and cry) out of pure happiness for the life I’ve had in the last 2 years, ever since I first read the 4HWW and Vagabonding and embraced their principles.

    There are a few other books that I feel are worth mentioning, that have impacted me more than I thought they would:

    “Inc. & Grow Rich” – Trusts, Personal corps, etc.
    “Zero Million” – Ryan Allis’ story and company building process
    Everything by Dan Kennedy

    Dan

    Reply
  • ChrisFebruary 27th, 2010, 5:08 am

    Great stuff again and a timely reminder for me. I’m having a ‘mini-retirement’ at my newish home, Taipei and one of my ‘comfort challenges’ is to go up to strangers near my home and start a conversation in Chinese but I’ve already but it off by one week.

    People really make places come alive. When I think back to the places I’ve been, the most memorable memories have been with people I’ve met there not ‘sights’.

    Thanks for the post

    Reply
  • Erin — February 27th, 2010, 6:45 am

    Thanks for this post Tim! It has perfect timing as my husband is just starting to recover from a life threatening condition. We won’t be able to travel as we had hoped for a while so these tips will help us immediately.

    I can also attest to #3. My job recently moved locations, extending my hour drive commute to a 1.5 hour train commute. By not allowing work to interfere in that 1.5 hour commute, I am living in that moment by finally getting to read some fiction and to just generally relax. People often think I’m crazy when I tell them I prefer my new longer commute, but I’ve found 3 hours a day that is now my time!

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissFebruary 28th, 2010, 4:35 am

      Erin, I feel exactly the same when living in a foreign country and having to commute on public transport! I always learn most of my language in these “forced” study sessions with no food, coffee, bathrooms, etc. as procrastination options.

      Tim

      Reply
  • Richard — February 27th, 2010, 8:52 am

    Hi Tim and Rolf,

    I was nodding my head the whole way through the video! I wish I could so eloquently deliver the value of my travels.

    I’m from the UK but after 4 months at a summer camp in the USA, 3 years teaching English in Japan, 1 year travelling Asia (India is a favourite) and 4 months exploring Europe and living in Spain on a European Union funded entrepreneurial exchange, it’s credit crunch time!

    My funds will not last forever, and my personal business is not happening over night (although it is happening). So the reality is, I’m 28 and for the last 2 months, I’ve been living at my mum’s house with no income.

    My skill set means I’m perfectly qualified for what I’d love to do next – coordinate NGO English school and volunteer programs in South America – but not much else. I have only been accepted for unpaid internships, but unfortunately, I only really have the money for the flight and I do actually need to earn at least a subsistence level wage (and I think I’m worth it!).

    How do I reconcile career development with personal (travel) development?

    I’m moving to London next Thursday to look for meaningful, interesting work, but really, I think I’ll find it in a different, developing country.

    All the best and thanks for any advice.

    From a guy on the edge of falling into the “real world”..

    Reply
  • Olivier GFebruary 27th, 2010, 9:14 am

    Mr Potts truly is a great man, so I’m happy to see him on this blog. I once contacted him for a little bit of advice. This is what he told me (it basically summarizes the lecture):

    Hi Olivier,

    Thanks for your message, and best of luck to you in life! If I were to
    give a stranger advice, it would be to view time as one’s truest form of
    wealth. Not “things” or “money” but “time” is what really counts in life,
    and how you spend it is how you become rich in life experience. Also: be
    patient, slow down and stay open to learning — both in your travels and
    at home — and you will better be able to actualize the time you have.

    I’m surely going to implement this advice into my life.

    Olivier

    Reply
  • RolfFebruary 27th, 2010, 10:19 am

    Thanks again for the comments, everyone! You’ve given some great examples of vagabonding in action.

    @Annabel: I know what you mean about how the developing world can teach us lessons about prioritizing family. When I’m not traveling I’m based in Kansas near my sister’s family and my parents. One of the reasons I got a farmhouse here 5 years ago (instead of a place in a sexier part of the U.S.) is that years of travel taught me that people all over the world consider family ties essential to a happy life. (Another reason I’m based in Kansas when I’m not traveling is that I can live here for a fraction of the cost of New York or San Francisco — and that savings invariably pays off in free time.) As I type this, I can see my nephews and my rat terriers running around in the field south of my house.

    @Matt: What do I wish I did differently when I first started traveling? In a way, nothing. I think some of the best travel lessons come when you learn them the hard way. But if I were to pinpoint one thing, it’s that I wish I’d slowed down more on the road. Simply slowing your pace can make a journey pay off in all kinds of unexpected ways (from meeting more people to saving more money on a day to day basis).

    @Tyler: I agree that vagabonding is at heart an attitude that extends in equal part to travel and home life, but I don’t think there’s a clear line between vagabonders and would-be vagabonders. The overworked Blackberry addict with too much luggage might already be mentally questioning the stresses in his life, and in two years he could be working the same job from a “remote office” on the beach in Rio. It’s a slow process for some people, and it often begins when people start to assess their time-wealth relative to their material wealth. I often tell people that the 4HWW “Trojan-horsed” Vagabonding’s time-wealth notions to a business audience that might never have otherwise plucked Vagabonding off the travel-section shelf in the bookstore. So there are many ways to promote the time-wealth philosophy to those obsessed with material wealth — and one of the best ways is to live by example.

    @Joseph: I loved your story of traveling with your family. I think there are few better ways to become rich in shared experience with your family than to travel with them. I traveled the world before my parents did, and I began meeting them in various parts of the world about 10 years ago, when they were in their 50s. To date we’ve visited Korea, China, Mongolia, France, and the Czech Republic together — and this spring I’ll be meeting them in New York (my mom has never been there, and my dad hasn’t been there since 1957).

    @Idai: I understand why you’d think traveling with children is impractical, but (even in this comment thread) there are many examples of people who’ve done it. Keep an eye on my Vagabonding Case Studies in coming months for some stellar examples of family vagabonding.

    @Ian: I love your observation that the travel mindset doesn’t necessarily need to involve travel. I actually point out in the pages of Vagabonding that long-term travel isn’t for everyone, and that’s fine. Seeking time-wealth, practicing simplicity, and refusing to set limits can make one a kind of traveler-seeker in one’s own hometown, amid friends and family.

    @Wilson: Great advice to counteract generalized travel-fears by seeking information from the people who live (or have lived) in a given destination. Another way of gaining perspective is to think about the headlines from your own country and what that might project to the rest of the world. I’m from the U.S. and I’ve never experienced a truly dangerous incident here, but there are people from outside the country who think the U.S. is all about school shootings and urban gang warfare. It’s essential to look past the more alarming news headlines when you’re trying to assess the safety of a given destination.

    @Richard: You raise the eternal question of sustainability for the vagabonding lifestyle. I think there’s always a rhythm, a give and take between personal and professional development, between work time and free time. If money is low right now, that probably just means it’s time to get back to work and strategically save for your next adventure. From the sound of it, you’ll also be wanting to plan your transition into doing the kind of work you’d love (NGO English schools and volunteer programs). I’ve had friends in similar positions with similar ambitions, and it’s often a matter of gradually gaining the experience and contacts to make it happen. That internship sounds promising (though of course it sounds like you might need to do some other work first to sustain the internship). So while I wish I had a silver bullet for you to make this transition happen overnight, I think it’s just a matter of being consistent, staying informed, and eventually moving closer to the kind of work you love.

    Reply
  • XixiFebruary 27th, 2010, 10:43 am

    What I have finally realized about travel is that no matter where you go, you still have to face yourself. Most people think that if they travel, they can somehow “escape” the world and their worries. However, when I travel, I can never really escape myself and my own mind. If you got issues with your family or other things in life, those things will continue to bother you in your mind during your travel. They won’t go away until you resolve them. So, don’t use travel as a way to escape.

    Reply
  • Jennie WalkerFebruary 27th, 2010, 12:17 pm

    Tim, great post!

    It’s been on my mind for a while now to get out in my own environment more, if just to bike and go to more farmer’s markets. I keep thinking…once I get this biz going, or that biz going, I’m on my way to South America or somewhere. I think I’ve been behind my computer screen too long! And I’ve read enough books already, any more is probably just lagniappe at this point.

    I quit my job a few months ago, working on my blog, freelance writing, and toying with the idea of investing in some rental properties before I make the plunge to travel out of the country. I’ll definitely keep up the blog and the freelance jobs if I do, but not sure how I would manage the properties.

    Also considered getting a camper/rv and traveling through the US before going out of the country…just to get my feet wet and to gain confidence traveling along.

    Anyway, great post, glad to see a new post, and thanks for your thought-provoking and inspiring website!

    Jennie

    Reply
  • Alex — February 27th, 2010, 12:42 pm

    Tim and Rolf,

    Thanks so much for the post and video! Your books are truly life changing.

    Do you have any advice for this gym rat concerning staying in shape while traveling long-term? Thanks again.

    Reply
  • Vagabond Lifestyle | Video | Destination EuropeFebruary 27th, 2010, 2:01 pm

    [...] been thinking a lot about all of this in recent months and today I watched this video by Rolf Potts in which he discusses his lifestyle, which is exactly how I would like to live. I definitely [...]

  • AndreaFebruary 27th, 2010, 2:17 pm

    Great video! I’ve been living the expat lifestyle for the last 5 years and while I’ve loved it, I’d forgotten what I really wanted to do and that was to travel more off the beaten path. So yes, I’ve travelled a lot but not *experienced* as much as I was planning on. It’s time to make some changes again.

    Reply
  • MichaelFebruary 27th, 2010, 4:33 pm

    Do you have any advice for this gym rat concerning staying in shape while traveling long-term?

    Check out Steve Maxwell and his bodyweight material. He lives out of his RV travelling the country and he has great stuff. The guy is 57 but looks great for any age.

    http://www.maxwellsc.com/blog.cfm

    Reply
  • RolfFebruary 27th, 2010, 5:39 pm

    @Alex: I tackled the fitness-on-the-road issue in a column for the Travel Channel’s WorldHum.com a couple years back:

    http://www.worldhum.com/features/ask-rolf-potts/how_do_you_stay_fit_when_youre_traveling_20080520/

    That advice applies when I’m moving around a lot. When I say in one place for awhile, I usually get a weekly or monthly gym membership. In Cuba a monthly gym pass cost me $7; in the Dominican Republic a monthly pass cost me $18. It’ll cost more in more developed countries, but gym prices are rarely more than you’ll find in the U.S.

    Reply
  • MichaelFebruary 28th, 2010, 1:51 am

    Hey,

    I just reviewed Rolf’s book and it was very interesting. This is so uncommon for “us” to travel this way that it requires a real commitment to really enjoy the experience.
    After spending one year in Berlin I relaly felt understood like he describes in the last chapter.
    Anyway, this is an healthy practice that everybody can experience just by starting not to plan everything while traveling :)

    Reply
  • JonnyFebruary 28th, 2010, 3:07 am

    Great article especially the points about your time as a commodity and being forced to simplify your life.

    I would add that if you couple a simple life, with ample time AND good financial intelligence then in this new information age you are on a good path for achieving lasting wealth and happiness in life.

    Reply
  • NickFebruary 28th, 2010, 3:41 am

    Interesting article.
    Good advices :)

    Reply
  • Alex — February 28th, 2010, 7:33 am

    Rolf and Michael- thanks so much for the advice, I really appreciate it!

    Reply
  • Linda — February 28th, 2010, 9:51 am

    Tim/Rolf, I was so happy to see another post to Tim’s blog – I have missed the blogs and was wondering where Tim was. I was a vagabonder in the 70′s and 80′s and eventually got a job in international development, which paid for even more vagabonding. However, am currently stuck in DC writing ‘stimulating” reports and your blog is tugging at my vagabonding spirit- your blogs are getting me fired up about fime, freedom and travel again. Rolf, I agree with you that one should go slowly and focus on 1 city, country, region – depending on the time one has to travel. I see so many young kids (and old kids, my age) wanting to tick off the citiies, cathedrals and museums they’ve seen and not taking the time to “see” the place.

    Keep up the traveling and the posting to inspire us former vagabonders to get back in the saddle. .

    Reply
  • Jennie WalkerFebruary 28th, 2010, 12:26 pm

    I just watched Rolf’s video and wanted to leave another comment. I’ve only made two trips out of the country so far, and one was a week long trip to Mexico city to visit a Canadian friend who taught in a university just outside of the city. I was probably 25 when I made that trip. It was the first time I’d ever traveled alone, and outside of the US. So I had few expectations, which was a good thing. Not speaking Spanish didn’t help with my anxieties during the 5 hour bus trip I had to take once the plane landed. I did pick up several words and some phrases during that trip though, hunger and being “lost” are big motivators!

    But looking back on the trip, 7-8 years later, the things I remember most are the brief but meaningful interactions with people and some out of the way places:

    (1) Visiting an antique store (my first trip out of the apartment alone!) to buy a rosary and talking with the owner using my guidebook, but leaving and feeling confident that I was able to make such an exchange for something I now treasure.

    (2) Having a local hold my hand sing to comfort me as I scuttled down the side of a pyramid on my rear end (I’m afraid of heights, and the view from the top was horrifying, nothing compare to the trip up!)

    (3) A photo of the most beautiful little house I’ve ever seen from a day trip into a colonial mountain village, I have kept the photo in a frame and nearby for inspiration to travel again.

    (4) The guy on the street who gave me 2-3 quarters (I was lacking less than $1) so I could get back to the airport in time. I was in panic mode and he came to my rescue. Not sure why I needed this amount, but I definitely needed small change for whatever reason…

    It’s really true that you remember the people and interactions more than the views, the “adventures”, the landmarks, and even the food. I’m a foodie, and I definitely DO remember the food (and mostly I remember the food in context… like the steak and cactus in the upstairs restaurant sitting across from my friend who was reading a book and eating a cheese soup and the cheese was so gooey and stringy it kept getting all over his face), but the people stay with you forever!

    Jennie

    Reply
  • clea walford — February 28th, 2010, 5:25 pm

    I’ve been an expat for the last 3,5 years and love it. Only I don’t travel as much as I originally wanted to. AFter reading your article I think that I should really try to travel more again!

    Reply
  • Jason — February 28th, 2010, 5:45 pm

    Tim,

    What a great post at PERFECT timing. I just came back from 4 weeks in Russia. Amazing trip. I read 4HWW on the ride to and from. I am currently reading it again to pull out some more things I can implement immediately. The post is perfect timing because I am now in the planning phase of my first mini-retirement and I am going out of my skin knowing that I can’t start for 12-18 months… now I can slow down and use these tips to enjoy the moment in the here and now for what it is while planning my first ex-pat experience.

    I am a 31 y/o guy that until the first read of 4HWW was full bought into the rat race and the materialistic life it provided. Your book changed my reality paradigm. I now have virtual assistants, a mail scanning/forwarding service, and attitude that are allowing me to really enjoy life in a way I never thought possible. DEAL is perhaps the most innovative yet common sense approach to living a purposeful life I have come across. Thank you so much for publishing and keeping it going for all of us. You are the motivation behind the movement. Thank you!

    Jason

    Reply
  • michael moebesFebruary 28th, 2010, 6:05 pm

    Agree with the second paragraph of point #1. I don’t travel as often as I’d like, but I never feel as alive and excited as I do in a new town, exploring and interacting with locals with no timetable. I did this a few months ago in Portland, Maine. I was alone but far from lonely. I can’t wait to do it again this summer.

    Reply
  • Dave Gold — February 28th, 2010, 6:39 pm

    Timmy and Rolfster! It’s about time you two did a dual-post :)

    Having lived in New York City for some time now, I’ve found the application of your “principles” timely, relevant and enriching – without ever leaving town.

    1) NOT having a car here is a true luxury. I love leveraging my commute time on public transportation for self-enrichment and reflection. Currently, I’m going back and forth between an Italian language audio program, Gary Vaynerchuk’s ‘Crush It!’ audio book, and a J. Krishnamurti dialogue.

    2) I’ve moved away from the swank dining scene of New York City, in favor of the authentic (and always humble) mom-and-pop restaurants of a given culture. Additionally, I’ll ALWAYS try the beer/wine from a given region, and if my language skills allow, I’ll try to hold a decent conversation with the waiter/waitress/owner. My faves right now are Caracas Arepa Bar (Venezuelan) and Zebu Grill (Brazilian) – strongly recommended!

    3) I walk my dog to Central Park daily, regularly trying new routes and stopping to enjoy the architecture surrounding me. Once in the park, I find immense enjoyment watching my dog frolic off-leash with his ‘buddies’. The dog community here in New York City is INCREDIBLE (especially, before 9AM on the weekends!). It truly is a sub-culture in itself.

    4) I’ve had a lot of luck with Craigslist and Meetup.com here, as well. There are some incredible people doing some really incredible things. Meeting new people from different backgrounds and cultures is easier than ever. I recently had lunch with a woman from Tibet, who fled from the Chinese with the Dalai Lama many years ago. Simply listening to her stories were mind-blowing.

    In a place as vast and fast-paced as New York City, it is very easy to speed through life miserably, trying to keep up with the latest-and-greatest, and missing the beautiful underlying culture altogether. That’s where your advice hits like a friggin’ sledgehammer. I can hardly contain myself when I think about all of the experiences I have left to uncover here!

    Molto grazie per l’ispirazione, amici.

    Ciao,
    Dave

    Reply
  • AndreaFebruary 28th, 2010, 7:21 pm

    This is an outstanding post. I try to live my life this way. Unfortunately, however, I see too many people trapped in the mode of goods-and-status-accumulation, as opposed to experience-accumulation. Do we blame society for this? It can be very difficult for people to break out of patterns, especially when their behaviour results from years of parental pressures to be a “good middle-class citizen”: get a high-paying job, buy a house (and a mortgage), have children, rinse, repeat…

    I think it is wonderful that you’ve focussed on the fact that you don’t have to be travelling to behave like a traveller. I wonder if people who have never had the impetus or good-fortune to do an extended travel stint will fully understand these principles? But it is really refreshing to see the ideas outlined here for people to think about.

    Reply
  • ChrisFebruary 28th, 2010, 7:47 pm

    Just watched the video for a second time and a flood of memories have come back to me.

    Travel is definitely an experience rich thing to do and the advice Rolf gives is spot on. From my travels it’s the times that I’ve let unfold by themselves that have been the riches for example; teaching English in a refugee camp in the jungle on the Thai-Burma border; discovering that I actually liked hiking in Nepal – after 17 days of it, I wanted more – and the list could go on.

    Also, just being open to people can make a huge difference. Yesterday, I went with my girlfiend and met a friend of hers. I wasn’t that excited about it but after she viewed my photography, she wants me to do some designs for T-shirts – cool.

    Even though I’ve been traveling on and off for 12 years, I’ve still got stuff to learn.

    Offering your skills is a great one. I’ve got English teaching experience but recently when I’ve travelled I tend to forgot about it. Next time I’ll do something like Rolf did.

    Also, ways to travel, buying a boat and sailing down the Mekong – MAGIC!

    Thanks Rolf and Tim for this.

    Great stuff.

    Time is Wealth!

    Reply
  • Wealthy in Time | Brown Butter & BourbonFebruary 28th, 2010, 8:41 pm

    [...] Ferriss posted video of Rolf Potts, who wrote Vagabonding about long-term travel, giving a speech about principles of travel that also [...]

  • Danielle TownFebruary 28th, 2010, 8:46 pm

    I love these ideas and I just ordered Vagabonding. The time equals wealth is meaningful in more than one way. I wrote a blog post about it (click on my name to go there) – while I’ve always thought of wealth as giving you options, I now think what it really gives you is the time to explore those options. My dad’s new book Payback Time is about generating wealth so you can get off the treadmill of financial dependence, and I think these ideas necessarily go to together. I plan to write more about it after reading the book.

    Reply
  • GrokFebruary 28th, 2010, 9:25 pm

    Testing Chrome browser for Tim

    Reply
  • Rossda — February 28th, 2010, 9:33 pm

    Mac – Chrome 5.0.335.0 dev – No problems

    Reply
  • Yukie — February 28th, 2010, 9:58 pm

    Hi Rolf,
    I totally agree with your opinion of expatriated experiences. I’ve lived in three foreign countries(for a relatively long period of time) and it never ceased to amaze me how much I learned (and am still leaning) from those experiences. I was hoping to go back to the journey but by watching your DO lecture, I think I’d better do it soon. Thank you.

    Hi Tim,
    Great post, as usual. Hopefully I am not the only one who associates Vagabonding with Bakabon.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensai_Bakabon

    By the way, I watched your DO lecture as well and I finally understand why you were wearing DO lecture T-shirts on one of your random episodes.
    Again, thank you for your inspiration.
    Yukie

    Reply
  • Jeff NabersFebruary 28th, 2010, 11:06 pm

    Wow. I’ll echo the “great timing” thing.

    Rolf, just last week I was thinking of buying your book on my Kindle. For some reason, just reading the summary didn’t sell me. Now I got a taste of your philosophy and I’m getting back on my Kindle to order your book now.

    :-)

    Jeff

    Reply
  • Wilding PenderisMarch 1st, 2010, 1:38 am

    This post blew my mind!

    Everything I’ve been experiencing for the
    past 4 months traveling here in Thailand
    were summed up here in this post brilliantly.

    I’m a changed man!

    I’m convinced this trip saved me. My mental
    health, love for life, interests…everything.
    Travel has become my top 3 favourite activities.
    I want to visit everywhere hot. If it’s warm there
    …I’m there!

    Oh and Tim, you were the inspiration for sure.

    Reply
  • Storm Kiernan — March 1st, 2010, 8:28 am

    Blog seems to work well in chrome.

    Reply
  • DJ WetzelMarch 1st, 2010, 9:48 am

    Hi Tim and Rolf,

    I recall back in 2008 when I flew back into Dulles airport after spending 4 months backpacking through Malawi. I had spent the last four months with only the clothes on my back, my backpack, and a sloppy guide for the local language Chichewa. I couldn’t speak it (yet) and everywhere I went little children would run away from me yelling “mzungu” (white man). But after being in country for four months and living among the people, learning their customs, eating their food, and enjoying life with them, America was a shock to my system.

    The first thing I saw when I stepped off the plane was a Starbucks…and as happy as I was to smell a caramel macchiato I was physically sick at the indulgences we have here in the U.S.

    I know this comment may be a tad off-topic but when I consider the care-free, inspirational four months I spent in Malawi I wonder why I’m still here and not back there. I grew so much in those four months, and I was so content and genuinely happy, that I didn’t want to leave.

    There is a lot to be said for travel and I think this post is fantastic.

    Reply
  • ByronMarch 1st, 2010, 10:37 am

    Great video Tim!

    I have been traveling for 4 months now on a mini-retirement through: Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Colombia, and Argentina (actually for 2 weeks last March) and everything Rolf had said about traveling definitely mirror my own experiences.

    Thanks so much for the encouragement I have found in your book and on your blog to break the 9-5 routine, and I would definitely also like to encourage others to take the time in their lives to go where you’ve always wanted to go, because experiences in life are what matter…

    -Byron

    Reply
  • Stephen NashMarch 1st, 2010, 12:19 pm

    Loved Vagabonding, and love this post. Reminds me to re-read his book. Incidentally, I’m a bookworm and I spend far too much on books frankly (and I refuse to get a Nook/Kindle etc). Here’s to rereading the books we’ve loved in the past to reinspire us and to deepen our understanding of it. A great travel book is “The Conference of the Birds” which chronicles Peter Brook’s journey through Africa in the early 70′s with a band of actors, performing in villages, seeking the essential. I’m rereading it now and finding it to be very inspiring both creatively, and for my travel-ache.

    Stephen Nash.

    Reply
  • Kseniya — March 1st, 2010, 2:52 pm

    great post!
    congenial ideas and vivid metaphors.
    ‘ll show it to my English speaking club members this week :)
    thank you very much indeed!

    Reply
  • soultravelers3March 1st, 2010, 2:54 pm

    Coming late to this, but just couldn’t miss the opportunity to give a big “Woot” to Rolf & Tim for this post.

    Yes, it’s mostly young males that you touch with your wisdom & inspiration, but this 50-something mom (who still has the heart of a child & has always been an out-of-the-box thinker) just adores both of you and the messages you share!

    (Is it just me, or do you two look like you could be brothers or cousins? ;) At any rate, you are wise beyond your years. The world so needs the messages that you give, so I get positively gleeful over your popularity!).

    I think I mostly have lived by those 5 keys, but even more so since we started our open ended world tour in 2006!

    Yes, @Idai & others who doubt, families with young children CAN vagabond around the world & CAN live a 4HWW and we have been living examples since 2006, THRIVING in 32 countries, 4 continents so far on just 23 dollars a day per person.(And we haven’t gotten to the far east or South America yet!). Living large well under our means allows us to build our nest egg as we roam the world (in a very green way).

    We’re thrilled to be featured Case Studies in the amazing new 4HWW and that plus these 5 keys from Rolf have enriched our lives profoundly. Time DOES equal wealth, so our primary reason to live this way was to have more quality & quantity time together and give our trilingual, violin & piano playing young daughter who was 5 when we began, the best possible education and foundation as a global citizen of the 21st century.

    So glad to hear that you will be doing Case Studies too Rolf. What is so great about them is how many unique ways people can make these principals work for them!

    Reply
  • MVTMarch 1st, 2010, 8:27 pm

    Hi Tim – what website would you recommend for event planning – I’m organizing a group hiking expedition with packing list, agenda, etc. Trying to tie everyone together on this. Thanks for your help!

    Reply
  • Janet — March 1st, 2010, 9:28 pm

    Hi Tim,

    I would like to respond to a point you made in your own DO Lecture. You stated that you aim to double the number of math and science majors in the US within 10 years, with the goal of increasing scientific literacy and encouraging logical decision-making.

    This is a great and admirable goal, but your methodology is…….sub-optimal.

    May I suggest an alternative? Actually, 2.

    1. Improve the communication of scientific progress in the popular media. Scientific literacy is poor in North America because science is not communicated in an exciting and accessible manner. Science is thought of as something intangible, even sinister, going on in the ivory tower. This is pure crap.

    2. Change the way science is taught in school, so that it is considered as essential for everyday functioning as reading and writing. We don’t need more science students – there are quite a lot of us already, and good jobs are scarce enough as it is. What we do need is for the public to have an eleventh-grade level understanding of basic math, biology, physics, and chemistry. Ok 11th grade is high….I’ll settle for 8th.

    These changes would bring about more good than doubling university science enrollments.

    Cheers,
    Janet

    Reply
  • Dustin EbaughMarch 1st, 2010, 10:45 pm

    No problems with Chrome here either.

    Great post Rolf! I’m in KS too, Wichita. Soon to be relocating to Phoenix, but you’re right, this is a great place to be. I’ve been here 20 years and have done a lot of traveling here and abroad from the center of the country. The cost of living is a major factor.

    @ Jennie We have 11 rentals and we’re going to keep them through our mini-retirement and after we relocate to Phoenix, an 18-hour drive from here. We have some friends who are going to manage the properties for us, but we also found several well-qualified management companies to do the job too. Sure, they might not do everything just like you would, but look around, ask other investors if they have suggestions for management companies in your area. I’m sure this is something you can outsource and not let it hold you back from traveling.

    @ Tim You are the MAN! Thanks so much for your book. Just finished up the 2009 edition on Saturday. I have already cut my workdays down from 12-18 hours to 4-7 hours a day, I’ll get it down lower, I’m sure. I just wanted to thank you for the great blog and all the super ideas in your book. You have inspired me and helped me to understand there’s much more to life than possessions and “goals”. Taking steps to the goals is just as important as having them.

    Best wishes to all and your muses.

    Reply
  • Bill — March 2nd, 2010, 3:29 am

    I’ve never traveled before these last five months in China. I have not been back home yet but as I read this article I can’t help but think of a small Mexican bar in Pomona California where I quickly used the restroom and left. I had been working on the road at my side job, process server, and found myself in dire need of a restroom. I can’t believe how many places at home I would have spent more time now that I’ve become so accustomed to being places where I “don’t belong.” By the way, it was the 4hww that lead me here at 42 years of age, never having owned a passport before. I am having the time of my life. I’m so glad I did not wait until retirement. I am sure I will never be the same even if I ever return home.

    Reply
  • Brian BreretonMarch 2nd, 2010, 9:19 am

    Tim-
    Another awesome and inspirational post (even if it is a guest post, it is on your site!). Since reading your book I left my job, moved to England, was able to live there for 2 years, was able to work for myself doing what I love to do (business skills training).
    I have just moved back to America (time for my British wife to experience America!) and even have managed to publish a book on Lulu.
    Keep up the posts, looking forward to your next book Tim (and yes, you are mentioned in mine!)
    It is called Think Like A Salesman, you can find it on Lulu…if you want a copy, I’d be happy to send one to you in thanks for all you’ve done.
    Cheers!

    Reply
  • RobMarch 2nd, 2010, 10:27 am

    Excellent article. I enjoyed the emphasis on experiences and not personal possessions. I find that it’s very easy to get into that mindset while traveling, the problem is what happens when I return home. Western consumerist values, make it more difficult to lead an experience filled life. Maybe I’m just making excuses.

    Reply
  • Leonard Irwin — March 2nd, 2010, 3:05 pm

    Hi Tim and Rolf

    Thanks for another great read. I like Rolf’s application travel benefits to life right now. Planning my own lifestyle design adventure and decided to apply those tips right now.

    Start to get into the mindset now and not wait. What I like about this post suggests people can start to develop a 4HWW long term travel mindset while still in their present lifestyle.

    Naturally, this list is just a sampling of how travel can transform your non-travel life. What have I missed? What has travel taught you about how to live life at home?

    For my non travel life I am using these suggestions to prepare my mind for the near future exit into the 4HWW lifestyle.

    Thanks to you both
    Leonard Irwin
    Kingston Ontario Canada

    Reply
  • MikeMarch 2nd, 2010, 5:34 pm

    I’ve been living the vagabond lifestyle for a couple of years myself now, having extricated myself from the rat race. I must say, while all five principals really resonated with me, the first one has been what has transformed my life. Time is all we have, and all we’ll ever really have.

    Our big-screen TVs, homes, and cars often have a dollar value attached to them – but has anybody considered the “time value” that comes with them as well? How much does your car cost in time? Maybe 3 hours and 30 minutes a month in maintenance, logging online to pay insurance and waxing the body? It’s one thing if you love cars, but another if you are trading your time for your possessions.

    The big screen TV.. well… don’t get me started on the time per year it takes to find the remote :)

    Richness comes from experiences.

    Reply
  • RobMarch 2nd, 2010, 11:50 pm

    Great tips and advice here.

    Something I think people need to watch occasionally after long term travel to not fall into the fast paced western lifestyle too quickly. I find time as wealth a bit difficult as the amount of time we have isn’t measurable until it’s all over. Although I am trying to change my mentality to it. I guess that comes from a ‘more is better’ background though.

    I emailed Rolf about being a case study after travelling for the past 12 months (I’m still out here trying to get by without any more savings), hopefully I’m on his list :-)

    Reply
  • Arlen BusenitzMarch 3rd, 2010, 12:44 pm

    Great point about keeping it simple. Packing less not only saves money on the trip but also makes for a better experience. I have lugged two 60 pound suitcases as I hopped public transporation trying to get to the hotel. Next time I’ll pack less.

    Reply
  • Jody — March 3rd, 2010, 1:31 pm

    Hi Tim,

    Just thought you’d like to know that the “Walden; Or, Life in the Woods” link in this blog post does not link to a book, but instead back to this blog post it self.

    Cheers

    Jody

    Reply
  • BryanMarch 3rd, 2010, 4:20 pm

    Perfect timing for me to find this post as I’m about to take off for a much needed vacation. Thanks!

    Reply
  • CoreyMarch 3rd, 2010, 6:11 pm

    I agree with number 5. I went to Caracas and Bogota. Every one said I would get kid napped or killed. I had a great time and met tons of people. I have also been to Mexico city many many times ie the kidnap capital. Had a great time every time I went. Never had any trouble.

    Reply
  • DynastyDCMarch 3rd, 2010, 6:20 pm

    Hey Rolf –

    Wow, explosive presentation. I too enjoy flying solo. I commend you for such wonderful insight.

    As noted in your video, Vagabonding is not an escape to life (as with so many other things). Very true.

    I also agree with you about life not rewarding us with free time after a lifetime of hard work. Thus, it is imperative to reevaluate the concept of time and create opportunities.

    By the way, I dig your house. I’m happy your home in Arkansas offers you genuine satisfaction. It’s your humble perspective which matters most.

    Best wishes to you and much success on your speaking ventures.

    Reply
  • The Travel TartMarch 3rd, 2010, 6:41 pm

    I totally agree with all of these lessons. My motto is ‘The More I Learn About Other Countries, The More I Learn About My Own!’

    That’s why travel is so damn addictive!

    Reply
  • Tanner ChristensenMarch 3rd, 2010, 9:06 pm

    Tim, you are – by far – one of the best authors on lifestyle design. Hands down.

    And speaking of travel, I have a brief travel-related question I would like to ask you via email. Could you please shoot me a quick email? It would be greatly appreciated!

    Reply
  • MaximMarch 4th, 2010, 6:53 am

    Tim, I wanted ask you for a long time what are your favorite travel blogs?

    Well, actually I think it’s better to ask what are your TOP-10 / TOP-20 blogs overall?

    I think this would make a perfect post, as many wonder like me what other blogs of the same quality as yours are out there :)

    Thanks a lot!

    Reply
  • ShushuMarch 4th, 2010, 1:13 pm

    Darling Tim
    FYI:

    Hey Rolf
    My name is Shunit (Shushu) Cohen. I’m a 32 y/o Israeli woman.
    I traveled the world and lived in different continents.
    Respecting your time (and being an Israeli), I will come straight to the point:

    My story
    I read the 4 Hour Work Week (I refer to the book as my “bible” and to Tim as my “God”)

    One night I was doing the exercise “Fear setting and escaping paralysis” from the book.
    Little did I know where an exercise like this would take me…

    “Samba station” Case Study

    My dream: going to Salvador, Bahia, Brazil to study dance

    The challenge, well, one of many: I am broke!!!

    At that time I was working and living in NYC for a good few years, and going on a long term journey seamed impossible and inappropriate. Life was complex.

    Then it “hit” me:

    “Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose” (Steve Jobs).

    “Flip Flop nation” here I come!!!

    But how???

    I don’t know anyone or speak Portuguese, nor do I have the funds to get myself there.
    What am I going to do???

    From this moment on I produced a chain of what I will call “miraculous” and unexpected events. This wasn’t easy and I was “sweating” a LOT.

    1st
    A job, I will find a place to work in Salvador-and I did:
    A receptionist at the “Nega Maluca” guesthouse.
    This job alone provided all of my basic needs and self confidence to start anew.

    2nd
    Garage sale, selling my belongings, for 2 reasons:
    1. I need the money so that I can realize this dream.
    2. I’m taking a backpack. One backpack that’s it.
    The rest I will donate. Salvation Army here I come…
    Done deal!!!

    3rd
    Air fair
    1200$ WHAT??? Hell no!!!
    Tim says “there are always lateral options”.
    Here was mine:

    Flying from NYC to El Salvador to Peru to Sao Paulo and finally after 46 hours arriving at Salvador da Bahia Brazil.

    The beauty is?
    It cost me 650$
    Sweet!

    To be continued…

    “And when the samba played the sun would set so high” (Madonna)

    Hope to here from you so that I can dispense the rest of my story…
    Thanks in advance
    Shushu

    Reply
  • Shunit (Shushu)March 4th, 2010, 2:46 pm

    Darling Tim
    FYI…Read the following
    I love you, and owe you everything.

    Hey Rolf
    My name is Shunit (Shushu) Cohen. I’m a 32 y/o Israeli woman.
    I traveled the world and lived in different continents.
    Respecting your time (and being an Israeli), I will come straight to the point:

    My story
    I read the 4 Hour Work Week (I refer to the book as my “bible” and to Tim as my “God”)
    One night I was doing the exercise “Fear setting and escaping paralysis” from the book.
    Little did I know where an exercise like this would take me…

    “Samba station” Case Study
    My dream: going to Salvador, Bahia, Brazil to study dance

    The challenge, well, one of many: I am broke!!!
    At that time I was working and living in NYC for a good few years, and going on a long term journey seamed impossible and inappropriate. Life was complex.

    Then it “hit” me:
    “Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose” (Steve Jobs).

    “Flip Flop nation” here I come!!!

    But how???

    I don’t know anyone or speak Portuguese, nor do I have the funds to get myself there.
    What am I going to do???

    From this moment on I produced a chain of what I will call “miraculous” and unexpected events. This wasn’t easy and I was “sweating” a LOT.

    1st
    A job, I will find a place to work in Salvador-and I did:
    A receptionist at the “Nega Maluca” guesthouse.
    This job alone provided all of my basic needs and self confidence to start anew.

    2nd
    Garage sale, selling my belongings, for 2 reasons:
    1. I need the money so that I can realize this dream.
    2. I’m taking a backpack. One backpack that’s it.
    The rest I will donate. Salvation Army here I come…
    Done deal!!!

    3rd
    Air fair
    1200$ WHAT??? Hell no!!!
    Tim says “there are always lateral options”.
    Here was mine:
    Flying from NYC to El Salvador to Peru to Sao Paulo and finally after 46 hours arriving at Salvador da Bahia Brazil.
    The beauty is?
    It cost me 650$
    Sweet!

    To be continued…
    “And when the samba played the sun would set so high” (Madonna)

    Hope to here from you so that I can dispense the rest of my story…
    Thanks in advance
    Shushu

    Reply
  • Ivan Wanyu — March 4th, 2010, 3:25 pm

    Tim, I’m a 21 year old kid from Denmark.

    I’ve seen and experienced some crazy things through out my life, thinking it was because I was such a free soul, nonsens.

    I realized a couple of months ago that I have been scared all my life.
    Of what I do not know.
    The most simple things, even mandatory things for survival could pass me by in form of days wasted on the couch.

    I read your book (4HWW) and I’m not scared any more.

    I understood what it all was about when a read your example with the student who were proposed with the challenge of contacting stars.
    I told my self I could get a star to personally write me back. I chose you.
    I have never contacted anybody before, not even my idols.

    I look forward hearing from you.

    PS: My life just started, thank you,

    Reply
  • Cindy SwainMarch 4th, 2010, 5:08 pm

    Tim and Rolf,

    One of these days with enough of us forward thinking-travel hungry-seize the day-live in the moment-minds, we are going to change the American ideology of waiting until retirement to start living. It always blows me away that so many people don’t grasp the idea that we don’t have a someday, all we hold in our hands is the present and if you have a desire to do something, like travel in India or learn how to kite surf, well than why not!

    I grew up in a town of less than 1,500 people (we didn’t even have a traffic light) and went from a small town girl to globe trotter. In the past nine years I have participated in a 3 month exchange in Italy, a year long study abroad in Australia, 2 months of traveling in South America, an 8 month (10 country) around the world trip, and for the last year have been living in Italy and am in the process of renewing my visa for another 4 months-1 year.

    One of the biggest lessons that I have learned over this span of time is how fast things are changing–from technology to culture to nature—and how lucky we are to be able to experience the world while traditions, customs and natural beauty still exists.

    Technology masques traditions, globalization transforms cultures and nature is an uncontrolled force that is constantly changing. I feel truly sorry for those who are planning to wait to experience the world, because by that time so much of the natural and simple beauty that we have the blessed opportunity to experience today may and probably will be gone.

    So, great work on spreading the word of how important it is to travel NOW, and I look forward to helping out on this global mission of awareness!

    -Cindy Swain

    Reply
  • NJ — March 5th, 2010, 3:08 am

    Hi Tim,
    I’m one of your students. Thanks for setting an example of ‘Going against the flow’,
    and ‘Living the life you want’….phenomenon.

    Now, i’m practicing on all of the fun tasks given in your book, and what i’m working on at the moment is ‘Contact any famous people’…. and i want to do it with you first, of course, an idol. ^^ If there s any response from you, i d be gone madly happy.
    Thank you in advance.

    Take care,
    Maverick dude,
    Thailand

    Reply
  • Tourist about town… « Manya ChylinskiMarch 5th, 2010, 5:04 am

    [...] are some thoughts from Rolf Potts about taking the lessons from being travel you and translating them into everyday you. March 5th, [...]

  • Ron PringleMarch 5th, 2010, 8:18 am

    Great article and great advice! My wife and I have been slowly applying that to our own lives and it’s defiitely starting to pay off in the every day experiences we have. I’m planning a week long motorcycle trip around Lake Michigan this summer in preparation for longer trips in the future and I’ll definitely keep these points in mind on my trip. Thanks again for the great article.

    Reply
  • RolfMarch 5th, 2010, 10:36 am

    @Daniel: Good luck with everything in Korea! My experiences in that country over 10 years ago had a huge impact on me, and deepened my instincts as a traveler. It’s not always easy to live in Korea, but it’s almost always rewarding.

    @Erin: I love it that you’re investing your train-commute into personal edification! I think it’s great that (instead of stressing out over the commute) you’re protecting that time and making it your own.

    @Dave: Glad to hear you’re approaching NYC dining at a mom-n-pop level. I was in Queens last summer and I found myself in a neighborhood where all the signs (and menus) were in Korean. The hwe dup-bap I ate there was one of the least expensive lunches I’ve had in NY — and the best Korean food I’ve had outside of Korea.

    Also, I agree that a dog can be a great window into a city or neighborhood. When I’m couch-crashing in NY my friend Anna’s dog has led me into some places and experiences I might otherwise have missed.

    @soultravelers3: Thanks for spreading the word that “family vagabonding” is doable and affordable and rewarding!

    As for physical resemblance between Tim and me — the one time we met in person in SF, the first thing the waitress asked when we sat down to dinner was if we were brothers — so you might be on to something (but as far as I know we have no family in common).

    @Dustin: You’re right that the cost of living in a place like Kansas makes the place very affordable and livable. Plus you’re never more than a $300 flight to any major American city. Naturally, this cost-of-living advantage can be applied even more readily to other parts of the world. Any place that is “off the beaten path” is likely to be exponentially cheaper than the well-known metropolises. There are some gorgeous parts of Thailand, for example, where you can live for almost nothing.

    Reply
  • IdaiMarch 5th, 2010, 3:05 pm

    Tim said:

    “Hi Idai,

    Search this blog for “Cold Remedy Case Studies” and you’ll see a bunch of families who travel and also handle schooling overseas with no problem.

    Hope you like them,

    Tim”

    Idai said:

    “Thanks Tim”

    Reply
  • Christoph DollisMarch 6th, 2010, 7:20 am

    Phenomenal video.

    Totally changed how I think about wealth, Rolf Potts did.

    You’d think The Four Hour Workweek would have been enough to do so, but no. I needed an extra push.

    I suppose it’s not for nothing Tim put this on his mandatory reading list.

    I completed my first and only two overseas trips in the last few years. The experiences, while less outright adventurous than some, will last me a lifetime. To me, it was about the people (and the stunning locations with totally different climates helped too).

    Whether I’m gallivanting about the world or around town, being able to control the majority of my time seems a highly worthy goal.

    I may do many things with my time — including work — if I so choose. I like work and I like creating a whole lot more than ploughing away at someone else’s list of tasks.

    Thanks for posting this.

    Reply
  • Marty — March 6th, 2010, 9:19 pm

    “Slow down” and “Keep it Simple”! I have been preaching/teaching and living this for a long, long time! I always try to live in the moment and really experience the present moment, it truly is the only way to enjoy what is going on at the moment! and….This can’t be achieved easily unless you keep things simple! …it is that simple! I am on “automatic” in a lot of areas in my life, so I can focus on the things that are important to me. Keeping it simple means keeping it real, if I don’t need it, I don’t own it.

    By the way: Reading some of the other comments, I would have to say Cindy Swain said it best! There is no time like NOW!!

    Planning another journey…soon!

    -Marty Vornkahl

    Reply
  • MichaelMarch 7th, 2010, 3:18 am

    @Rolf

    There are some gorgeous parts of Thailand, for example, where you can live for almost nothing.

    You can’t make a statement like that without giving some examples, can you? :-)

    Reply
  • Steve’s Sunday Selections – March 7th, 2010 | Steve Scott SiteMarch 7th, 2010, 5:08 am

    [...] I might as well post something from Tim Ferriss. On his site he has an excellent guest post called 5 Travel Lessons You Can Use at Home by Rolf Potts the author of the Vagabonding book. This is an excellent read and Rolf has a superb [...]

  • Craig BedworthMarch 7th, 2010, 12:37 pm

    Hi Tim,

    I’m looking at doing a Thought Leader series on my blog. I was hoping you’d be willing to answer 5 quick questions related to the social media sphere? I know you’re busy living, but this would be greatly appreciated :-) Let me know if you’d be keen to answer them for me. Shel Israel has just helped me out.

    Cheers

    Reply
  • Jackie Savi-CannonMarch 7th, 2010, 2:23 pm

    I don’t know which I like better 1 or 5.

    As an 80′s child who struggled with these notions without having the right tools to investigate, it is so exciting to see young brilliant minds creating a new lifestyle model. I guess there was enough dysfunction revealed with talk and reality TV to getting people looking for a different approach. Very exciting times ahead.

    Jak

    Reply
  • AD — March 8th, 2010, 8:49 am

    Not sure if someone already posted this, but number five reminds me of one of my favorite quotes by one of my favorite writers, Aldous Huxley: “To travel is to discover that everyone is wrong about other countries.”

    We haven’t been to nearly all of the places I want to see, but whenever I get advice about being murdered in Mexico (we’re talking Yucatan, too, not even border towns) or how all Europeans hate Americans, I just smile.

    Reply
  • Megan SneddenMarch 8th, 2010, 9:30 am

    All points resonated deeply with me, especially time = wealth. I’m currently planning a two-month trek around Northern Argentina slated for April/May. I chose to enrich my experience with little jewels like working on an estancia in trade for accommodation not only to save money but also to take my time to get to know people of the country and get passed the touristic pony show….no pun intended gauchos. My bank account numbers may be dwindling, but in all reality I feel everyday like a millionaire for the things I have that I could never buy. Thanks Tim and Rolf …

    Reply
  • NahyanMarch 8th, 2010, 9:54 am

    excellent, i especially liked points 1 and 3

    Reply
  • Frankerson PMarch 8th, 2010, 10:17 am

    “Spend less time working on things you don’t enjoy and buying things you don’t need; spend more time embracing the kinds of activities (learning new skills, meeting new people, spending time with friends and family) that make you feel alive and part of the world.”

    The above part really stood out for me. It sounds so simple and obvious after reading it, but it’s something I never think about or work at really applying in my life. I’m going to work on that now. Thanks for the inspiration!

    Reply
  • Clyde — March 9th, 2010, 6:57 am

    If you cant observe the fallen tree in your backyard with the same awe and wonder as when observing a Mongolian sunset then you’re missing the whole point. “travel” is in the mind.

    Reply
  • Erika AwakeningMarch 9th, 2010, 9:04 am

    Thanks, Tim.

    Yeah, I’ve always found travel useful for breaking out of ruts.

    In fact, interrupting any of our daily “habits” is a very effective way of breaking egoic patterns and starting something new.

    Reply
  • Jason Palmer — March 9th, 2010, 10:17 am

    I love ‘walden’, I remember picking up a book about Thoreau by his contempories, apparently he used to pop home for dinner sometimes, very practical and kept his mum happy.

    I usually travel with a small rucksack, I find hiking clothes best, you can easily wash them in a hotel sink and by morning are dry.

    I was recently in Italy, I noticed that the hotel lobby had free wi-fi, working online seems a good idea. Was great to meet a guide who told me she moved there from the near big city just because she liked living in the mountains, freedom, we are all free, but one has to exercise free will, to embrace it.

    On that point, if you check the bbc radio 3 website, you can find a play about Thomas Pain ( you can listen online until next sunday ), it is very interesting stuff.

    Computers are for listening to the radio :)

    Reply
  • IvyMarch 9th, 2010, 11:31 am

    Traveling teaches me to remain open and flexible, leaving room for the unexpected. At times, those moments reveal my character because I have to think and act at the moment.

    To enjoy where you are at that moment is invaluable.

    Inspiring! Thanks Rolf & Tim!

    Reply
  • SabrinaMarch 9th, 2010, 5:28 pm

    This is some great information. I like the tip to slow down. I find myself rushing all over the place all the time. I need to learn how to slow down when I’m at home.

    Reply
  • Powers — March 10th, 2010, 5:54 pm

    3) Slow Down = Mindfulness

    Recommended reading: Miracle of Mindfulness by Thich Nhat Hanh. ISBN-13: 978-0807012390.

    When I rush through everything in my attempt to be productive, those moments in time are meaningless and now gone, as if I’m running towards life’s finish line. The following quote sounded silly to me at first, but eventually I found it profound.

    “To my mind, the idea that doing the dishes is unpleasant can occur only when you are not doing them. Once you are standing in front of the sink with your sleeves rolled up and your hands in warm water, it really is not so bad. I enjoy taking my time with each dish, being fully aware of the dish, the water, and each movement of my hands. I know that if I hurry in order to go and have a cup of tea, the time will be unpleasant and not worth living. That would be a pity, for each minute, each second of life is a miracle. The dishes themselves and the fact that I am here washing them are miracles!” – Thich Nhat Hanh.

    Reply
  • Miguel WIckertMarch 10th, 2010, 10:24 pm

    Hey Tim,

    Rolf’s guest post is inspiring and useful, thanks for allowing him to share. So, how is your dead lift coming along? I’m at 320Ib and pushing! My goal this year is also to lift 500Ib for five clean reps. Don’t forget to keep us posted.

    -Miguel

    Reply
  • Jackie Savi-CannonMarch 12th, 2010, 12:16 pm

    Love the post by Powers – I think it is important to try and find beautiful mindful moments in the mundane. It keeps are energy ripe for when the big rushes come in.

    Jak

    Reply
  • Jason Palmer — March 12th, 2010, 2:52 pm

    I was in Italy recently, my girlfriend took me on a ski trip, I gave up on the ski lessons as I was no good and it was a pain ( remembered the bit from the book about giving up on stuff your bad at ), I had a AWESOME TIME, going on walks, pretending to be a ‘grand tourist’, walking in the alps etc. etc.

    One day, i was up at a remote abandoned watch tower and I could hear the birds, cocks crowing in the distance and then the church bells, all with lovely snow around, it was like being Mahler !!!!

    I am off back in the summer, I think, with a tent, travel is great, I just prefer short breaks at the moment, though going to spend a lot of July in the english lake district with my dad.

    life…is…short, get those mini retirements in now

    Reply
  • 99marsMarch 12th, 2010, 6:59 pm

    Dos?! Sunny smiles in rainy Seattle.
    Muchas gracias from the bottom of mi corazon!
    e

    Reply
  • Orlee Forest — March 13th, 2010, 12:27 pm

    Thank you Tim for the post.

    Always in such timely fashion you tap into my chords and beautifully expand my resources for knowledge, action tools and motivation.

    I recently becamea daily follower of Ted.com. Among my favourite speakers are Dan Ariely, Phillip Zimbardo, Dan Gilbert and…well you may know this guy: Tim Ferriss??

    Just yesterday I was listening to Carl Honore eloquently advocate “Slowness”. Here is a link to his lecture: http://www.ted.com/talks/carl_honore_praises_slowness.html

    Interestingly, Rolf Potts makes subtle references to slowness which intuitively made me link the two together; and also seemingly and ironically with you. I say seemingly ironic because on the surface it may appear contradicting, as you have mastered the fast track path to obtaining what most consider “against the odds” goals. (And you kept no secret in your book about your earlier adventures on speed reading). Which btw – all admirable in my mind.

    I interpreted the link between the three of you on an introspective life style aspect. I see all choices relating to savouring what life meaning is all about: Living your life for what your heart desires.

    And commonly, all three of you link to my core beliefs and thus far recent life choices after spending most of my 20s living a taxing race. I am currently working towards severing my ties to my current place I call home, beautiful British Columbia, Canada. I recently sold my house & furniture, separated myself from forced and unfulfilling relationships, and donated many of my cloths (well… I still have a lot – I am a fashionista at heart).

    While I am going through this extremely liberating purging process, I intend in the next few months to embark on a spontaneous unplanned nomadic lifestyle and world travel journey while welcoming the adventures and opportunities that will spark me. Just me and my beautiful Golden Retriever, Bela. Well…and the fabulous people I know I will meet on my way… which I certainly hope one day includes you.

    Thank you for being there.

    Keep living passionately, keep inspiring, Keep spreading knowledge… :)

    Orlee Forest

    Reply
  • Orlee ForestMarch 13th, 2010, 12:41 pm

    Thank you Tim for the post.

    Always in such timely fashion you tap into my chords and beautifully expand my resources for knowledge, action tools and motivation.

    I recently becamea daily follower of Ted.com. Among my favourite speakers are Dan Ariely, Phillip Zimbardo, Dan Gilbert and…well you may know this guy: Tim Ferriss??

    Just yesterday I was listening to Carl Honore eloquently advocate “Slowness”. Here is a link to his lecture: http://www.ted.com/talks/carl_honore_praises_slowness.html

    Interestingly, Rolf Potts makes subtle references to slowness which intuitively made me link the two together; and also seemingly and ironically with you. I say seemingly ironic because on the surface it may appear contradicting, as you have mastered the fast track path to obtaining what most consider “against the odds” goals. (And you kept no secret in your book about your earlier adventures on speed reading). Which btw – all admirable in my mind.

    I interpreted the link between the three of you on an introspective life style aspect. I see all choices relating to savouring what life meaning is all about: Living your life for what your heart desires.

    And commonly, all three of you link to my core beliefs and thus far recent life choices after spending most of my 20s living a taxing race. I am currently working towards severing my ties to my current place I call home, beautiful British Columbia, Canada. I recently sold my house & furniture, separated myself from forced and unfulfilling relationships, and donated many of my cloths (well… I still have a lot – I am a fashionista at heart).

    While I am going through this extremely liberating purging process, I intend in the next few months to embark on a spontaneous unplanned nomadic lifestyle and world travel journey while welcoming the adventures and opportunities that will spark me. Just me and my beautiful Golden Retriever, Bela. Well…and the fabulous people I know I will meet on my way… which I certainly hope one day includes you.

    Thank you for being there.

    Keep living passionately, keep inspiring, Keep spreading knowledge… :)

    Orlee Forest

    Reply
  • TriciaMarch 13th, 2010, 12:55 pm

    I love this book! I now call myself “The vagaBLONDE” :)

    Reply
  • Jason PalmerMarch 15th, 2010, 9:51 am

    Orlee,

    Lovely post, you rock !

    Reply
  • RolfMarch 15th, 2010, 10:12 am

    Great stuff, everyone — thanks!

    @Michael: As for examples in Thailand where you can live on almost nothing — examples abound! When I was writing Vagabonding I lived in a town of about 30,000 people on Thailand’s border with the southernmost tip of Myanmar. I don’t think I ever spent more than $200 a month, all expenses included, and I was living in a big and comfortable apartment and eating fantastic Thai food every day. The town I was in, Ranong, isn’t the prettiest town in the world (it’s kind of a grungy border town), but it borders some of the best rainforest in Thailand. For quainter villages, go up to northern Thailand. There’s a town up there called Pai, for example, which as of ten years ago was a perfectly blissful little respite from the rest of the world. I think Pai has been “discovered” and has since become the San Miguel de Allende of Thailand (nothing wrong with that; it just means more artsy expats and higher prices) — but Pai is just one example of what’s out there. My advice would be to just wander around northern Thailand for a month until you find an off-the-beaten-path town you fall in love with. In small-town, non-tourist Thailand you can rent a house for about $50 a month and eat fantastic food for about $1 a meal. And of course Thailand isn’t the only country where this lifestyle is possible. Just keep your eyes and ears open as you travel, wherever you are!

    Reply
  • AndrewMarch 18th, 2010, 2:58 pm

    Excellent points that helps put things into perspective. Thanks!

    Reply
  • Davis Miller — March 22nd, 2010, 8:53 am

    Point Break – A Perfect Bar Experience in NYC

    A local friend recommended and took my Cali group to this amazing bar. He said that mostly locals came here so I didn’t really know what to expect ambiance wise… but screw it, the view at this bar was absolutely breathtaking! No joke. I felt like a celebrity w/ superstar treatment as the staff are friendly and amazing to say the very least.

    I don’t know who the house DJ was but he definitely was playing music right up my alley. It would’ve been my dream for people to start dancing, but it’s all good.

    It’s a bit sceney for my taste, but it really didn’t bother me much. the bartenders knew their stuff, although their 1st cocktail was a little weak, when he saw i understood cocktails the next 2 were stronger. I also liked that even though the place was really hopping the bartender remembered what i was drinking when i came to order another. (he also understood how good a gin hendricks is, and not to overpower it with the mixer). It was amazing to see their “das boot” which is shaped like a boot filled with beer. Don’t get me wrong, I am not drunk…it’s an actual boot shaped beer container ready to be emptied..try it ..you will love it!! Oh..how can I forget, they even have a wheel o’ shots where you just have to spin it and have to drink whatever shot it lands on!! Now call that bar creativity at its best!!!

    We ordered the Veal and Fish Tacos. They were delicious. Mm! We ended up asking for spoons to polish off whatever remained in the platter. (Faux pas? Who cares as long as it gets in my tummy.) The fries were crispy, but not overcooked, just the way that I like them.

    So take in this scene: You walk in to what seems like an overly crowded place, but soon fine an empty table. Time seems to stop and the only indicator of the night moving on is the moon and your brain cells slowly going to bed forever. The music is not to loud and the people around look good, the only thing left for you to do is to enjoy that drink you paid ridiculously low for and laugh at the joke your co-worker just told.

    The vibe of the place just never seems to die out and if you happen to spot some NYC socialite, sports player, or star, don’t let it get to you… because for that moment, this night they are no long more important than then you. In fact go up to them and introduce yourself!

    All in all just a great place to meet new people, or just have drinks with people you already know. I’ve been to numerous bars in the city but i would say this place is just great. Very welcoming staff, very laid back ambiance. I’ve been here twice after my first visit with my Cali group . I would say its worth the every penny you spend!!

    Reply
  • MichaelMarch 22nd, 2010, 4:55 pm

    @Rolf

    Thanks so much!

    Reply
  • Mikayla B — March 22nd, 2010, 6:00 pm

    Hi to SoulTravelers3 and others,

    We are a family who are on their way to start living similar to soultravelers3 family. We are happy to have found another who thinks family traveling is a priority. And that the same run of the mill traditions should be continued. We think differently and we are glad that Tim agrees with us and many others on this blog.

    We are finishing up our turn-keying lifestyle, we have about 6 major projects to get done before we can do it. But what we will have at the end is not only freedom to travel but high automated income. We have 6 months before leaving to Egypt so we are planning on its completion by that time.

    We are curious what type of professions soultravelers3 had and what type of homeschooling program do you use.

    Other questions are: What is a typical day for your family while in different countries? What types of hobbies do you have? What types of idealogy do you have in regards to raising children?

    My personal email is april1009@gmail.com. Contact me.

    Mikayla

    Reply
  • JeanApril 7th, 2010, 7:28 am

    I told my boss about my plans for a one year sabbatical after returning from Cambodia. I want to take a break from work to experience life and pursue personal interests which i always wanted to but have not much monetary returns. I was told that i will be wasting the 10 years of working experiences i had built and the credibilty and track records i spent efforts building during few years with my current company. Told him life path is not linear and what is important is that i have a happy and fullfilled life, not what people perceived from outside, such as how much you earn, or how successful or rich you are. I want to experience life, learn new things, see new things, take the road less travelled, spend time with my loved ones, working on meaningful projects. Is it really silly and naive for me to just take the plunge and take my break?

    Reply
  • Rhonda SwanApril 8th, 2010, 1:42 pm

    Hey Tim,

    Just wanted to drop a line and let you know that my family is living the 4 HOUR WORK WEEK!!

    We left 18 months ago with our daughter, who is 3 now and have been traveling the world working our mobile business.

    Thanks for the inspiration! I posted a video I cut about Mini Retirements on your Facebook page.

    Cheers, Rhonda Swan

    !

    Reply
  • EmiApril 16th, 2010, 2:52 pm

    This talk reminds me of the quote:
    “The wise man travels to discover himself.”
    —James Russell Lowell

    Reply
  • LisaApril 27th, 2010, 8:22 pm

    Sigh. Love it.
    Rolf: I read your book in 2006. I quit my ABC TV Producing job and left the country to travel in Oct 2006 and traveled for 15 months solo around the world. Then I came back to NY and Chicago…then I left again. I’ve been traveling and living out of a bag for 3 1/2 years now.
    Tim: I read your book in between ‘world tours’ and also really liked it. I felt lucky in a way b/c I felt like I was (and still am) living what I love.

    Great post.
    Question for both of you:
    I’d like to re-post this gem on my blog. Is that possible with links back and ‘courtesy’ of course?

    Thanks!
    Lisa

    Reply
  • David Parsons — May 5th, 2010, 6:43 pm

    Hey Tim, Thanks for the great post! I have really been trying to come up with a way to travel this summer. Im not exactly sure where to start though and being at the age of 18, I dont have very much money to spend. Im also thinking about getting a job this summer to help me save up. Do you have any suggestions on how to travel very cheaply and save a lot of money? Im also thinking about getting “Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel”, he had very many points in the video. Once again, thanks for the post!

    Reply
  • SandraMay 12th, 2010, 7:12 am

    ““Value” is a word we often hear in day-to-day life, but travel has a way of teaching us that value is not pegged to a cash amount” I completely agree with this and everything that this article says. Live life to the fullest but keep everything in perspective. Money isn’t everything, but it allows you to travel! So if you can’t travel, go ahead and find new experiences in some other form.

    Reply
  • JEFF — June 2nd, 2010, 7:20 pm

    i have one month to see south america and have already booked a flight into bogota in july. any suggestions for obtaining/purchasing a south american discount air pass? i need to travel at minimum to ecuador, uruguay and paraguay. individual point to point flights appear expensive. what is the best, most cost effective ways to fly in south america?

    thanks for any/all suggestions!

    jeff

    Reply
  • Cleo Villanueva — June 3rd, 2010, 10:00 pm

    This is really good stuff. Going home at the end of a trip or a journey is always something I look forward to, but at the same time, I’m always itching to go on another adventure. What you said about keeping it simple, that’s one of the best lessons I learned from traveling. You realize how little you actually need to live a full and happy life and it’s one lesson I know I’ll keep.
    I also liked when you wrote; “Travel has a way revealing that much of what you’ve heard about the world is wrong”. This is so true, traveling has shattered so many preconceived notions I had about people from different nationalities. It definitely has a way of opening your eyes to different realities in a way that makes you more understanding and accepting of people.

    Reply
  • susanne jerome — July 4th, 2010, 5:04 pm

    you talked to a guy about how to monetize a blog and you mentioned a search engine friendly hosting site. it that site Media Temple? incidently, yeah your blogs are useful and durable. thanks Susanne Jerome

    Reply
  • KarimJuly 15th, 2010, 5:10 pm

    This dude is TIm’s older brother, LOL

    Reply
  • Cameron BenzJuly 24th, 2010, 4:16 pm

    Tim & Rolf,
    finally got around to reading Vagabonding and pretty much didn’t put it down. I don’t know if the other readers of your blog know it Tim, but Rolf has his website http://www.rolfpotts.com as well and the stories there are a lot of fun to read.

    Reply
  • AnonAugust 3rd, 2010, 8:02 pm

    Great post! I’m trying to perfect my travel by incorporating online social media! Couchsurfing.org is great for finding accomodation with random (kind) strangers and my personal favourite (cause I built it. ha), liftsurfer.com is great for finding lifts to the said couches.
    Keep on vagabondin’ folks!

    Reply
  • AlisonAugust 6th, 2010, 7:44 am

    I love it-great tips to live life by. It is so true that we get caught up in life and forget to live in the moment. Travelling with my kids has been such a great bonding experience and has created great memories. I am a single mom with 3 kids and I was able to take each child to a different destination (France, Italy & Morrocco) for a few days each. And of all the places we have traveled to, each one of my children has said their favorite spot was the one we went to just the two of us.

    Reply
  • TimAugust 25th, 2010, 4:16 am

    I’d far rather wander Bali undisturbed and at peace, for an entire month. These travel lessons do make good sense when applying them to everyday life. Being able to stop and smell the roses, or even better, play in the garden, when it suits you has got no price tag that can beat it. We tend to rush though our lives, from event to event, without enjoying the journey, and there is no heart in that path.

    Reply
  • Roger ConnerSeptember 21st, 2010, 5:24 am

    I have tried to catch the travel bug, but so far with no luck. Yes there are a few places I would like to see just once,,,L.A. and New York, just for the scale of them, and because they are such American cultural icons, maybe Ireland because my ancestors came from there and it is pretty (but of course so is my home Kentucky), maybe something in Europe (what’s good that hasn’t been “Americanized” and tourish trapped?), but…? So the theme of being travel minded at home works for me…I have found little parks, local lakes, local cultural sites, that has been fun. But travel further away than a couple of hundred miles usually leaves me tired and disappointed unless there is a specific event to see. But I am not giving up, I am still trying to catch the bug…

    Reply
  • SimaSeptember 27th, 2010, 12:58 pm

    Thanks for the post! I feel better about myself, because I have a ton of time but not a lot of money :) YAY! I’m wealthy! Much of this past year has been about slowing down, cutting back and living passionately. I ended up reading 4 hour work week to figure out how I can continue this lifestyle!

    As a holistic therapist, it’s nice have multiple reference points for people to understand the importance of those 5 principles. One of my favorite quotes from Swami Prabhavananda is “We shall do better to remember that every human being is searching, however confusedly, for meaning in life and will welcome discussion of that meaning provided that we can find a vocabulary which speaks to his or condition. If we approach conversation from this angle and conduct it with charity, frankness, sincerity and a serious interest in the opinions of others, we shall be surprised to find how much tacit spiritual interchange can result from apparently casual talk about everyday events, science, art, politics or sport.”

    S

    Reply
  • Christine EllisOctober 27th, 2010, 12:16 pm

    I bought Rolf’s book off of Amazon.com today. This was a great blog post, thanks so much!

    Christine :-)

    Reply
  • Thomas WattsNovember 5th, 2010, 5:11 am

    I absolutely love this line … “By far the most important lesson travel teaches you is that your time is all you really own in life.” For me the more I think about it, the more it makes me think about it. As I’m actually just returning from a long overseas trip wish I had read this article before my journey. However, what it has done is made me start thinking about my next trip. Huge, huge thank-you. Has made my day.

    Reply
  • michelle mooreNovember 26th, 2010, 5:57 pm

    cool is cool!

    TIM… SO GLAD I FOUND YOU

    AND BTW
    WISH I HAD >3 FRIENDS TO EAT WITH WEEKLY
    WISH I WAS PART OF THE ZEN GROUP
    WISH MY DARLING HUSBAND WAS STILL ALIVE
    WISH I WASN’T ALONE ON THIS ROCK

    LIVE..LOVE..LAUGH…!

    Reply
  • Sandra HopkinsJanuary 8th, 2011, 12:59 pm

    Welcome back Tim! Way to go. I just have to think of those 5 mentioned above. You’ve done an excellent job in giving advices about travelling. Might have to write that in my handbook whenever I will travel.

    Reply
  • AnonJanuary 23rd, 2011, 6:33 am

    Your ideas about travel and lifestyle are highly rewarding, have you thought about writing a book or could you recommend any? Sometimes I need a little help from someone to actually show me what I enjoy in life, yet when I read something like the article above I just sought of go “Oh yes” and it’s all so clear to me. Sometimes I feel like there’s to much going on in my life (and head) for me to easily pick out the things that bring me happiness.

    Glen

    Reply
  • ThaddeusFebruary 16th, 2011, 12:13 am

    Awesome video – Gives me something to think about as I’m about to start a year of straight traveling myself.

    Reply
  • NormanMarch 5th, 2011, 11:03 am

    I just read Vagabonding and I have to comment here about it because you introduced me to him: He’s a phenomenal writer. I don’t mean pretty good or okay or adequate or that the subject is amazing so it carries his writing… I mean his voice, vocab, meter, metaphor; the whole package, as good as anything I’ve read.

    I’m a minor classics geek (mostly American, though I’m reading Ulysses with Strauss right now) so when I hear a voice like Potts I get excited.

    So if you avoid the “how to”, dry, amateur voice that most travel writer are limited to, read Rolf Potts for a very well spoken change of pace. Then pack a very light bag and get the hell out of town.

    Reply
  • Brian McKenzieOctober 12th, 2011, 10:10 pm

    I liked the video and you also provided some great tips. I travel pretty frequently and I’m thinking about vacationing somewhere in either Central or South America this year, perhaps Costa Rica.

    Reply
  • Ian LeahyMay 21st, 2012, 4:43 pm

    I agree, traveling solo is simpler and it makes you more open to meeting new people and new experiences.

    Reply

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