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You ask me why I live in the Grey hills
I smile but do not answer, for my thoughts are elsewhere
Like
peach petals carried by the stream
they have gone
To
other climates, to countries
Other than the world of men
Li
Po
Why Travel?
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The
urge to travel has driven mankind throughout history.
In search of food, warmth, new communities, or
for the sheer joy of
exploring new grounds, we have taken to road, to sea, and now, to air.
We travel to discover the world around us.
To revel in its diversity, both cultural and ecological.
We travel to refresh ourselves, to grant us a new perspective on
daily rhythms. We travel in
search of inspiration – to journey to pilgrimage points of ancient
faiths, and groundbreaking models of how to live with kindness, compassion
and sustainability in chaotic times.
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KindToMe would like
to encourage all it's visitors to extend their exploration into the world around
them. Spend a weekend at the
seaside, exposing yourself to the glorious fury of the British coast.
Journey to remote tropical jungles, throbbing with flora and fauna
that have yet to be recorded in the annals of modern science – but have
often been used for hundreds of years as local medicines.
Immerse yourself in the infinite silence of the desert.
Let mundane thoughts evaporate as you are
confronted with the earth’s immensity. Travel
alone. Meet different people.
Confront different beliefs. Taste
different foods. Hear
different music. Smell
different scents.
Travel
with friends, old and new. Discuss
your experiences. Be open to
new perspectives. Open your
heart and mind to others. Enrich
your experience by reading. We
can highly recommend the Rough
Guides; Footprint
Books, and Moon
Handbooks for an unbeatable list of high quality guidebooks, and links to useful,
inspiring travel related sites.
Royal Geographical Society, and Wanderlust, publish excellent articles on our planet and her
people. They also list a
broad range of travel opportunities, and tour operators who will steer you
on your journey. Let the
experience and wisdom of others enrich your own personal journey, but
remember – at the end of the day, it is yours, and is what you make it. |
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Remember
that you are visiting someone else’s home, and behave appropriately.
Visit Tourism Concern
- they list an excellent series of local tours and tour operators, who
strive to promote the best aspects of tourism, and control the often
social and environmental degradation that can be an unfortunate effect of
thoughtless travel. Be
mindful in your interactions with others. Your
journey does not end when you return home.
A lifetime is well spent, working to incorporate the experiences of
a short sojourn into our everyday life.
Sometimes coming home is infinitely more challenging than that
first step onto the dusty streets of a foreign country.
Settling back into routines, confronted with bills,
responsibilities, and seemingly mundane affairs can seem desperately empty
after the thrills of trekking in the Himalayas, visiting Mayan ruins, or
spotting African wildlife. And
there’s the rub. Our journey
is what, and where, we make it. |
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The
intense need that so many of us feel, springs of our deepest need: we have
to understand, we are not meant to remain forever ignorant.
Three riddles confront us: the world, ourselves, and God.
By its lovable beauty and its wonders, the world attracts us long
before we come to feel it has a hidden meaning: we start out to study and
conquer it, demanding what response it can give to our deepest desires. But
the world with its countless aspects cannot give us the fundamental
answer: only God can. And God
can be met nowhere but in ourselves.
This truth every one must discover for himself.
Our deep demands are alive because of a silent soul within us and
they will be answered if we can only release that soul.
In so many it has become paralyzed
through lack of use.
The power to cure that paralysis lies in the heart and not in the
mind. Ella
Maillart, Cruises and Caravans, 1942 |
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