why you should travel young
posted by jeff goins (google+) on tuesday, june 26, 2012 ·
comments (144)
as i write this, i’m flying. it’s an incredible concept: to
be suspended in the air, moving at two hundred miles an hour — while i read a
magazine. amazing, isn’t it?
i woke up at three a.m. this morning. long before the sun
rose, thirty people loaded up three conversion vans and drove two hours to the
san juan airport. our trip was finished. it was time to go home. but we were
changed.
as i sit, waiting for the flight attendant to bring my
ginger ale, i’m left wondering why i travel at all. the other night, i was
reminded why i do it — why i believe this discipline of travel is worth all the
hassle.
i was leading a missions trip in puerto rico. after a day of
work, as we were driving back to the church where we were staying, one of the
young women brought up a question.
“do you think i should go to graduate school or move to
africa?”
i don’t think she was talking to me. in fact, i’m pretty
sure she wasn’t. but that didn’t stop me from offering my opinion.
i told her to travel. hands down. no excuses. just go.
she sighed, nodding. “yeah, but…”
i had heard this excuse before, and i didn’t buy it. i knew
the “yeah-but” intimately. i had uttered it many times before. the words seem
innocuous enough, but are actually quite fatal.
yeah, but …
… what about debt?
… what about my job?
… what about my boyfriend?
this phrase is lethal. it makes it sound like we have the
best of intentions, when really we are just too scared to do what we should. it
allows us to be cowards while sounding noble.
most people i know who waited to travel the world never did
it. conversely, plenty of people who waited for grad school or a steady job
still did those things after they traveled.
it reminded me of dr. eisenhautz and the men’s locker room.
dr. eisenhautz was a german professor at my college. i
didn’t study german, but i was a foreign language student so we knew each
other. this explains why he felt the need to strike up a conversation with me
at six o’clock one morning.
i was about to start working out, and he had just finished.
we were both getting dressed in the locker room. it was, to say the least, a
little awkward — two grown men shooting the breeze while taking off their
clothes.
“you come here often?” he asked. i could have laughed.
“um, yeah, i guess,” i said, still wiping the crusted pieces
of whatever out of my eyes.
“that’s great,” he said. “just great.”
i nodded, not really paying attention. he had already had
his adrenaline shot; i was still waiting for mine. i somehow uttered that a
friend and i had been coming to the gym for a few weeks now, about three times
a week.
“great,” dr. eisenhautz repeated. he paused as if to reflect
on what he would say next. then, he just blurted it out. the most profound
thing i had heard in my life.
“the habits you form here will be with you for the rest of
your life.”
my head jerked up, my eyes got big, and i stared at him,
letting the words soak into my half-conscious mind. he nodded, said a gruff
goodbye, and left. i was dumbfounded.
the words reverberated in my mind for the rest of the day.
years later, they still haunt me. it’s true — the habits you form early in life
will, most likely, be with you for the rest of your existence.
i have seen this fact proven repeatedly. my friends who
drank a lot in college drink in larger quantities today. back then, we called
it “partying.” now, it has a less glamorous name: alcoholism. there are other
examples. the guys and girls who slept around back then now have babies and unfaithful
marriages. those with no ambition then are still working the same dead end
jobs.
“we are what we repeatedly do,” aristotle once said. while i
don’t want to sound all gloom-and-doom, and i believe your life can turn around
at any moment, there is an important lesson here: life is a result of
intentional habits. so i decided to do the things that were most important to
me first, not last.
after graduating college, i joined a band and traveled
across north america for nine months. with six of my peers, i performed at
schools, churches, and prisons. we even spent a month in taiwan on our overseas
tour. (we were huge in taiwan.)
as part of our low-cost travel budget, we usually stayed in
people’s homes. over dinner or in conversation later in the evening, it would
almost always come up — the statement i dreaded. as we were conversing about
life on the road — the challenges of long days, being cooped up in a van, and
always being on the move — some well-intentioned adult would say, “it’s great
that you’re doing this … while you’re still young.”
ouch. those last words — while you’re still young — stung like
a squirt of lemon juice in the eye (a sensation with which i am well
acquainted). they reeked of vicarious longing and mid-life regret. i hated
hearing that phrase.
i wanted to shout back,
“no, this is not great while i’m still young! it’s great for
the rest of my life! you don’t understand. this is not just a thing i’m doing
to kill time. this is my calling! my life! i don’t want what you have. i will
always be an adventurer.”
in a year, i will turn thirty. now i realize how wrong i
was. regardless of the intent of those words, there was wisdom in them.
as we get older, life can just sort of happen to us.
whatever we end up doing, we often end up with more responsibilities, more
burdens, more obligations. this is not always bad. in fact, in many cases it is
really good. it means you’re influencing people, leaving a legacy.
youth is a time of total empowerment. you get to do what you
want. as you mature and gain new responsibilities, you have to be very
intentional about making sure you don’t lose sight of what’s important. the
best way to do that is to make investments in your life so that you can have an
effect on who you are in your later years.
i did this by traveling. not for the sake of being a
tourist, but to discover the beauty of life — to remember that i am not
complete.
there is nothing like riding a bicycle across the golden
gate bridge or seeing the coliseum at sunset. i wish i could paint a picture
for you of how incredible the guatemalan mountains are or what a rush it is to
appear on italian tv. even the amazing photographs i have of niagara falls and
the american midwest countryside do not do these experiences justice. i can’t
tell you how beautiful southern spain is from the vantage point of a train; you
have to experience it yourself. the only way you can relate is by seeing them.
while you’re young, you should travel. you should take the
time to see the world and taste the fullness of life. spend an afternoon
sitting in front of the michelangelo. walk the streets of paris. climb
kilimanjaro. hike the appalachian trail. see the great wall of china. get your
heart broken by the “killing fields” of cambodia. swim through the great barrier
reef. these are the moments that define the rest of your life; they’re the
experiences that stick with you forever.
traveling will change you like little else can. it will put
you in places that will force you to care for issues that are bigger than you.
you will begin to understand that the world is both very large and very small.
you will have a newfound respect for pain and suffering, having seen that
two-thirds of humanity struggle to simply get a meal each day.
while you’re still young, get cultured. get to know the
world and the magnificent people that fill it. the world is a stunning place,
full of outstanding works of art. see it.
you won’t always be young. and life won’t always be just
about you. so travel, young person. experience the world for all it’s worth.
become a person of culture, adventure, and compassion. while you still can.
do not squander this time. you will never have it again. you
have a crucial opportunity to invest in the next season of your life now.
whatever you sow, you will eventually reap. the habits you form in this season
will stick with you for the rest of your life. so choose those habits wisely.
and if you’re not as young as you’d like (few of us are),
travel anyway. it may not be easy or practical, but it’s worth it. traveling
allows you to feel more connected to your fellow human beings in a deep and
lasting way, like little else can. in other words, it makes you more human.
that’s what it did for me, anyway.
.love.
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