Posts Tagged ‘inspiration’

How To Travel If You Can’t Afford To, Pt. 2

September 23rd, 2009

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As a follow-up to my previous post, here are some of my other favorite tips and ideas for inexpensive ways to travel this big, crazy, beautiful connected world we all share:

1. Volunteer!

Explore the volunteer options in places you’d like to visit. Try sites like www.helpx.net , http://www.rudec.org , or even long term commitments like the Peace Corps  or placements found on www.idealist.org 

2. Camp.

If you’re in a country good for road trips (the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, etc.) and have some wheels, consider packing up a tent, sleeping bag, and other accoutrements and hitting that proverbial open road. Waking up in the open air is everything it’s cracked up to be.

3. Carpool.

Again, if you’re able to do a road trip, consider carpooling with friends. Not only will this save in gas, but you can also chip in on a campsite or vacation rental. Traveling with friends can make for some memorable stories. (Remind me to tell you about my good friend, Noreen, driving a mini-van down a one-way tram line street in Austria.) Here’s my favorite vacation rental site: Vacation Rentals by Owner .

4. Keep your ear to the tarmac.

Use a flight aggregator like Kayak , which searches all travel websites, to find the best fare. Want to try and forecast whether the rate you found will drop or increase? Try http://www.bing.com/travel/, also a flight aggregator, which utilizes “Farecast Technology” to predict price fluctuations with about 75% accuracy.

5. Make priorities.

Money is always a choice. Even paying taxes is a choice, albeit one most of us choose to grudgingly do. But, we make this choice because we choose not to have the negative repercussion of paying hefty fines and serving prison time. That is to say, if you set the intention to travel and turn your attention to that intention, the choices you make with your money will become clearer. Now I can’t help but think in terms of “travel dollars”. (As in, well I could buy this or contribute this money to traveling to ::insert cool place::)

6. Get crazy.

There are some inspirational people out there traveling in awe-inspiring ways. For instance, check out some of my dear friends at Bike the US for MS , who have biked across the US for two summers, raising money for Multiple Sclerosis. The good vibes these ladies and gents have put out in the world have definitely reverberated.

Bottom line: Life your life as a work of art. Travel as an artform, with passion, curiosity, and an gratefulness.

What are some of your favorite ways to travel if you can’t afford to?

 

text: Nancy Harder/photo: Dino De Luca

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25 Ways to Restore the Spirit

September 13th, 2009

 

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Purposely slowing down is not a concept particularly encouraged or accepted by our Western culture. However, to be truly productive and insure we’re on our best path, we must allow the spirit, body, and mind to rest.

And if we’re traveling consistently, the need to turn inward and recuperate from delays, lost luggage, and sensory overload is absolutely imperative. Not only to stay healthy and productive, but to make sure we stay grateful and full of wonder on our next adventures.

So here are 25 ways to restore and release:

  1. Do nothing. Be gentle and kind to yourself. Listen to what you truly feel like doing, even if that’s absolutely nothing at all.
  2. Make a list of 25 things that make you happy in the world. (For example, hammocks, daffodils, etc…)
  3. Walk in a park, or if you’re lucky, a beach or mountain hiking trail.
  4. Set an intention that day for whatever you need most, whether healing, restoration, peace, acceptance of love, etc.
  5. Read anything by Martha Beck.
  6. Paint something. Anything.
  7. Pick a favorite CD and listen through headphones. Do nothing else but absorb the sound-scape.
  8. Meditate for 15 minutes. Start with a simple mantra like “I know I’m breathing in, I know I’m breathing out.”
  9. Take a break from e-mail and television.
  10. Take a yoga class. Or try a new class if you have an established practice.
  11. Go on a creativity retreat.
  12. Go on a meditation and/or yoga retreat
  13. Stay in bed all day reading Marlene de Blasi.
  14. Admire the colors of nature, especially after a rain. 
  15. Take a vacation from the ticker-tape parade of thoughts, anxieties, and to-dos. Write them on slips of paper, throw them in a seal-able jar, and don’t open that jar up for an hour, a day or a weekend.
  16. Go to a baseball game with a close friend and catch up on conversation.
  17. Play an instrument. Play more what you feel, less what you know.
  18. Take pictures of things you like.
  19. Volunteer at a local humane society (or shelter, soup kitchen, boys and girls club, etc). Compassion = Joy.
  20. Drive/bike somewhere. Anywhere. Get lost. (Paul and Linda McCartney used to do this on the weekends, inspiring the song Two of Us.)
  21. Write/speak out loud your 15 happiest memories. Now you’re funniest memories.
  22. Watch a great movie like Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
  23. Feed yourself nourishing meals, that kind that makes your body give an inward smile.
  24. Play with and walk your pet. Receive their unconditional love.
  25. Tell a dear friend/partner/family member why you’re so grateful to have them in your life. Gratitude = Joy.

 

text: Nancy Harder/photo: Federico Stevanin

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How to be a Travel Writer in 10 Easy Steps

September 12th, 2009

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What does it mean to be a travel writer?

Well, that depends. Years ago, the field of travel writing might have been seen as an elusive club. I imagine a glorious few, decked in khaki head-to-toe, scribbling notes in a moleskine notebook.  (Call me a romantic, but I think moleskines are still fantastic.)

The world has changed. Globalization and social media have created a new ballgame. Writers are publishing themselves (blogs, online magazines, e-zines) and successfully freelancing. Offline media is still around, yet the successful travel writers of today know that staying connected and being creative are the new rules in travel-writing-town.

So, if you’ve ever thought to yourself, “Wow-that would be amazing to be a travel writer,” here are the ten steps to help make that dream possible:

1. Set an intention. As “la-dee-dah” as this seems, intention creates reality in a powerful way.  Set your intention when you wake up in the morning or before you place your coffee cup next to your laptop.  Trust me on this. As an example, your intention could be “I intend joy in my writing today”. See, wasn’t that easy?

2. Read. Read great travel books, novels in all genres, guidebooks, and travel blogs such as bravenewtraveler, almostfearless, nomadicmatt, cooltravelguide, etc…Notice your favorite authors and take note of their style and approach to travel writing. Are you drawn more to prose? Quick-hitter blog posts? Also, find inspiration in books on writing, such as those by Anne Lamott and Stephen King. Take a travel-writing course, such as one offered by Matador University.

3. Release your voice. I don’t say “find your voice”, because your unique voice is already within you. It’s a matter of releasing that voice and practicing it to hone your skill as a writer.

4. Write! Begin writing. Give yourself permission to have stream of consciousness thought. Yes, you will probably feel like a drunk, schizophrenic person. That’s ok-persevere and don’t censor just yet. That will come with 2nd, 3rd, and 4th draft edits.

5. Get your focus groove on. Once you get the creative juices flowing on writing, start distilling the material into a particular focus. Think about why someone would find value in this information. Does it provide humor? Insider information? A new way to think about something? “Evergreen Content”? (Widely applicable content that will not lose its luster readily?)

6. Start a blog. Start a blog to instantly begin publishing your work. The media is in your hands! And with advertising and other revenue sources from your blog, you can also make moola. This also gives a way to market yourself and be “out there”. Plus, when submitting for publication to other sources, you’ll have a great portfolio of your writing.

7. Reach out to the community. One of the best things about blogging is the sense of community. Find and subscribe to your favorite bloggers. Comment on their posts.  E-mail them (within good judgement). Sleuth out if the bloggers are interested in being guest bloggers on your site. Go to blogger conferences. Read lots of great blogs on blogging, such as copyblogger and problogger. Check other blogrolls out there for more lists of blogs, such as this one.

8. Research. Research the writing markets you can submit to, both on and off-line. Indentify what type of article the publication is looking for, their submission policies, and editors.  (See next post for specific markets!)

9. Just do it. Submit your material. Step into the ring of fire. As Eleanor Roosevelt once said, “You must do the thing you think you cannot do.”

10. Fill the well. As you begin blogging, writing, and getting published, remember to fill the well. Dream, travel, take vacations from work, and most of all, don’t get discouraged. As Christine Kane says, “Some will. Some won’t. So what? Someone’s waiting.”

 

text: Nancy Harder/photo: Bill Longshaw

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