0:07
hi this is Anita from the Dusty Roads
0:09
podcast today I want to talk a little
0:11
bit about how travel or seeing the world
0:14
can really change you and change who you
0:17
are you know when I was in college I
0:21
took a trip through China and I'd have
0:23
to say that that trip was a pivotal
0:26
moment in my life and it changed me on
0:28
many levels you know I didn't go for
0:31
luxury or comfort i was very much down
0:34
in with the trenches i boarded trains
0:36
that rattled through endless countryides
0:39
buses that bumped along dirt roads i
0:41
rode in the back of trucks i you know
0:44
met random people along the way and I
0:47
just really had a great experience
0:49
traveling and seeing the countryside of
0:52
China like I'd never seen it before i
0:54
saw it very much up close and personal
0:56
you know one of the things that I used
0:58
to really love to do is you know
1:00
sometimes I'd go to like a monument or
1:02
some other place and I'd see the
1:03
monument and it was great and then I
1:05
just kind of sit and I'd people watch
1:06
and kind of get to know some people and
1:08
meet some new friends along the way i
1:10
just love doing that i love talking to
1:12
the people that I was there with and
1:14
getting to know them and getting to know
1:16
something about their lives and their
1:18
experiences you know that trip changed
1:20
my world view it deepened my empathy and
1:24
gave me a new lens to understand not
1:27
just China but the people in China in
1:30
general and that's the real power of
1:32
travel you know that travel is not just
1:35
about the postcard moments or the
1:38
Instagram moments and this is something
1:39
that really is one of my beefs that
1:42
bothers me a lot when people just travel
1:45
and all they want to do is let's take a
1:47
selfie we've been here and they take a
1:50
selfie and they post it so everyone can
1:52
say "Oh isn't that so wonderful you
1:53
travel?" But they don't really really
1:55
immerse themselves in the travel and the
1:58
experience themselves it becomes all
2:00
about taking that picture getting that
2:02
selfie next to that monument and then
2:05
saying "Look at me i've been there."
2:07
That's not really what travel's about
2:09
travel should be something that changes
2:11
you that makes you a different person
2:16
you know it's not the postcard moments
2:18
it's the unexpected counter encounters
2:21
that quietly rearrange how you think
2:23
feel and you see the world travel should
2:26
build empathy there's a growing body of
2:29
research that shows that immersive
2:31
travel increases empathy a 2017 study
2:36
from the Journal of Personality and
2:38
Social Psychology found that people who
2:40
spend extended time abroad scored higher
2:43
in perceptive taking and emotional
2:46
understanding measures so in other words
2:48
if you're abroad or you've been spending
2:50
time abroad or away from your own
2:52
culture this is going to help your own
2:54
sense of perspective and emotional but
2:57
when you live among people whose lives
2:59
look very different than your own it
3:01
becomes harder to dehumanize them you
3:04
know you start to see the nuances you
3:06
you you stop lumping people into us and
3:09
them you begin to see that there's a
3:11
whole other world out there my
3:14
experience in China taught me that there
3:15
was no textbook you know ever could i
3:18
remember riding a pack train where I sat
3:21
across from an older man who wore a mau
3:23
jacket and had hands you know worn from
3:26
decades of work we shared sunflower
3:29
seeds and some watermelon and he told me
3:31
about his children you know the land
3:33
reforms and how it was affecting him and
3:35
his family the changing times it wasn't
3:37
a political debate it was a human
3:40
exchange it was two people talking and
3:42
exchanging our humanity you know I saw
3:46
him as not as a representative of the of
3:48
of China but I I saw him as a father a
3:51
worker a human being with hopes and
3:53
frustrations just like mine you know
3:55
that's sort of like that stays with you
3:57
when you when you meet people on a very
3:59
personal level and you get to know about
4:02
them and their lives you begin to
4:04
realize that in many ways we have much
4:07
more in common than what we might think
4:09
we have that we are very much human
4:13
beings that may have things more in
4:16
common than we have our own differences
4:20
travel can also help you spark
4:21
creativity you know travel doesn't make
4:24
you more empathetic but travel can also
4:26
make you more creative according to
4:29
research that was published is people
4:31
who live abroad not just visit but
4:33
people actually live abroad tend to
4:35
develop more excellent creative problem
4:37
solving skills and I believe too that
4:39
they begin to also understand other
4:42
people this last weekend I was taking a
4:45
yoga class my teacher's from Holland her
4:48
husband's from Israel and after the
4:50
class there was a um we went out to eat
4:53
you know have um it was customary went
4:56
out to a local coffee shop and you know
4:59
there was somebody that was there from
5:00
Australia and a guy that was there from
5:03
the Ukraine and it was you know
5:05
interesting we could all talk and had
5:07
something in common something to talk
5:09
about we all understood each other on on
5:14
a on a very very sort of different level
5:16
it wasn't like them and me it was us we
5:19
were one and I think that's really like
5:21
when you travel when you you know you
5:23
live abroad and you know you don't just
5:26
like live abroad for a short period of
5:28
time an extended period of time you
5:31
begin to see the world in a very
5:32
different view kind of like what I've
5:34
talked here in my podcast a lot about
5:38
you begin to really live your life as a
5:43
you know and part of the reason is
5:45
because when you adapt to a new culture
5:47
it pushes your brain to think
5:49
differently you're constantly decoding
5:52
unfamiliar cues adjusting your behavior
5:54
and finding new communication methods in
5:57
China when I traveled China so many
5:59
years ago I had to figure out things
6:01
with you know with my limited language
6:02
skills and you know limited guide book
6:05
for world regions i had to learn to read
6:07
read the room pay attention to
6:09
non-verbal signals and adjust quickly i
6:12
had to learn to be able to do all of
6:13
that to be able to see things and
6:15
understand things in order to survive
6:18
that's the kind of cognitive flexibility
6:20
that sticks with you you know it's
6:21
helped me in my work today in the work
6:23
that I do it's helped me in
6:24
relationships has helped me you with
6:26
life's unpredictable terms um turns and
6:30
twists that you have travel can also
6:32
reconnect you with a purpose you know
6:34
one of the most surprising benefits of
6:36
immersive travel is how you can
6:38
reconnect you with a sense of purpose
6:41
when you're you know you're taken out of
6:42
your daily routine and you've exposed
6:44
the vastly different ways of living you
6:46
you question your assumption about what
6:48
matters you re-evaluate your goals and
6:51
ask more significant questions traveling
6:54
through China in such a formative age
6:55
you know did precisely that for me i saw
6:58
people making do with little communities
7:00
pulling together and a rhythm of life
7:02
that proprietized you know family and
7:04
endurance over consumerism i saw a
7:07
different part of China i saw how
7:09
important the family was to many of the
7:12
Chinese how important community was to
7:14
them you know it forced me to you know
7:16
ask myself what kind of life do I want
7:17
what do I value what's important to me
7:20
what's important to my life you know my
7:22
story is just one among many stories
7:24
about people who've um traveled you hear
7:26
similar stories of transformational you
7:28
hear similar stories of how travel has
7:30
you know changed people there's all
7:32
different ways that travel can change
7:34
you and change your perspective and
7:36
essentially change who you are you know
7:39
travel can also bring with it a lot of
7:41
discomfort there can be times where it's
7:43
frustrating where it's hard where you
7:46
just cry out and it it can be lonely it
7:50
can be it can be difficult you can miss
7:53
out on things that are going on at home
7:55
you know there can be many types of diff
7:57
discomforts that can make you off
7:58
balance but travel can help you to be
8:02
able to you know understand
8:05
i believe that those those discomforts
8:07
are far outweighed by the benefits that
8:10
you gain i remember getting lost cycling
8:13
in a small city in Guailing China and
8:16
unsure how to ask for directions a local
8:18
family saw me they invited me in for
8:20
lunch and tea you know we couldn't speak
8:22
the same language fluently but they
8:24
offered warmth and hospitality they gave
8:26
me what little they had and they fed me
8:28
some rice and some a little bit of
8:30
vegetables from their garden you know
8:32
discomfort isn't the enemy it's a
8:34
teacher it's it's about teaches you
8:37
humility it teaches you to listen more
8:39
judge less and adapt constantly when I
8:42
thought of that little family and their
8:44
little hut that they had there at the
8:45
time and I thought about them working
8:47
off of the land it really really made me
8:51
see what they valued they they loved
8:53
their children they loved each other
8:56
they loved their home you know and and
8:58
they really were very kind and generous
9:01
people maybe more kind and generous than
9:03
I am um sometimes in my own life so one
9:07
thing you can do when we talk about
9:08
living life as a global citizen is you
9:10
can believe be a lifelong believer in
9:13
the transformation of travel believe
9:16
that travel can change you and can make
9:19
you a different person that travel can
9:22
help to change your life in positive and
9:26
great ways if you let it travel can and
9:30
will challenge you but it will also
9:32
teach you and it will change you and you
9:36
will not be the same person after you've
9:41
we hope that you will read our blog that
9:43
we have on this which is entitled power
9:45
of travel how seeing the world changes
9:48
who you are and that you will you know
9:51
that you'll read it and that it'll give
9:52
you some ideas as to why travel
9:55
continues to be such an important part
9:58
of I believe anyone's life if you have
10:00
the opportunity take it go out and
10:02
travel explore and see the world but
10:03
remember don't just be a tourist be
10:06
someone who travels with a purpose and
10:09
with with cultural literacy in place if
10:12
you want to understand cultural lit
10:13
literacy we have done a podcast also on
10:17
that we can put a link to that podcast
10:19
also in the description where you can be
10:21
able to learn what it means to travel
10:22
with cultural literacy in mind thank you
10:25
so much for listening we certainly do
10:26
appreciate you and we hope that you'll
10:28
join with us and living your life as a
10:31
global citizen being part of this great
10:33
beautiful global world that we're part
10:35
of thank you and we look forward to
10:37
having you join with us and subscribe to