Travel Changed the Way I Think About Work

There’s something that happens when you remove yourself from familiar surroundings long enough. The usual noise quiets down, and you start to hear what you actually think.

I’ve spent time working from places that had no real claim on my attention: beach towns, mountain cities, spots with spotty reception and no one expecting me anywhere. And what I noticed, consistently, is that the further I got from my default environment, the clearer my thinking about work became. Not because travel is magic. More because it stripped away the context I normally use to avoid the harder questions.

The clarity that comes from unfamiliar places

When I was spending time in Colombia, moving between Medellin and Cartagena and out to Guatape, work was still happening. But the relationship I had with it felt different. I wasn’t operating inside a structure that someone else had built for me. I was making decisions constantly, small ones and large ones, about where to be and what to prioritize and what actually mattered.

That kind of low-level autonomy does something to you over time. You stop treating your work life as a thing that happens to you and start seeing it as something you’re actively choosing. Which sounds obvious until you realize how rarely most people actually feel that way.

The same thing would happen when I was out somewhere quieter, somewhere without reception. Not having that ambient connection to everything would push me toward thinking more carefully about what I was trying to build. I noticed I was more creative in those stretches, more willing to sit with an idea instead of immediately reaching for distraction. That wasn’t a coincidence.

What solitude actually showed me

I do romanticize solitude, honestly. As an introvert, it has never felt like some unfortunate condition I needed to make peace with. It feels restorative, clarifying, and strangely honest. Part of what I value about it is exactly that it makes you confront what you actually want instead of what you think you’re supposed to want.

When I had real stretches of quiet, whether from being somewhere remote or just being alone in an unfamiliar city with no social obligations, I found myself returning to the same thing. I wanted work that felt like mine. Not in a possessive sense, but in the sense that it reflected something genuine. Blogging, writing, building something around ideas I actually cared about. That desire had been there for years. Travel just made it impossible to ignore.

There’s a version of that realization that could tip into self-indulgent daydreaming. But the more I sat with it, the more it felt like useful information. If the work I was doing energized me most when it was self-directed and writing-centered, that wasn’t a personality quirk to manage around. It was a signal worth taking seriously.

Movement as a diagnostic tool

I think what travel actually does, functionally, is force you to see what travels well with you and what doesn’t.

Some things I carried across every location without much trouble: curiosity, writing, the ability to build systems for myself, a genuine interest in observation and documentation. Those felt durable. They worked in Mexico and Southeast Asia and in the middle of nowhere with no signal. They didn’t depend on a particular office or a particular city or a particular social structure.

Other things were clearly borrowing their energy from context. The sense of momentum that came from being in a certain environment, around certain people, inside a certain routine. Those weren’t bad things, but they weren’t portable. And that distinction started to feel important.

Work worth building around, I think, is work that travels. Not literally, though that’s a nice bonus. But work that holds its meaning when you strip away the external scaffolding. Work that still makes sense when you’re sitting somewhere unfamiliar, asking yourself why you’re doing it.

The question I kept coming back to

I’m not going to pretend I’ve resolved all of this neatly. Work is complicated, and so is building anything sustainable from scratch. But the clearest insight I came away from those years of movement with is simple enough: the environments that stripped away distraction and routine were the ones that showed me what I was actually drawn to.

That’s not a lesson travel teaches you once. It’s something you keep relearning, each time you get quiet enough to listen.

For me, the answer kept pointing toward writing and independence and enough space to think. Your version will be different. But I’d argue that if you haven’t asked the question somewhere genuinely unfamiliar, in actual solitude, without your normal life humming along in the background, you might not have heard your own answer yet.

That might be the best argument for travel I know. Not the experiences themselves, though those matter too. But the way they create conditions for honesty that ordinary life tends to smooth right over.

Top 5 Best Apps For Backpacking Southeast Asia

Southeast Asia is a backpacker’s paradise due to its vibrant culture, beautiful scenery, and all-around low cost. It’s no surprise that the countries comprising Southeast Asia have seen a huge increase in travelers over the last few years. Thanks to smartphones and their associated apps, backpacking foreign countries has become much more accessible. For Southeast Asia specifically, there are a handful of apps that are essential to ensuring you have a safe and efficient trip. Continue reading below to learn five of the most useful smartphone apps for backpacking Southeast Asia.

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Southeast Asia Update #7 [Thai Islands]

Previous: Southeast Asia Update #6

With sadness and reluctance, Madison and I began planning for the final two-week leg of our journey through Southeast Asia. From the northern Thai city of Chiang Mai, it was time to head south to decompress near the crystal clear waters and limestone cliffs of the Thai Islands. The itinerary consisted of flying to the coastal city of Ao Nang which would act as our home base for a week as we went island hopping each day to a few of the dozens of islands further out to sea. For our final week, we’d then take a speedboat 60km further out to sea to a small island near Malaysia called Koh Lipe, a.k.a. “the Maldives of Thailand”. My goal for this part of the trip was to try to be as present and carefree as possible. I wouldn’t say that the Thai Islands were uneventful, but we were definitely not as active as we were in previous cities. That being said, this post will probably be brief.

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Southeast Asia Update #6 [Northern Thailand]

Previous: Southeast Asia Update #5

If you’ve been following this blog series from the beginning you may remember that our initial goal for this two-month trip was to visit four countries: Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Laos. At one point during our time in Vietnam, however, we decided it’d be best to exclude Laos from our itinerary altogether. This is because we felt we wanted to slow our trip down a bit and stay in Vietnam and Thailand longer than originally planned. In my last post, I covered our time in northern Vietnam, but instead of booking a flight into Laos from Hanoi, we went directly to the northern Thai city of Chiang Mai.

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Southeast Asia Update #5 [Northern Vietnam]

Previous: Southeast Asia Update #4

The further into Vietnam we traveled, the more enthralled we became. After bumming it at the beaches for a couple of weeks it was now time to head to our first Northern Vietnam destination, Hanoi, the capital of the country. For the next two weeks, we’d find ourselves caught up in the chaos of Hanoi, on a luxury cruise in Ha Long Bay, and at peace in the mountain village of Sa Pa.

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Southeast Asia Update #3 [Cambodia to Vietnam]

Previous: Southeast Asia Update #2

My previous post was written while Madison and I were already on another Giant Ibis bus to Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), Vietnam from Phnom Penh, Cambodia. That previous post, however, only covered our journey up until the end of Siem Reap, Cambodia. This current post will cover the brief time we spent in both Phnom Penh and Saigon.

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Preparing For Southeast Asia

Sometime back in early Spring, my girlfriend Madison and I decided it was time for the out-of-country trip we’ve always talked about. One night we spontaneously bought tickets to Southeast Asia (SEA) for two and a half months after seeing a big price drop in airline tickets. This happened about six months ago, so while it was exciting at the time, the reality of our decision hadn’t quite hit us yet. Fast-forward six months later and it suddenly feels very real. We are a little less than one month away from our departure date and it’s starting to feel like crunch time. Many aspects of our plan have already been accomplished, and at this point we’re just playing the waiting game and taking care of whatever last minute things we can think of. The lease on our apartment has ended and we are staying at Madison’s mom’s house for the next few weeks until our departure. We’ve both quit our jobs and are now using our abundant free time for preparation and stress-relieving leisure.

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