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Month: August 2011

How travel makes you smarter, sexier and more productive

How travel makes you smarter, sexier and more productive

Sometime I find an article that is good or fun enough to be posted here. I found this one on Lonely Planet blog. Get your travel bag packed soon.

Here it is, hope you enjoy it:
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 recent ItsJustLunch.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 Paraguayan guaraní 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.”

Your Friend

Your Friend

A friend sent this to me and it’s so powerful I have to share it with you. If it impacts you, send it to the world. I we all believed and acted this way the world would be a much happier and safer place.

“I don’t care what you earn, where you live, what you drive, whether you’re gay or straight, fat or thin, tall or short, beautiful or average, rich or poor, smart or not, sick or healthy. If you’re my friend, you’re my friend. I accept you for who you are, and that’s all that counts. If you feel the same… steal this status from me, your friend, like I just did from another friend. I wish everyone felt this way.”

Explore, Dream, Discover by Mark Twain

Explore, Dream, Discover by Mark Twain

Mark Twain is always good reading and good for motivating quotes. This one means a lot to me.
“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”

When you read it, see yourself doing what he says, throwing off the lines that are holding you back, erase that childhood programing that’s keeping you from leaving your safe harbor and sailing towards the real YOU, and doing what YOU want instead of what others want you to do.

So, unleash your sails, let the trade winds fill them and take you to your dreams. You’ll encounter both rough seas and smooth seas, that’s life, you can and will ride the sea of life and explore and dream and discover great things during your journey. In the end, you’ll be a happier and better person for it.

Responsibility and Freedom and You

Responsibility and Freedom and You

In our society there is entirely too much finger pointing and not enough who take responsibility for their actions. As Eleanor Roosevelt said,

“Freedom makes a huge requirement of every human being. With freedom comes responsibility. For the person who is unwilling to grow up, the person who does not want to carry is own weight, this is a frightening prospect.”

Politicians, CEOs, your boss, your spouse, your kids and maybe even you, must take responsibility to have a civil society and the freedom our ancestors fought for.

Are those things your value, then look at your relationships, are you carrying your own weight? Are being responsible, are you standing up for freedom?