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Do you want to travel the world but feel overwhelmed and unclear where to begin? Don't let fear stop you. Filled with useful advice and tasks, Plan Safe Travel: Solo is a straightforward 5-stage planning process that transforms your dream into a safe reality: assess: Set your travel needs, concerns and budget, design: Decide trip style, itinerary and accommodation, including how to meet other travellers, Adapt: Fine-tune your design, by answering important questions, Prepare: Make practical choices, like luggage, insurance, money and mobile coverage, Travel: Read safety tips. For five years, I have travelled as a female, solo traveller. People ask how I do it. Pre-trip decisions instil confidence. Let my knowledge help you experience this world. Use Covid times to plan for lifelong memories. City hopping, gap year, career break, or once-in-a-lifetime trip, create your perfect journey with Plan Safe Travel: Solo.
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Seitenzahl: 61
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2021
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For my parents, and for all the people who make me feel alive again.
I travel solo but you shape my journey.
‘Plan Safe Travel’ was written prior to the Covid-19 epidemic. Covid-19 should now also be considered when planning your trip. Ensure you:
read the small print of health and travel insurancestudy entry and exit requirements of different countriessave for unexpected financial extras.Remember that you must feel comfortable with all your travel choices.
Happy planning!
‘Wait, you do that alone?’
No, I do it ‘solo’. I choose to be alone or with strangers or with friends. I choose to travel my way.
A lack of time, money or confidence. Safety concerns. Dreading loneliness. The reasons not to go away are endless. But the pipedream lives on, so how do you make it a reality?
Consider the word ‘alone’. Connotations of isolation and vulnerability dominate. Now, change this to the term ‘solo’. It seems more neutral, correct? Suddenly, travelling seems less frightening and overwhelming. A ‘solo’ trip sounds empowering – although this is an individual journey, there is a choice to meet people along the way. Lifelong friendships can be forged and arise from the most surprising situations, yet opportunities are built in only with your permission. ‘Alone’ time can now be enjoyed, as there is a shift in perspective to it being desired and craved.
Nowadays, it is always easy to be surrounded by your own community too. Technology allows us to rarely feel cut off. With Wi-Fi increasingly ever-present in this world, friends and family provide support across long distances and rather than leaving them behind, they accompany you.
I have always loved travelling
For many years, I suppressed my passion and submitted to the pressures of society. But eight years of teaching high school English wore away enthusiasm, confidence and ambition. I was stuck in a rut. Confined by systems and norms, life was meaningless, lacked purpose and fulfilment. I’d turned 31 and realised that I was simply existing, not living. Ambivalence was ruling. An ambitious goal of travelling the world was born. It seemed daunting and unachievable, but stubborn and determined, my mind was set. I quit my career, sold my flat and set off…
Four years later, and life is my own; I have volunteered, travelled and lived abroad. It is my birthday and I am in Papua New Guinea, receiving an embrace from the tribal chief. It must be my fiftieth, sixtieth, seventieth country; I never count. Whilst others gloat of their adventures, social media popularity disinterests me. Instead, I pride myself on the view that greets me daily in the mirror. It happens to look ten years younger now – quite the bonus – but, more vitally, it is of a fulfilled, relaxed, smiley person.
This is not a book of memoirs or an autobiography
Over the years, I have made mistakes and met many vulnerable travellers who have encountered dangerous situations. Hindsight has led me to this moment. Whilst online forums, destination books and apps exist, until now, there has been no real emphasis placed on the early planning stages.
I aim to help you design your own safe adventure
We all are entirely unique. Our demands and expected outcomes of heading abroad are different. Booking a flight is easy, but lack of research leads to vulnerability. Naivety is our enemy; knowledge empowers and provides security.
This book guides you in understanding how to travel your way by providing a path through the decision-making process. Some questions are thought-provoking and difficult to answer, only raising more concerns. But considered trip design allows for greater confidence; deliberate and carefully selected decisions provide comfort, as you have a plan to avoid significant danger. This reassurance is liberating, as there is less distraction, anxiety and hesitancy. Although impossible to guarantee safety, instead being streetwise and enjoying the moment are your main priorities.
Even with a detailed itinerary, travelling can sometimes be unpredictable and through no fault of our own, inconvenient events occur, such as a delayed flight or a natural disaster.
As perfection is unachievable, we must therefore plan to ADAPT:
With educated decisions come educated risks
Remember, never underestimate your own strength. Solo travelling takes bravery, so no matter the situation:
1. TRUST YOUR JUDGEMENT – instinct and gut feeling should lead all decision making. If it feels wrong, then it is. No explanation or justification is required.
2. BE DECISIVE – dithering leads to disorganisation and missed opportunities.
3. APPRECIATE EVERY MOMENT.
Plan safe travels everyone and enjoy your trip. Alex
There are so many desirable destinations and travel options that establishing a starting point can feel complex. A good place to begin is:
I am inspired by the possibilities of who I can become and what I can achieve. It is empowering, enlightening and energising.
But most travellers rarely consider this assessment stage. Instead, having booked the flight, they then begin studying a guidebook. This is the wrong order, as you should read up on destination before paying out any money.
Two major components need researching:
1. PERSONAL CONTEXT
2. THE COUNTRY’S CONTEXT: CURRENT CLIMATE
Context is a current situation or state. These circumstances continually change, whether they are emotional, physical, political, economically or mental.
The key to unlocking the safe travel experience is accurately assessing how your own self, in this present moment, relates to the country of choice.
For many, travelling is about ‘finding yourself’. This theory holds one major flaw: you must understand your own needs before designing a travel plan. Of course, experiences like trekking around Nepal will teach new things, but the root of who you are will not have changed.
Unfortunately, money confines us. Plenty of people earn a wage remotely or abroad but usually, when booking a trip, there is a financial bottom line. Money is needed for travelling. Saving and saving and saving will help, but this still leads to an end number that cannot be surpassed. This figure should stand proud in your head, and in your bank account.
Crucially, I retain an ‘excess budget’ in my account. This is a hidden back-up that I am reluctant to spend. So many travellers state that they ‘have no money’; however, travelling intelligently means possessing the finances to return home in any situation. Exhausting all my money is of no interest to me, feeling safe is. The excess budget is not for spending frivolously: it is a fund for emergencies.
