Why having a terrible travel experience makes you a better person Posted on 28 May 2014 Go on, have a terrible travel experience. It’ll make you more likeable. At the very least it makes your dreary, long-winded, soporific holiday monologue bearable. There’s nothing quite so nauseating as listening to someone regale you with the details of their unadulterated vacation. I recently fell victim to such an ordeal. My neighbour flapped on about his honeymoon in Paris, replete with punctual flights, impeccable transfers, five-star cuisine and hotel service ‘wrung from royalty’. I had to force myself into a daze for self-preservation. As I drifted off, Captain Flappy Gums spluttered and shuddered, finally morphing into a sludgy creature of such grotesque opulence that he no longer looked human. The hallucination had just about taken the form of Jabba the Hutt operating a garbage disposal in reverse when it retched up one magical sentence: ‘On the last day, our taxi took a wrong turn and we missed our flight. It was terrible.’ Immediately, it snapped me out of my reverie. I wanted to know more. It made me think of The Yage Letters by William S Burroughs, in which a beatnik drug-obsessed Burroughs travels through Panama, Columbia and Peru in search of the most mysterious and powerful of natural hallucinogens, the ultimate fix: a magical shrub called yage, or ayahuasca. He has the absolute worst time. He’s conned by medicine men, incarcerated by the law, rolled by a hustler and even manages to get lost in the jungle while stupendously high. It’s an almost unbelievable succession of life handing lemon after lemon to the poor bloke. But it’s a great story. Why? Because having a bad time is endearing. It reminds us that we are essentially like one another; we all suffer similar things and we all laugh at the same things. When it comes to travel, enduring adverse circumstances is also a rite of passage. Early travellers earned their right to be in a country because they didn’t circumvent the uncomfortable customs. There was simply no other way. Nowadays it’s more difficult to have a bad time. The modern travel industry is literally geared to serving you up a better time. Gone are the long pilgrimages and scurvy-ridden cruises. All we have left is lost luggage, flat tyres, pickpockets … and economy class. Displeasures like these should not be dodged. For example, if you visit India to ‘find yourself’ in a revelation of turbans but don’t suffer the indecency of Delhi belly, then you’re cheating. Perhaps you avoided being robbed by an individual of questionable gender while on holiday in Thailand? I don’t want to hear it. You might as well not have gone. You went to Disney World and weren’t sat on by a rotund American after a hot-dog dispute? You just missed the best ride they have! Similarly, telling me you spent your honeymoon eating hors d’oeuvres in a silk gown while having your toes manicured at the Hotel Le Meurice does not make me ask, ‘What happened next?’ It just makes you sound like a douche. The point is, there are lemons out there. Let travel hand them to you, make it into lemonade and watch everyone sip on it contently as you captivate them with a dazzling account of your last holiday. That said, if, like Burroughs, life hands you lemons while you’re lost in a jungle on the hunt for your next big fix, maybe you should stop taking drugs. Because life doesn’t really have hands, now does it? Related Posts August is women’s month 18 August 2021 Every year on 9 August, we celebrate Women’s Day. In 1956, more than 20 000... read more Why are there so few black wildlife photographers? 20 April 2021 Wildlife photography isn’t an easy career for anyone. But for a young black person, like... read more It’s time for South Africa to adopt local tourist pricing 30 September 2020 While there will be many lessons learned from the pandemic, a big one is the... read more PREV ARTICLE NEXT ARTICLE
August is women’s month 18 August 2021 Every year on 9 August, we celebrate Women’s Day. In 1956, more than 20 000... read more
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