Thursday, June 30, 2011

In Addition to

According to Lonely Planet, travel provides a bit more than fulfillment, exploration and discovery...


 



How travel makes you smarter, sexier and more productive


Robert ReidLonely Planet author



Why do we travel? Just a hunch here: because it’s fun. Plus we have to occasionally pay a visit to Uncle Greg in Minneapolis or attend that conference on soybean research your boss makes you go to every year. But, at the same time, travel can pay off in many ways, and science backs it up.


Here are the four main ways that travel can improve your life:


1. Travel makes you younger


David Eagleman, recently profiled as ‘The Possibilian’ in the New Yorker, studies time perception at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, and has made many experiments regarding how life-threatening moments feel slowed down.


Travel to new places has always felt like stretched time to me too; a week in Guatemala seems to last as long as three weeks in the Outer Banks – in a good way. So I asked him, for my recent CNN piece on travel to new destinations, whether science can back up my gut reaction.


Eagleman told me adults’ sense of time is more ‘compressed’ than children’s, but that travel to new or ‘novel’ places – the more exotic, the better – is an equalizer of sorts. ‘It essentially puts you, neurally, in the same position as when you were a child.’


Travel: the fountain of youth! And, with its perceived time-stretching possibilities, a life-saver even if you only take a week or two for vacation this summer.


2. Travel makes you smarter


It’s an old cliché that travel broadens your mind. I’d scoff if it weren’t true. A recent psychological study at Indiana University found students had broader answers when they thought the study was imported from Greece, rather than homegrown. What the researchers call ‘psychological distance’ – what we might call ‘armchair travel’ – increases your creativity. A recent review of the psychological distance concept, suggests that travel, or even planning travel and imagining yourself in an unfamiliar and distant location, might not just improve creativity but self-awareness as well.


William Maddux, an American social psychologist, studies how those who live abroad come home more creative too. He told me by phone that ‘immersion’ in a place is key – one of the reasons, he says, he’s working in France.


‘It all depends on someone’s mindset when traveling’, he said. ‘Are they really open to it? If not, and all they do is sit and watch TV, it probably won’t make them more creative… And you don’t necessarily have to cross a border either. What’s more similar New York and Toronto, or New York and Savannah?’


3. Travel makes you more productive


Americans’ relative lack of holiday time is sometimes defended as a strong ‘work ethic’, and a reason the country is so productive. But is it?


This fun Businessweek slideshow shows how many countries’ economic output rivals the US, with far less work time. France, for example, takes off 60% more days off (40 compared to the USA’s 25), and records 98% GDP per hour worked. While the USA remains the world’s top ‘competitive’ country, runner-up, Switzerland, nearly matches the US mark with a week more vacation time.


Some argue taking extended time is even better. In a TED Video on taking sabbaticals, graphic-designer Stefan Sagmeister illustrates how he plans a one-year break from work to ‘experiment’ every seven years simply to generate new ideas.


4. Travel makes you sexier


It’s not just a tan you return with, but stories. According to one recentItsJustLunch.com survey, the best first-date conversation topic was hobbies, with travel following second. Somehow manage to combine the two, and brace yourself Romeo. Just be sure to have exchanged your Paraguayanguaraní into dollars before the bill arrives.


And if travel has already done its job by making you more creative, youthful, self-aware and productive, you’re bound to be looking pretty good out there.



Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Unfaithful

I've been cheating around a bit.  Haven't been able to keep my hands on just one.  With so many around, it's hard to stay truly loyal.


I can't help myself.  I love them.  Such great packages, all looking so good.  If you can say no to other and just stick to one, you have more willpower than me!  I have to have a piece of them all!


Guidebooks, that is.


I can't stick with one company.  I know most of the information is very similar between brands, but I like the idea of looking at travel, at countries, from many ways.  If I were to only use Lonely Planet, I'd fear all my travels might start to feel the same, take on the same pace.  The countries I'm visiting might be different, but the overall experience could start to feel practiced instead of unique.  The same with traveling with Frommer's or any of the other brands.  The format of these travel companies' books is based on a set structure; therefore, they have a structure to their research, the hotels and restaurants they recommend, and the sight they rate for you to see.


I don't want structure.  I want adventure and discovery.


That's not to say that I don't use them!  I own 15 guidebooks, 8 of which I have here with me in S.Korea.  I constantly look up travel itineraries and travel blogs.  I rip travel articles out of magazines - very sorry if you ride in my seat after I have flown.  Your Sky Magazine will be missing a few pages.  But I can't use only one brand of guidebooks.


I want to fulfill my own vision while traveling.


So I have become unfaithful: unfaithful to brands but loyal to travel.


[T]ake steps down new roads, armed with nothing but your own vision. - Ayn Rand

Monday, June 20, 2011

One to repeat

At least parts of it!!


This weekend would have to count as one of the best, and definitely fullest, weekends I've had here in S.Korea so far!  Nonstop for ~48hrs, it has left me sitting here Monday morning with eyes that won't fully open, a few bruises I can't quite recall their creation and a desire to do it all again... or be back in bed, but I'm not sure which desire is greater at this moment.


Friday (6/17) night was 'Pour Your Own Doubles' at the Wolfhound.  Messy.  Just messy.  No parts of the night are missing from my memory, but I think some of my liver is after the amount of vodka that was consumed.  But that grows back... right?


Saturday (6/18) I got up "early" to meet Shannon to play sand volleyball.  Every bump and move I made my stomach threatened to make me pay for the night before.  After one game, I caved to the stronger man - my hangover - and curled up in my towel on the sand.  Not my best showing, but I at least made it out!  Maybe next weekend I'll go again, and actually show up in a condition that I can play. 


After the beach you need to clean up, and where's the best(?)closest place?!  A jjimjilbang!  What's a jjimjilbang (said jim-ju-bong) you ask?  Well it's a spa/suana where women (and men) can go to get their naked-on and enjoy a variety of pools, showers and steam rooms for less than 10,000won.  


Not really being a naked person I was a bit nervous about baring all and walking around in front of watchful Korean eyes, but once the undies were dropped and I dipped into the first pool I hardly noticed.  Women of all ages - old to babies - were washing, sitting, showering, lounging about.  It's actually a really comforting place.  I left feeling clean and rested.  Too bad I had another full night ahead of me to get through!


A quick metro ride, and I met up with Beth, Grace, Jennie and some other friends for Turkish food to get the night started.  From there it was on to Club Fabric for an art-music thing.  The 'show' started off a bit odd, but after a few drinks and a change of artists, things really got going.  A few more drinks, some facepaint and dancing and it turned into a really great night!


A great night that left me in bed the next day till nearly 2!  Oops!  More liver lost.  I'm still holding on to the fact that is grows back!!  Come on liver!!!  But once out of bed and I had gotten my hangover some food, I was off with Shannon to a temple!  See Dad!! Cultural events!!! I do actually do other things than drink! :)


We went to Haedong Yonggungsa Temple.  It's beautiful!  Sits right on the cliffs over looking the water.  The day was a bit overcast, but we walked around the grounds and sat on the rocks talking and relaxing.  About as much as I could take after such an intense-crazy weekend.  


A late dinner with more talking, a long metro ride home, and finally I could get a shower and put the weekend to bed.  Top nights though.  Top Nights!

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Exercise

I've been considering it.  More so lately, because everyone is talking about weight.  And usually in terms of weight loss.  I apparently do not know the meaning of loss, since the last time I stepped on the scale I had gained.  


Two kg.  TWO!!  


And remember I'm American!  We don't use kg, we weigh things in pounds!!! 1 kg = 2.2 fffffffffffffff lbs!!!  :(  Really not the kind of math you want to be doing now that the beaches are open.  


So, exercise it is.  What's the best exercise? Running.  What's the exercise I dislike the most? Running.  So what am I doing? Running.  This should be fun.  But it won't be too bad because now I have a friend to run with.  Jill!    


This is what she had to say about our first run on her blog:


 


Running Partners!




I've always wanted a running partner!  Problem is, I've never been a good runner, and most people with running partners get together and run miles and miles everyday!  I needed someone who could run a 1/2 mile... stop... rest... and then another 1/2 mile back!  Well, lucky for me, I've got myself a running partner, and a new friend!  I met Meagan when my school's volleyball team played hers a little while back.  Turns out, we're neighbors and live less than a 5 minute walk from each other!  We had dinner together on Thrusday and decided to become running partners to get our summer bodies ready for the beach!

We mapped out our jog/run with www.mapmyrun.com (which is awesome by the way!) and did a full pace run for 1/2 mile to Home Plus and then jogged back .62 miles, stopping at the convenient store for some ice cream at the end!  I realize this completely negates the calories we burned during the workout, but we felt we should celebrate our first day of running together!  





May there be many more neighborhood runs to come!


 


 

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Ringing true?

Ok so just some of it, but it's a bit of a trip how close it comes.  I think I might need to pay closer attention to the stars.

I'm a Libra.  Check your's out.

 

Monday, June 13, 2011

It is a truth universally acknowledged

That Jane Austen is amazing.  By most people.  Mainly women.  Ok, maybe just by me in my circle of friends, but I love her! I love her stories, I love her characters, I love her plots, I love it all.  


Pride and Prejudice is my favorite.  I think it's the battle for love that does it for me!  Elizabeth hates Darcy.  Then she loves him.  He can't stand her.  Then he loves her.  And AH!! all the other stuff that lies in their way!!  It's such a struggle!!  It kills me!!  I own several copies of the book, and I have it on my Kindle as well.  You know... just in case one gets misplaced.  I also have Pride and Prejudice and Zombies which was a fun and interesting spin on Jane's work.  


But for as much as I love Jane, I think she'd be disappointed in me recently.  Back home, I was reading book after book.  I had a wait list on standby at the library, ready for me to bring one back and take another out.  So when preparing to leave for Korea, I made what I thought was an advantageous decision to get a Kindle.  I loaded it up with some books and was ready to take flight.  


I used it!  On my first flight.  For maybe the first two hours.  Then I took a break, looked around, took a nap, and by that time we'd landed in LA and I had to pack up and deplane.  On the second flight, I pulled it out again, turned it one, read a page, but it was an international flight - so movies were free, and it was night, and I didn't get the case with the built in light and…. somehow nearly 4months later and I haven't used it since.


I've gotten books since being here and done quite a bit of reading.  Frommer's, Lonely Planet, Berlitz, Footprints - amazing authors!  But I want to get back to literature.  


So I'm making a change!!  


Amazon was nice enough to email me letting me know about a summer deals event!   What little gem did I find?!  Pride and Prejudice The Wild and Wanton Edition.  Jane, meet the (modern) romance genre!  


 

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Alternative means of transportation required

Last night I went out to dinner with friends in PNU (stop 128 on the Orange line/line 1).  The evening was lots of fun!  Good food, good friends, good conversation; but when the night ended and we were all heading to make our way home by subway we were stopped - body on the tracks, alternative means of transportation required!


Suicide by train.  By train?!  That really has to be the WORST way to go!  Your life is so bad, you want a train,  A FREAKING TRAIN!, to smash into you, run you over for at least 2-3mins and then have some poor city worker scrape "you" up off of the tracks?!  Life's really that bad?!! 


I don't mind taking alternative transportation, but my metro stop is Nampo-dong (stop 111 on the Orange) and PNU is a 45mins subway ride away from there!!  No bus is going to run that route and a taxi would cost ton-a-won!! 



Busan-subway-map


Luckily several of us were stuck so we shared a taxi to Seomyeon (stop 119 on the Orange) and from there I was able to get a bus. My A.T. only ended up costing me 3,000won more than taking the subway.


This is the first I've had to deal with this in Korea.  When I lived DC it would happen ALL the time. So I guess I should be thankful... as thankful as one can be in a situation surrounding suicide...


And before people unfriend me on facebook or ask my parents what went wrong with me - I do think that suicide is terrible and it is horrible that people are suffering so much that they feel this is the only way to end the pain.  I feel extremely sad for anyone dealing with darkness like this.  But seek help! because a train is not the answer!!  


Korea has the highest suicide rate amoungst countries in the OECD.  24.3 (per 100,000 people) in 2008.  I'm not discrediting how tough life is here for some or the pressures they face, I'm just merely commenting.  


Sorry for any offense. 

Fancy a paddle?

The beach is open!!  Officially.  


Do they do that in the States?  Close the beach, and mark its opening with a festival?!  I thought it was/is swim at your own risk because Bay Watch isn't real.... but I live in Ohio so my knowledge of beach regulations and restrictions is limited to the summer - which IS beach season, so back to the point...  


 I went to the beach!! And can now go any and everyday I like, becaue the beach is open!


I have been doing a little geography studying, but have yet to determine which sub-category of water we're actually swimming in here in Busan.  



The Yellow Sea lies to the west of South Korea.  The East China Sea lies to the southwest.  The Sea of Japan forms the open body of water to the northeast of South Korea.  All of these seas are extensions of the Pacific Ocean.


So call it what you will, I have been in the _________ and it is cold!!! But when one has to pee at the beach, where else do they go ;) 



Gwangali


jk, maybe...


 

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Ni Hao China

You can't think of Asia without your mind next thinking of China.  No?  Close your eyes.  Asia (China).  Asia (Great Wall).  Asia (China).  See? I told you so.  :)


For my first big Asian vacation, where am I going?!  Hello China!!! I'm coming to see ya!!  


It's all sorted, searched, selected, booked, and paid for!  (Another big, big, huge shout out to my mother, Debbie Redding, for my early birthday present!! )


In two months Michael and I will be on our way to Beijing to start our travels through the land of a billion people!  And we're going to Disneyland!! 


China_tour

It's an Olympic sport

Table Tennis?  Really?!  It's an Olympic sport?!  It's ping pong!!  Don't glorify it with a fancy name and let people win medals for playing a parlour sport! 


Ok! Maybe, I'm just a little bit bitter since I completely and absolutely suck at it!  I definitely don't look like this when I play...


[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akHsCdsVgTE?wmode=transparent]


I'm even so skilled that when I did managed to return a volley I hit a student in the _ _ _ _s. Really awesome.  Not embarrassing at all!!  A foreigner.  A girl.  The only girl in the "Table Tennis" club! Hits a student there!!  Ahhh I could have died! 


I have to play again today, and every Wednesday.  Play a sport that is not a sport, under the watchful eyes of Koreans who freaking LOVE this game and spend many an hour playing, because... it's good exercise!?  What??!  Although the men in that clip do have nice leg muscles...  

Load 'em in the luggage compartment

I've seen 4 funeral services since being in Korea.  Ok, "seen" is a stretch, but the bits I've seen - on my walk to school - are interesting. 


In America death has to look nice.  Families get limos, fancy hearses, and big shiny, deluxe coffins to box up their loved ones.  Koreans like death to look nice too, but it's done a bit differently.  For instances:


Coffins are not deluxe models, they are plywood boxes covered with a white flag made of silky material.


There are no hearses, there are charter buses with a modified luggage compartment into which the departed is loaded! Mourners then load onto the bus and ride along with the departed to the burial site.  An interesting way to ride no doubt.


This all just struck me as interesting, so I thought I'd share.  If you're still curious about the rest of Korean funerals check out this site.