What travelling to 66 countries has taught me

BY ONEIKA RAYMOND

Montenegro and Bosnia were the 65th and 66th countries I’ve visited.  A reflection on what my travels have taught me.

While I don’t covet passport stamps and don’t really pay attention to my little blue book anymore, I hit a travel milestone a couple of weeks ago that I couldn’t ignore. My trip to Montenegro and Bosnia marked the 65th and 66th countries I’ve set foot in: a fact that floors me since I never intentionally set out to see a certain number of countries in my life. At 21, I had never left the continent of North America.  Jaunts to the U.S. and the Caribbean to visit family were the extent of my world travels.   But a year-long study abroad in France in 2003 changed everything for me so that, 10 years, 66 countries, and 6 continents later, travel has become a way of life for me, natural as breathing.

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Have I learned anything from my extensive travels? You betcha.  Travel has probably been one of the greatest educators in my life and has schooled me in more ways that I’ll ever be able (or willing) to truly verbalize.

Below are 20 of the many things travelling to 66 countries has taught me (about myself, my preferences, my dislikes):

1.  I prefer the status of  expat more than traveller. At the tender age of almost 31, I am a six-time expat who has lived abroad in Latin America, Europe, and Asia for over 7 years in total.  I love really getting to know a foreign land or culture better  and feel I can only achieve this by living in a foreign destination for a year or more.

2.  One should never check luggage unless they absolutely have to.  Waiting in line for bags is just too annoying, especially after a long haul flight.  I avoid checking luggage whenever possible.

3.  As much as I like people, I thoroughly enjoy solo travel. HUGE discovery for me.  I love my own company, love how travelling by myself affords me the freedom to do my own thing… or, alternatively, opens me up to meeting new people.

4.  My stomach is a traitor.  I get food poisoning.  A lot.  If I go somewhere foreign I usually get sick.  Does that stop me from travelling?  Not at all.  But I prepare myself accordingly.

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5.  Getting sick when travelling alone is the WORST.  This happened to me in Guatemala and was a horrible experience I hopefully will never have to repeat.

6.  Travelling and travel blogging  have lead me to meet the coolest people. I’ve met amazing people (usually whilst travelling solo).  Blogging has also connected me with people I am now honoured to count among my friends in real life.

7.  Miscommunication and linguistic barriers can actually be fun.  My recent move back to Hong Kong has reminded me how amusing and enriching not being able to get your point across can be (I use a lot of sign language and sweeping hand gestures here).

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8.  I really like slow travel.  Lazy days exploring a new place with no rush or agenda is totally my thing my right now, as are taking longer trips where I intentionally plan fewer visits to cities and attractions.  No disrespect to fast travel, though — travelling fast is a great way to get the flavour of a place and decide whether or not you want to go back.

9.  Sometimes the places everybody digs just won’t resonate with you.  I didn’t love Machu Picchu, though most people think it’s the most amazing thing they’ve ever seen.  I think Madrid is cooler than Barcelona; but again, I’m in the minority. This is no biggie.  Sometimes I go against the traveller status quo and that’s perfectly okay.
10.  Smiles are currency.  You may not speak the local language but smiles are universal. A smile is probably one of the most important tools one can arm oneself with in unknown territories.

11.  Love is often found in the strangest, most unexpected, and most faraway of places.  I met Liebling on Halloween at an Oktoberfest party in Hong Kong. Nuff said.

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12.  I’m not the daredevil I thought I was.  While I did a skydive last year, my sheer petrification upon jumping out of a plane at 12,000 feet (I’m afraid of heights, you see) led me to solemnly vow never to do such a ridiculous thing again.  For all my big talk, I’m pretty conservative when it comes to adventure and have an aversion to risk (particularly when it involves potentially harming important body parts).  So I tend to stay away from the wild, crazy, and unsafe activities that give adrenaline junkies life. (Except for that time I went whitewater rafting in Nepal despite not knowing how to swim.  And that time I hiked an active volcano in adverse weather conditions in Guatemala. Ahem.)

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13.  Always (and I mean ALWAYS) check to see if you need an tourist visa to enter a country before your trip. Or the plane might leave without you. I learned this the hard way when I attempted to board the plane to Dubai last year and found out that a random diplomatic dispute between Canada and the UAE resulted in Canadian travellers requiring an advance entry visa. Unaware of this skirmish and subsequent change in policy, I didn’t have a visa in hand…and thus wasn’t allowed to take my flight . Many tears, lots of stress, and a rush visa costing $600 USD later, I eventually made it to Dubai, two days later than planned.

14. Where I’m from is pretty awesome.  The more I travel, the more I realize that my native country of Canadia is pretty cool after all. Eh.

15.  Travel privilege is real. While one can attribute my travels to drive, determination, and extreme discipline with a budget, it’s undeniable that having the “right” passport has opened the world up to me .  As a Canadian citizen with a little blue travel document, I am mostly allowed to discover the four corners of the earth without restrictions. As long as I have the will, time, and money, I can go mostly anywhere my heart desires; this freedom is something I have entirely taken for granted in the past.  Because the reality for many of those  who didn’t win the “nationality lottery” is that there are a lot more barriers to travel. People in the world from the “wrong” countries frequently suffer lengthy, costly, and often demoralizing processes that assess whether they will be permitted to travel to the country of their dreams. I can’t imagine having my passport dictate where I can and cannot go; the concept is alien to me as much as it is distressing. Humbling, too— I often don’t realize my privilege, but I am surely thankful for it.

16.  As long as you’re not hurting anyone, there’s no right or wrong way to travel. I may not approve of the guy who blows through 23 countries in 25 days, but is it really any of my business?  Unless it’s harmful in some way, I let people travel in the way that makes them happy: as different people with a diversity of ideas, perspectives, and interests we are bound to travel differently from one another.

17.  Sometimes best friends can be the worst travel partners. No horror stories here, but I have come to realize that the quirks you may find endearing about a friend at home can be wildly annoying once on the road. Beware.

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18.  You should really invest in travel insurance.  I got pickpocketed in Egypt and lost $275 USD.  The good news? Travel insurance reimbursed me every last penny. Don’t leave home without it.

19.  Good walking shoes are the cornerstone of any successful trip.   I get to know a place best on foot, so having comfy walking shoes has proved invaluable.

20.  I love travel, but it doesn’t define me.  Travel is not the be-all and end-all for me. I may have a blog called Oneika the Traveller, but travel is only one part of who I am. I am many things and define myself in many ways — travel is but one aspect of a very full, multi-faceted existence that I am continually trying to cultivate.

What things has travel taught you?

SHARING IS CARING

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117 Comments

  • I keep trying to tell people that best friends might be horrible travel companions, but it’s hard to convey to people who seem to have no idea what’s going on. Oh well. Oh, and I agree on walking shoes. ALL shoes should be comfy. Clearly.

  • Yeah indeed you are correct about friends travelling together and maybe even family. I try to always bring my hubby and then the arguments start 🙁 .. I try to be a budget traveler and he is a spender at heart. Most recent trip to Mazatlan, Mexico last week we came home with 3 hemmets (unnecessarily). I tend to not try to stay away from that but he loves it 🙁 very difficult!! Now I just hope I can buy a house for my three hemmets :)) btw love your blog

    • I went to Mazatlan several years ago with my boyfriend (at the time) and we broke up three weeks later! It was my first EVER travel experience without parents, though, and I was SO unadventurous. How is Mazatlan now? I’d love to relive that holiday (sans the boy).

  • It’s so impressive how you managed to travel to so many countries during only one decade! Great post and amazing advice! I loved the one about smiles being the universal currency 🙂

  • Congratulations on hit Country No.66. Wow, it won’t be long before you are writing a post about country No.100!

    Are you thinking about writing a book because I am sure you have plenty of tales to share. Good luck in Hong Kong 🙂

  • Awww …what a heart warming piece 🙂 Good for you! What rich experiences 🙂
    Hope to travel as much as you have soon; little by little, one country at a time!

  • Great list Onika. Point number 15 (having the right passport) stands out to me because we’ve dedicated our whole blog to the hassle of travelling with an ‘un-priveleged’ passport. You’re right, it’s tedious and expensive to apply for visas and plan our travels months in advance. It can be extremely demoralising but in our case, wanderlust triumphs EVERY single time 🙂

    • Point 15 stood out to me as well. I’ve met several people abroad whom I wish could visit me in the States, but because of their passport, they aren’t able to. I’m off to check out your blog.

  • Great post, Oneika. I especially agree with #15. My husband is Jamaican and I’m American, and he definitely has the “wrong” passport. While I can pretty much go anywhere (except Cuba), even though he’s a U.S. permanent resident, 8 times out of 10, he has to get a visa for his travels. Interestingly, he can travel to Cuba with no problems. But it’s sad that most Jamaicans can’t even leave Jamaica without going through a ton of hassle. So like you, I’m so thankful to have the “right” passport.

  • All I can say is CONGRATS and I love love love this post. I wish I was you 🙂

  • Congrats on 66 countries! That’s amazing! I really loved this post, and I never even thought about the passport privilege. Thanks for making me aware!

    Also, what travel insurance company are you with? I had no idea travel insurance covers pick-pocketing as well. What was the process like making a claim for that?

  • Amazing! I’m 24 and I hope before I turn 30 to travel to five countries (Germany, Australia, Japan, France, Greece). But you have 66 under your belt! That’s amazing. 🙂 I hope you have some advice on first time travelers and how your paying for your trips. It would be so helpful.

    Thanks for documenting your travels. 🙂

  • I like all twenty of them! Travel taught me that every person is human, no matter how rich or poor they are. Everybody is the same, we all feel pain and happiness. This sounds like something pretty obvious and it is, but traveling just made me realise this so much more.

  • Congrats Oneika! This is awesome. I am actually surprised. We share a lot of the same views in terms on travel (2, 10, 12, 14, 17, 20). Talking about smiles, I read a quote that applies here: “A smile is a curve that sets everything straight.” So keep on traveling and smiling.

  • Great summary, Oneika! I’m in my first year of expat life (BKK, baby!) and I really love it. I think there are many countries that I will come to call home in the future. Living abroad is, like you said, a perfect way to travel slowly and really get to know a place. It’s also the best way to make friends abroad, with locals other than those who work in tourism. 🙂

    Good luck with the next 66!!

  • How do you define the difference between a “Traveller” and “Expat”? I’ve always used the word Traveller in the Gypsy/Tinkerer sense of the word. My mother was often called a Gypsy by people who had no idea how accurate they were. I inherited that lifestyle. I enjoyed this post and sent it onward to a few friends who need a few more reasons to get off of the couch and see the world!

    Have a great day!
    ~Wateef

  • Love this post, milady! Finding more and more that I’m more “expat” than “traveler” myself. Of course, I just signed a year-long lease on an apartment in the States, so there’s that. 😉

  • Yep, I agree on the visa thing. Same happened to me in India. Failed to get an Indian visa in advance as I thought I could get one on arrival, so I was denied to board the plane. I was gutted!

  • I love how gutsy you are. I shared this blog on my Facebook. Many black women lack the guts to travel> It is based on fear. Please note that you are an inspiration to many of them. I just hop your adventures persuade more to travel. I live and teach in China. I am also a blogger.

  • Great post Oneika! Travel taught me so much more than going than my masters level education – it taught me how to relate to people (sometimes that smile is all you need), relax and take things as they come, and that not everything in life needs to be planned to minute detail. Completely agree with you on finding love in unexpected places – I ended up marrying the “annoying and very arrogant Englishman” who I met in China…

  • Number 15 for sure. I’m American. I know there’s a few countries we can’t really get into unless we kind of sneak around (oh how I’m jonesing to get to Cuba). But I just don’t think people realize how lucky they are being born here. By an accident of birth, they speak the most spoken language in the world and have the money to get where they want to go. That’s why it boggles my mind that people want to specify their traveling. Like: “I’m not a tourist, I’m a traveler.” Or: “I only go off the beaten path.” And it’s like, but you’re already so lucky to be able to travel and that’s all that matters.

    You have a great list here and I think what you learned is humbling and important. 🙂

    • Yup, 15 stood out for me. Those with Western (and perhaps Japanese, Korean, and Singaporean) passports are so lucky, so so so lucky.

  • OMG, you are so right! I’d been wanting to visit Japan for a long time. So, last summer a very good friend and I started planning. Since I had a daughter in high school and it was summer vacation, my sister agreed to house sit for me and look after the kid.

    This friend first said she was available in June, then switched to July (keep in mind I was on Expedia all the time looking for deals – not she). Then, all of a sudden she says she’s available in September. I told her that I wasn’t because my daughter started her senior year then. I made my reservations and booked my hotel online, purchased my ticket and left in August ALONE!

    Four of my Japanese friends from Faceook met me as they’d promised and we went all over Tokyo, Yokohoma, Hayama and Kamakura, to name a few. I am SO glad I went alone and I fell in love with Japan! I think how much I would have missed out if my now ex-friend had come with me. Alone, it was awesome and I’ve made lasting friendships with my Japanese “translators.” lol

    Get out there and GO SOLO! Be friendly, smile and be open with people. You won’t regret it. 🙂

  • Hello Oneika, I just stumbled upon your blog and I really like it. I appreciate your being honest, about not being a daredevil for example. I thought I was the only traveller who is not looking particularly looking for adrenaline or dangerous activities.

    You and other travel bloggers are an inspiration for me, keep up the good work!

  • Oneika: You’re such an inspiration! Especially to a Canadian girl who totally relates to your experience of family travels mostly to the US and the Caribbean. I’m definitely more of an expat kind of girl as well – so much so that I’m moving to London next month! Can’t wait.

    I really liked your point about passport privilege – I had never really thought about it in that way though I was always aware that there are few countries I need a visa to visit. Which leads me to take heed to the other point you made about checking visa requirements beforehand…

    Yours in Travel,

  • I’m hoping to go travelling on a fairly big scale, soon.

    I’d love to go back to Italy. First and only time there, I found that several Italians got it in their heads that black women were prostitutes (shipped in by the mafia from Africa)

    I worry that if I return alone, this will be a huge nightmare.

    Did you have to cope with that?

  • I’m planning on studying abroad next year, not really sure if I want to go for Fall2014 or just the summer2014. It cost 17,000 for the fall semester and I am looking at scholarships. But I’m not finding enough money to cover the cost. Does anyone, or Oneika, what did you use to pay for your first study abroad? Hopefully someone has some information. Thanks anyway

  • I love this list. Your writing is so grounded and honest, it’s lovely. Here’s to another 10 years and another 20 lessons!

  • I so agree wth #17. I went on a trip to Italy w/a good friend and we’ve not spoken since our return.

  • Thank you for talking about the struggles for those without the ‘right’ nationality. I am desperate to see the world, but I have had such painful experiences going through the visa processes that I feel I am losing hope in that dream.

    Sometimes, it feels dehumanising. It is really expensive and they generally ask for so many personal records like bank statements going back for months (and you must have a minimum balance of a certain amount for a certain amount of time), birth certificates, marriage certificates..the list goes on.

    The waiting times can be very long and if you are denied a visa (sometimes for the smallest of reasons like they don’t like the photo you provide despite it fitting the right criteria), the money is never refundable.

    God speed to you!
    Enjoy it for those of us who are not able to.

  • I really liked that part about the privilege having the “right” passport! I will appreciate this more.
    This is blog is on my top list, just so you know! Good travels Oneika!
    -Sowayfarer

  • Wow what a feat 66 countries! Journey on baby! If I could reverse the hands of time I would have started travelling in my teens. However, travel has taught me that you can begin to travel the world at any age, it’s never ever too late to travel! #3 resonates with me, there’s nothing like the experience of travelling solo , very transformative! #6 I have met some amazingly interesting people and have learned a lot of the ins and outs of travel through blogging and travelling. #15 is very real, it is a blessing to have the privilege to travel to anywhere in the world. I think many travelers tend to forget that not everyone has this privilege, I had to remind myself of this. I’ve also met some travelers that seem to care more about the stamp than the journey. But I guess that’s none of my business, #16 lol. I also have strong feelings that love will find me doing the thing I am most passionate about…travel. Nope travel doesn’t define me, it has taught me that I am very capable of accomplishing whatever my heart desires! Keep inspiring us Oneika The Traveller!

  • I relate so much to #15. I hate getting visas but they are a necessity if I want to travel! They’re expensive and there are so many risks involved. Luckily for me I travelled when I was younger and so usually I do get my visas its just expensive but the treatment you get when people see your passport is very different (I’ve heard of people getting pulled out of line just for the country their passport is from). I always tell my American friends to travel if and whenever they can!

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  • Numbers 13 and 15 apply to me. I’m Jamaican and most of the places that I want to go to require a visa. Fortunately I have a good job here that makes getting visas a little easier for me but it’s still annoying and costly both in terms of the fees and time. And many countries only give a single entry visa so if you want to visit again you have to go through the process again. Ugh!

    • As someone with a Canadian passport I really used to take my ease of access for granted! Here’s hoping that some of the restrictions on Jamaican passport holders are lifted soon!

  • I had to write and say that I too think Madrid is far more interesting and worthwhile than Barcelona. But you are right, we are few and far between! lol

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