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Traveling alone. YES or NO?
I was telling my mum earlier that the next time I travel somewhere for a holiday, it’s likely I will be traveling alone again. She asked me if I enjoy traveling by myself and I replied “YES!”.
I know it’s such a loner-thing to do by traveling alone to a different country especially if it’s miles away from home but based on my experience, I had MORE FUN traveling alone & seeing new places by myself than traveling with a group.
These are the reasons why I LOVE traveling by myself:
- You don’t have to ask permission from someone and you can go, do, eat and see anything you like. Best reason if you’re only visiting the place for a short amount of time.
- I can only blame myself if I didn’t have fun at my destination. Because I have no one else to blame!
- I think I’m an introvert person and this is probably the best way for me to enhance my “social” skills.
- Time to get away from people I hate and the place I loathe.
- I was able to see things in a different way without any bias comments from my “circle group”.
- I missed home A LOT MORE and there was an urge of excitement on my way back. I don’t think you can have this feeling if you’re traveling with someone or a group of people from home.
- Getting lost in an unknown place and relying on your inner instinct if you’re doing the right things.
- Solving problems created by other people (e.g. SuperShuttle drivers/Airlines).
Plus, I used to work in a hostel and we had a lot of single-travelers from all over the world stayed in our hostel and most of them had a blast. I asked some of them why they were traveling alone and the most common answer was they were trying to find themselves. I thought that was courageous. Once I finish my uni in January, I’m actually puzzled on which direction I will take. Fulfill my dream of moving to New York City or stay for a while and work so I can save up for a very BIG OE. I’m thinking of hopping on a tour bus in Europe and see these countries (Slovak Republic, Czech Republic, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Turkey, Hungary, Serbia, Finland, Greece, Italy, France, Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Spain and Portugal). I also wanna experience South America while I’m young (Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Peru & Bolivia).
So, would you still travel with someone or a group or take a risk and travel by yourself?
This is timely for my trip: a piece in the New York Times about a woman’s experience with solo travel. I’ve traveled solo many times, within the US as well as in Europe, Israel, China, and New Zealand. And as of this weekend, I’ll be on my own in Uzbekistan for a week before I meet up with some people.
I love traveling solo. The independence allows me to go where I want to, eat when I feel like it, and change my plans on a whim. It can get lonely; I’m too shy to approach people, to make friends easily. But it also offers an intensity that I find harder to come by in the company of others. When I sort through my favorite nuggets remembered from past trips, I tend think of solitary moments: the utter silence of camping alone in the Negev Desert; my legs aching from hours of wandering the medieval stone streets of Český Krumlov; the view of Beijing from Jingshan Park in the harsh light of a rare clear summer day.
But traveling alone can be hard. There’s no one to try strange foods with, no one to help you approach intimidating people, no one to grab your hand to ward off stares or suggestive calls or open propositions. Whitman seems to discount the dangers of traveling solo, but anyone in almost any city should be cautious of walking alone at night. It’s great to feel free enough to travel – I do – but I wouldn’t recommend her blithe abandonment of caution.
Whitman writes, “I think women are definitely more approachable. And it doesn’t have to be in a sexual way, for sure.” But it can be. And being alone, in an unfamiliar landscape and language and culture, makes sexual advances all the more threatening. Her attitude irritates me, and I felt the need to respond to a few of her points.
Q: Were there ever times when you wished, “Oh God, I wish I was a man in this situation?”
A: Oh, wow, I’ve never wished that.I have.
One example: I was about 20 years old, living in Jerusalem, and I dearly wanted to go to Jordan to see Petra. My parents, understandably enough, didn’t want me going alone. But my friends were unable to make the trip with me, and I ended up not going. Male travelers frequently make that same trip safely, but no one I spoke to, no book I read, recommended that I do what countless men have safely, easily done.
I’m 5 feet 2 with blond hair, and I stick out like a sore thumb in Asia — I’m tall and fat! But someone else with darker hair and features isn’t going to stick out as much, and the same goes for places like the Middle East. I’ve got a friend who’s traveled all through the Middle East, and she just loves it. But for me, it would be a really difficult place.
I’m several inches taller than she is, and I stick out like a much sore-r thumb in Asia. I don’t let that stop me. Sure, I get stared at. Sure, complete strangers deposited their wives or children next to me to photograph them with the funny blue-eyed foreigner. That’s part of the experience, not a deal-breaker.
The fact that she so casually discounts the entire Middle East for herself turns me off, particularly because she implies that it’s more her coloring and build than any more profound reasons, such as cultural differences. I feel uncomfortable in heavily male-dominated situations, and that would make certain places difficult for me to travel through. But I’m not going to limit my travel to Europe simply because I’m less conspicuous there. I stand out from the people around me because I’m a tourist from a different culture, who speaks different languages. For me, fitting in is not the point. Finding new experiences and beautiful places and interesting people is the point.
What are some of the challenges that women traveling solo and on a budget have to face?
Gosh, I think that there’s a mind-set that most women grow up with, that you have to have all of your shoes, and you have to have all of your nice clothes, and you have to stay in an expensive place to be safe….Seriously? She’s worried that women let shoes and nice clothes hold us back? I’m not the first person to point this out - many intelligent, sensible people have made similar comments in the NYT thread - but this is absurd.
Solo women travelers have many genuine issues to consider, including physical safety. These considerations don’t have to be deal-breakers, but they should be carefully thought out. Has she ever felt uncomfortable because she found herself staying in a cheap hostel in a sketchy part of town, with men eyeing every step she took down the stinking sidewalk? Has she ever found herself debating whether to ignore or politely decline a sexual suggestion, or perhaps feign ignorance and offer a fakely naive hello, and oh dear god don’t let him follow me?
Shoes aren’t the problem.
But let me leave behind this idiocy and quote another woman traveler: my grandmother, who traveled the world with my grandfather and walked the Great Wall of China years before I did. Her signature phrase was: If you don’t have fun, it’s your own fault. Yes, be cautious and all that, but have a good time and don’t forget to write.
How Solo Travel for Women Changes You
http://www.women-on-the-road.com/solo-travel-for-women.html
1. You will become more self-sufficient.
2. You’ll learn to relax and take things as they come.
3. Your sense of proportion will change.
4. You’ll become stronger.
5. You will learn a lot of things.
6. You’ll learn to take care of yourself.
7. Time will shift.
8. You’ll have greater empathy.
9. Solo travel for women helps you meet new people.
10. You’ll be more open to the world.
11. Little things will take on more value.
12. You’ll learn to love your own company if you don’t already.
13. You can do without the extras.
14. You’ll be less fearful.
15. Many of your prejudices will disappear.
16. You’ll appreciate what you left behind.
A teaser video for the new Travel TV show “Travel Yourself”.
The first episode is set to beign filming in Spain at the end of August!
Check out the website for a great new Travel TV show that is being made!! The first episode is to be filmed at the end of August in Spain! An interactive production allowing comments and suggestions to the way the show is made, and if your near where they are filming you may even be able to be a part of the experience! An extremely interactive show documenting and tweeting the making of a show online from the beginning to end!
“Travel Yourself exposes the good and bad of travel and shares real life experiences, while focusing more on the experience than the destination itself.
The first episode will be filmed in Spain at the end of August 2009 featuring the famous La Tomatina Festival in Bunol, Spain, said to be the world’s largest (tomato) food fight.”

