Tag Archives: Learning

The Perfect School Day

It’s probably clear from this blog by now that education is very (dare I say “increasingly”?) important to me. I’ve written a lot about education in general, and more specifically on the purpose of education. Much of what prompted those posts came from reflection and discussion with a friend when I was working in Singapore. 

Here are some of my past writings on education:

We’ve also literally written thousands of unpublished words on the topic, including over 10,000 words in an unfinished e-book that has been on the back burner for months, but spurred on most of my education-related thinking over the past year or so. I’ve rethought a lot of what I “knew” about school, teachers, and students and I’m excited about the possibility of true education reform.

So with all the abstract philosophical thought on the topic and much reviewing of the educational literature, here is a complete “perfect day” of secondary school as my friend and I envision it.

The Daily Schedule
9:00 AM – Start of school. This isn’t super important, other than it isn’t super early. Many high school students naturally sleep in a bit later due to staying up later and there really isn’t any reason to begin at 7:00 AM.

9:00-10:30 AM – Reading. Ideally this is aimed at current local, national, international, or global problems with current events from the news or other texts. The goal is simply to be aware at the beginning of each day of the suffering that is taking place all around us. This is not done to instill pessimism, but to inspire compassion – the desire to alleviate suffering in others. Literature that deals with human created suffering such as Frankenstein make for good selections during this time as well.

Conversation. This is a time to discuss what’s been read and share what interests and engages us. There can be a specific topic for this first hour, say sex trafficking of women around the world, or more open-ended reading of current affairs and sharing issues of personal interests. The aim is simply to engage in meaningful conversation about the state of the world with the purpose of refining ever more acutely what causes suffering and understanding the variety of contexts that contribute to it.

Investigation. This is a time to investigate what solutions have been generated for the causes of suffering we’ve been reading and discussing and to figure out what we can do as individuals, a group, and a community (both locally and societally) to alleviate it. This should spur lots of insight and opportunities for the social entrepreneurship block to come later in the day as possible gaps are identified in current attempts to deal with issues. Students might investigate political, economic, social, or technological solutions that have been attempted to deal with world problems.

10:30-11:00 AM – Break. This is a time to simply relax, have a snack if needed and transition to the next phase of the day.

11:00 AM-12:30 PM  – Physical education. This is a time for strength training, cardiovascular training, mobility training, and other athletics. This is also an opportunity to meet in small groups or one-on-one to discuss nutrition, mental health, and emotional health in order to increase and monitor overall well-being. The aim is pragmatic, how do we take care of ourselves as humans?

12:30-1:10 PM – Lunch.

1:10-2:40 PM – Social entrepreneurship. This is a time to work collaboratively on projects that aim to alleviate suffering and improve the world. Creativity, service, design, innovation, STEM, and business skills are intermingled in order to develop projects and programs that would have the greatest possible impact in any particular area. All members of the school community spend this time actively engaged in social entrepreneurship work, which could also include supporting one another’s enterprises, meeting with community partners and facilitators, and working off campus. This is also an opportunity to attend roundtable discussions to present work completed so far and elicit feedback from others, as well as figure out collaborative partnerships.

2:40-3:00 PM – Break.

3:00-4:30 PM – Personal growth and well-being. This is a time to end the day on a positive note, examining personal strengths, goals, and psychological states. This is also time to follow individual passions, such as reading literature, playing music, learning languages, creative writing, playing sports, making videos, blogging, or simply relaxing. The rejuvenation that comes from this part of the day will help the following day to commence with similar excitement. Engagement and flow should occur often and students can leave for the day feeling charged and full of zeal.

A Day in the Life of a Student
“Air pollution increases amidst warnings.”
“Migrants face deportation.”
“Refugees seek urgent medical care”

Maia stretches and looks up. It’s nearly 9:30, the end of the half-hour reading block that begins the day. Maia, her peers, and their teachers have been together as a team for the past year and a half. While they don’t always agree on how to most effectively tackle the suffering in the world, they care for each other and about those around them.

Soon, there’s enough movement to indicate that the readers are ready to talk. They readjust themselves around the room, remaining comfortable, but better able to see and hear each other.

“I’ve been reading a lot about climate change today.” The comment comes from a student perched on an ottoman next to a stack of books with titles like The Age of Sustainable Development.

“Did you see the New York Times article on the summit?” Maia asks, still sitting against the wall. “There’s a picture of the Doomsday Clock in my head.”

“I thought Canada put up a particularly strong stance, actually, and that might push other countries to follow through with caps on emissions.” A student new to the group states, sitting at a desk.

“That’s pretty broad, though,” says a student on the floor near Maia. “Yesterday, I read a lot of this book on the Copenhagen Consensus and there are real proposals that real people are working on, but it’s hard to tell whether emission caps are actually more effective than other suggestions, like bioengineering. On the one hand, it’s an easier sell. So maybe that’s better than nothing.”

The conversation continues for about thirty minutes and covers a range of topics from climate change to micronutrient deficiencies in small children. As always, the focus is on understanding why suffering occurs. Gradually, students return to their laptops and put in headphones, ready to move on from discussion.

Feeling agency to act is important. Maia and several classmates have lately been investigating vaccination efforts in Africa. They read Half the Sky together earlier in the year, which prompted questions about sex trafficking due to poverty, leading to a foray into tropical diseases. When they come across a new report on Ebola, one group member calls over a teacher to ask about virus mutations while others gather around a YouTube video explaining the science.

After about thirty minutes, it’s time to stop. Maia has learned to monitor her body for fatigue and tries to pause in her work before reaching a point of frustration. While some stay to continue working, Maia needs a half-hour of relaxation and maybe some frisbee. She takes an apple out of her bag and joins a loud group of friends on their way outside.

Frisbee leaves Maia feeling warmed up and ready to keep moving. She has a meeting with a nutrition counselor at 11, the beginning of the physical education block. After a long exploration of ethics and sentience, Maia has decided to become a vegetarian and wants guidance on her new diet. If she can’t take care of herself, she can’t make the world a better place. A guidance counselor taught her that last year after she experienced a series of anxiety attacks. After her meeting, Maia joins a group of classmates for a trail run in the woods on the edges of campus.

When they get back to the gym, Maia heads straight to her favorite coach. She wants to add mobility training to keep her hips mobile for the barbell squats she already does with the hope of squatting one and a half times her own body weight. She found a series of exercises online and asks for help with her form. The gym begins to clear out around 12:30 as students freshen up before lunch.

The afternoon campus is unrecognizable from the calm of the morning. Teachers, students, and community members are everywhere, all working on a myriad of social entrepreneurship projects. Maia’s group is putting together an education campaign about vaccination. They’ve partnered with another group focusing on fundraising efforts to implement the campaign. Each group takes a turn updating the other on what they’ve accomplished since their last check-in two weeks earlier. A teacher joins the groups to ask whether they’ve contacted any humanitarian aid agencies, which Maia’s group adds to their task list. Across the room, a few students and teachers are gathered around a whiteboard with a series of questions: “How do we create vaccines? What are they? Are there vaccines we don’t have, but would like to have? What’s been done to create them? Can we try making one?” Pointing this out to her group members, Maia joins in the discussion. This could be another good partnership.

It’s 2:45 by the time Maia’s group decides to stop for the day. They have a “next steps” action plan that should get them through the rest of the week. Other groups have already paused in their social entrepreneurship work and gone back outside to take a break.

Maia returns to her locker for her yoga mat and makes her way to an open studio space. After learning about yoga and meditation from a friend last year, Maia started an afternoon yoga class during the personal growth block. At the beginning of class, she invites each person to check in with themselves and set an intention for their practice. They’ll be in this space for an hour so she encourages them to focus on altruism, approaching each person with the goal of enhancing their overall well-being in every interaction.

After class, Maia steps over a robot whizzing down the hallway and follows the sounds of yelling and cheering to a room at the end of the hall. Someone mentioned a new virtual reality video game and maybe these are the people to ask about it.

At 4:30, Maia joins the waves of students leaving campus. She feels content, optimistic about the work she’s doing, and already looking forward to meeting with her project group again tomorrow. She makes a mental note to see what the team of teachers has been working on; she hasn’t really talked with them this week. Maia flips through her phone to a podcast recorded daily by a group of students.

“Good afternoon,” the host begins. “Thanks for joining us on What to Be. Today’s special guest is the executive chef at a local restaurant that provides job training and childcare for mothers.”

Maia smiles. That chef is a friend who graduated two years ago. Cool.

Final Thoughts
The actual blocked timing of much of this day ought to be more flexible than is written out here. It’s important that students learn how to manage their time and what is important. If they are fully wrapped up in a project they are working on involving social entrepreneurship, it is in no way urgent that they stop so they can move onto the final chunk of the day focused on personal growth and well-being; they are almost certainly already feeling a sense of personal growth and well-being if they are truly engaged in the project and feel a deep sense of meaning and purpose. Let them continue on.

The shape of this day is designed so that students can be exposed to problems early, work hard on thinking about and reflecting on them, take a break to physically recharge with exercise and food, move onto solving problems and creating value in the world for others, and then finish with some personal “me” time that explores what gives each of us pleasure and a sense of well-being. They will be prepared to act as responsible citizens who can think critically and participate in civic debates while also being ready for employment that is purposeful and creative. When not acting as citizens or employees they will understand how to relax and enjoy themselves in personal activities that contribute to a sense of rejuvenation and flow.

Learn, exercise, connect, create, be. Do our students really need to focus on anything else?

A Case for Real Learning

The teacher is not in the school to impose certain ideas or to form certain habits in the child, but is there as a member of the community to select the influences which shall affect the child and to assist him in properly responding to these influences. – John Dewey

I’ve been a teacher for six years. I’ve taught students in grades 5-12 in four cities in three countries with four distinctly different curricula and subject matter. There have been a few occasions where I have been able to act as a facilitator as my students begin to understand the world around them. Far too often, however, a teacher’s role is to uncover the world while students watch. It is troubling to me that not all education emphasizes engaging students with real issues to help them come to terms with their world and their role in it.

It is further troubling to me, particularly in the wake of Besty DeVos’s confirmation hearings, that the role of teachers has largely become helping students learn what an outside body has decided they need to know and practice the skills they will need to take a multiple choice test about that information.

This model of education is a) irrelevant to the 21st century, b) a vital misunderstanding of what students are actually capable of, and c) a detriment to developing a better and more peaceful world. We need to rethink what learning means, what our schools look like, and what we want our students to know and be able to do when they graduate.

This post aims to present a vision for education that will actually prepare students to improve the world they are living in. I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Education for Problem Solving
There is little purpose in thinking about the future if we are not committed to grappling with the problems that will only grow as long as we prefer to pretend they don’t exist. Educating for the future means preparing students to solve these world problems, and even determining what the problems are can be daunting.

The UN Sustainable Development Goals, which I’ve written about before, aim to address the following:

  1. No poverty
  2. Zero hunger
  3. Good health and well-being
  4. Quality education
  5. Gender equality
  6. Clean water and sanitation
  7. Affordable and clean energy
  8. Decent work and economic growth
  9. Industry, innovation, and infrastructure
  10. Reduced inequalities
  11. Sustainable cities and communities
  12. Responsible consumption and production
  13. Climate action
  14. Life below water
  15. Life on land
  16. Peace, justice, and strong institutions
  17. Partnerships for the goals

These goals are very broad, and a wide variety of efforts are ongoing to achieve these goals. Some initiatives are better investments than others, which Bjørn Lomborg explores in How to Spend $75 Billion to Make the World a Better Place, a summary of research findings from the 2012 Copenhagen Consensus. Lomborg lists the following as worthy investments:

  1. Bundled interventions to reduce undernutrition in preschoolers (to fight hunger and improve education)
  2. Expanding the subsidy for malaria combination treatment
  3. Expanded childhood immunization coverage
  4. Deworming of schoolchildren, to improve educational and health outcomes
  5. Expanding tuberculosis treatment
  6. R&D to increase yield enhancements, to decrease hunger, fight biodiversity destruction, and lessen the effects of climate change
  7. Investing in effective early warning systems to protect populations against natural disaster
  8. Strengthening surgical capacity
  9. Hepatitis B immunization
  10. Using low-cost drugs in the cause of acute heart attacks in poorer nations (these are already available in developed countries
  11. Salt reduction campaign to reduce chronic disease
  12. Geoengineering R&D into the feasibility of solar radiation management
  13. Conditional cash transfers for school attendance
  14. Accelerated HIV vaccine R&D
  15. Extended field trial on information campaigns on the benefits of schooling
  16. Borehole and public hand-pump invention (Kindle Location 40)

Clearly, there is work to be done. There are problems to address and ways to go about doing so. If these are the problems we need our graduates to go out in the world and solve, schools need to provide students with the tools to do just that. They need to be aware of these problems, critically understand them, evaluate ongoing solutions, and determine how they can innovate those solutions to make them even more effective. The critical thinking, research, and interaction with others that such an education would require go far beyond anything we are doing in our schools today.

What the World Needs
In Empowering Global Citizens, which delineates the curriculum on global education followed by Avenues: The World School, the authors broadly identify environmental, technological, societal, economic, and geopolitical categories of risks that the world will be facing when today’s students leave school. To deal with these problems, the authors explain, we need a new generation of leaders:

Today’s world needs leaders who are versatile and interdisciplinary thinkers who are able to work toward finding solutions to these pernicious and entangled threats as well as informed citizens who are aware of these risks and of the way in which their own actions can minimize their impact. (Kindle Location 437)

Developing such leaders requires education that emphasizes creativity and entrepreneurship to prepare students to go out into the world and act. Therefore, we need to change what we teach, how we teach, and how we assess. We need to provide students with ample opportunity to explore the crises the world is facing and work with others to figure out how to mitigate them. According to Yong Zhao in World Class Learners:

Entrepreneurship is fundamentally about the desire to solve problems creatively. The foundation of entrepreneurship – creativity, curiosity, imagination, risk taking, and collaboration – is, just like the ideas of engineering, “in our bones and part of our human nature and experience.” Human beings are born with the desire and potential to create and innovate, to dream and imagine, and to challenge and improve the status quo. We are also born with propensity to be social, to communicate, and to collaborate. (p. 8-9)

Schools, therefore, need to acknowledge and embrace this human potential to improve the world around them. Doing so will provide students with an education that fundamentally makes all of this possible by aiming to develop the leaders who will guide innovation.

Zhao continues:

To prepare global, creative, and entrepreneurial talents, that is, everyone in the future, education should at first not harm any child who aspires to do so or suppress their curiosity, imagination, and desire to be different by imposing upon him or her contents and skills judged to be good for him or her by an external agency and thus depriving of the opportunities to explore and express on their own. . . . The most desirable education, of course, is one that enhances human curiosity and creativity, encourages risk taking, and cultivates the entrepreneurial spirit in the context of globalization. (p. 17)

This truly radical shift is undoubtedly necessary if we ever hope to make our world better. Schools today are often copies of schools decades ago. The world, however, is in many ways utterly unrecognizable.

Progressive Education
The framers of the Avenues global education curriculum, which the school calls the World Course, point to the principles of progressive education as defined by the Progressive Education Network (PEN):

  • a curriculum tailored to individual learning styles, developmental needs, and intellectual interests
  • the student as an active partner in learning
  • arts, sciences, and humanities equally valued in an interdisciplinary curriculum
  • learning through direct experience and primary material
  • a focus on multicultural and global perspectives
  • the school as a model of democracy
  • the school as a humane environment
  • commitment to the community beyond school
  • commitment to a healthy body through sports and outdoor play (Kindle Locations 694-716)

It is hard to imagine anyone reading the above list and disagreeing that this is what education should look like. Schools should act as microcosms of society, a society in which stakeholders have agency, make decisions, work with others, and learn in the ways that make the most sense for them. Current education policy, however, seems completely contrary to all of the above principles. Students have no choice in what they study and no choice in how they are assessed. Funding is cut from all areas of curriculum that are not externally tested in order to spend money on expensive programs to prepare students for assessments. Many students hate school because it stops them from doing what they enjoy. Learning in school often takes away from authentic exploring outside of school, rather than guiding students to think critically about what they see and experience on a daily basis.

If we want progress, we need to lay a foundation in which progress is possible. We need deliberately reconfigure what schools are and what they are supposed to do.

Based on the list above, progressive education means educating students to become what Alex Lickerman describes as “experts at living”, or individuals who can look at the world outside of themselves and act in ways that will improve well-being for all. Reframing education through a progressive lens can provide a framework for designing schools and curricula that will help students develop the necessary capacities to work for the benefit of humanity.

Along with PEN’s “focus on multicultural and global perspectives”, we need to intentionally push our students to become globally competent individuals who are able to interact effectively with a wide variety of people in numerous contexts. World problems will remain unresolved if we are unable to bridge our bubbles and divisions and come together as people who care about our common planet and shared humanity.

The authors of the Avenues World Course curriculum define global competency in this way:

So global competency encompasses, for example, a particular capacity for empathy with people from different cultural backgrounds as well as the intercultural competency needs to collaborate with colleagues from different national, religious, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds. It similarly includes a deep understanding of and an interest in topics that are global in nature, including, for instance, shared natural-resource challenges, concerns for global conflicts and peace, and understanding of the historical sources of such conflicts, and knowledge of international institutions. Global competency equally requires an understanding of the global risks outlined earlier, the skills needed to educate oneself on those risks, and the capacity to live in ways that contribute to the mitigation of those risks. (Kindle Location 731)

If we want progress, we need to commit to education that mirrors the world we live in today. Discrete subjects – typically English, math, science, and social studies – in separate classrooms with separate teachers do not match what students find in the real world. There are no “math projects” or “English essays” in the workplace. There are problems to solve and a myriad ways to go about doing so. There are colleagues to work with and research to do, not individual assessments based on regurgitating accumulated facts. To develop globally competent students, our schools need to reflect the reality of a global world.

Real Learning
Young people are fascinated with the world around them. We hardly teach the word “why?” because it comes up constantly. We all ask questions about what we experience, and we all have our own ways of making sense of it. When we come across questions as adults, we do a quick Google search, solicit advice or opinions from friends, and form our own conclusions. We read what interests us and ask for help when we come across something we do not understand. Our interests change over time as we interact with different ideas. We are constantly learning, and probably remembering more than we ever did when expected to prove it on a test. Because we have fallen into this learning on our own, out of interest and based on experience, we better understand because we’ve had to seek out our own answers to our questions.

Why should we want anything different for our students?

As Zhao explains:

[A]llowing students the freedom to choose what to do in school helps children learn to take initiatives, a necessary quality of the entrepreneurial spirit. When children are given the freedom, they have to take the initiative to decide what to do. And when they do what they want to do, they have commitment. In contrast, when asked to follow a prescribed routine, they simply follow directions. The more prescribed the work, the less opportunity children have to exercise their own will. And the more prescribed, the less risk is involved. As a result, children simply become followers who learn to conform, to find the correct answers expected by adults. (p. 173)

It is difficult for many parents (and likely for many teachers) to imagine students learning different topics than their classmates and at a different pace. It is difficult to imagine different assessments and modalities of learning, and providing feedback without a grade. We worry about how we’ll know if our students are doing as well as their peers, or whether colleges will understand transcripts comprised of comments on student growth and development.

But we also worry about whether there will even be a planet because of climate change, or whether today’s students will be able to afford higher education. We worry about what jobs will be available and how to prepare students for them.

We may talk about these worries, but anyone looking into most schools wouldn’t know it. Schools have remained fundamentally the same even though the world is completely different. If we truly want to prepare students for the world they live in today and the unknown world of the future, changing the way we think about schools is imperative and requires immediate attention.

When students graduate at age 18, we expect them to know what they want to do, how they want to do it, have a plan to pay for it, and suddenly behave as independent adults. But we don’t spend their school years preparing them for this future. Moving forward, we can choose a model of creative entrepreneurship for our schools in which students are able to learn as adults do, based on talents, interests, and collaboration. Zhao explains:

Creative entrepreneurs are passionate individuals who capitalize on their strengths rather than spending time making up for their weaknesses. Driven by passion and given the freedom, they can construct their resources to enhance what they are good at instead of wasting efforts to become like others. As discussed earlier, successful entrepreneurs need to offer something unique, something different than what is already in existence. That uniqueness does not come from standardized experiences. Instead, it comes from the freedom to be individuals. (p. 175)

We want to develop passionate leaders who have a vision and experience in making decisions, delegating tasks, problem-solving, and troubleshooting. It is necessary to change the way we think about schools in order to graduate students who are able to do this. Providing students with the freedom to explore and to choose their own paths, while clearly benefitting students because it capitalizes on their interests and strengths, also prepares them to make a difference in the very real world that needs their efforts.

The World Course authors relate their view of global competency to specifically this idea of giving students the freedom to make choices and affect change:

Central to our conception of global competency is the notion of human agency – of empowerment – and we therefore sought to cultivate the mind-set that individuals can make a difference, the desire to take initiative, the ability to act in leadership roles, and an understanding of responsibility. (Kindle Location 770)

Thus, we need to build learning environments in which students interact with current world problems, have the freedom to make choices and guide their own learning, and work with those around them, including peers, teachers, families, and community members. Interdisciplinary projects, designing products, and service learning are all easy ways to make this possible.

We cannot hope to improve the world if our education systems look nothing like what we want our students to do once out in the world. Schools, rather than being siloed and distinctly separate from the world, need to be at the center of how we collectively work to make the world a better place.

Don’t limit a child to your own learning, for he was born in another time. – Rabindranath Tagore

Further Reading

Why I Prioritize Travel

I’m a traveler. I always have been. My family moved to the US from Montreal when I was very young and spent nearly every Friday afternoon heading north and Sunday afternoon heading south. In the summers, we’d pile into the car and spend a day and a half driving down to South Carolina for a week on the beach. We’d listen to Garrison Keillor’s News from Lake Wobegon when it got dark, or my dad would invent stories about the origins of words. To this day, references to Tomato Butt, Raw Chester, and Chalk Al Ate make me smile when nothing else does.

My parents took us to Europe for the first time when I was 14 and the rest, as they say, is history. I was absolutely hooked. In a plethora of ways, my parents taught us to love adventure, experiences, new people, new foods, beautiful places, mass transit in languages we didn’t understand, grocery stores and local markets selling wares we didn’t recognize.

Wanderlust and I are very good friends. These days, my airplane-approved cosmetics case is always packed and my luggage tags still show my address from three addresses ago. I usually have at least one upcoming trip flagged in my email inbox and I’m always looking out for the next one. I have additional visa pages in my passport and a tattoo I got overseas on my ankle.

Traveling is a huge part of who I am and what I love to do, which is probably very clear from this blog. I wanted to take some time to explain why travel is a priority for me. So here we go!

Learning About the World
First and foremost, I see travel as accelerated learning. I love learning and make an effort to learn something new every day. When I travel, I’m constantly seeing, hearing, smelling, touching, tasting something new. Being outside my comfort zone leads me to ask questions in order to understand everything around me. That’s not going to happen if I’m drinking the same cup of coffee in the same café with the same people!

In order to make sense of what I’m experiencing and to begin answering the questions that come up when confronted with a new environment, I find myself acutely aware of my surroundings because I am assessing my place in the world. I wonder why places are the way they are, why people do what they do, ways my expectations are accurate or inaccurate, and what similarities/differences are apparent in culture and behavior. All of this wondering leads to and from observation, and the observation helps me understand how I fit in a global landscape. Essentially, my travel experiences are opportunities to understand more about people, systems, and patterns.

Travel has also allowed me to see the world develop, which has broadened my worldview. I have a much deeper understanding of the traditions and customs common to different regions, as well as ways that religion and politics do or do not have an impact on different societies. Travel has made my world a lot larger (there’s a lot to learn out there) but also a lot smaller. People are people, no matter where you are.

Learning About Myself
If you clicked on the link above, you’ll see that I included “seek out and do things that scare me” on a list of rules to live by that I posted a few weeks ago. If you didn’t click, now’s a good opportunity. I’ll wait.

Travel allows me to take a temporary, non-threatening step out of my comfort zone. Sure, I’ve felt unsafe while traveling. But I also regularly feel unsafe in America First. The point is that there’s no risk to trying anything new when there’s no commitment. By its very nature, traveling is non-committal. If something doesn’t work, that’s okay – it’s temporary. Traveling allows me to practice doing new things when the stakes are low, which makes me more likely to take the leap when it actually matters.

For me, the occasionally uncomfortable experiences that I can laugh about now are about clarifying personal values. When confronted with situations that differ from the norm, my internal moral compass is quick to pass judgement, both positively and negatively. Recognizing these reactions and checking myself to determine their origins and biases has led me to reconsider what matters to me and, more importantly, why.

Likewise, anything that is a break from daily life allows me to approach experiences with a clear head. Without distractions or any real obligations, I am better able to be fully present in the moment. I can take in what is around me without feeling like I’m compromising something else that needs my attention. In a different environment I find that I am better able to reflect on experiences without pull from routine tasks or obligations, which acts as a complete mental reset. A forced step back from the everyday, a complete break with the norm, is thoroughly rejuvenating.

Time is Finite
People like to remind me that the world isn’t going anywhere and that I don’t have to do everything right away. The world may not be disappearing (though that’s not far from happening), but it is undoubtedly rapidly changing in a myriad ways. Coral reefs are dying. Low-lying cities are sinking. National parks are in need of funding. And developing countries are developing!

At the risk of sounding morbid, I do plan my travel experiences with a mind to what I know I can do now, and might not be able to do later. Right now, I am relatively young, single, employed, and physically fit. It’s important to me to make the most of that. Museums will always be accessible; hiking in rainforests might not be.

There Are No Rules
When I talk about moving overseas, which I hope to do again, someone usually asks, “But aren’t you afraid you’ll never meet someone? Get married? Have kids?”. Of course, but that’s not any more or less likely if I go somewhere else than if I stay where I am. I don’t need to follow a prescribed path of school, job, marriage, house, baby. If I can’t live the life I’m living, what’s the point of living at all?

Ultimately, I prioritize travel because there’s no reason not to. I have a career that allows me to travel and to work around the world. I don’t know if that will always be the case. So I prioritize travel because I can. And I love doing it. If I didn’t, I’d prioritize something else!

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Bon Voyage!
Travel can be really simple, like going to a town or city you’ve never visited before, or very complicated involving visas, passports, multiple destinations, and multiple modes of transportation. Travel is just exploring somewhere new.

So go. Go somewhere new, even just for the day. You’ll be glad you did.

There are no foreign lands. It is the traveler only who is foreign. – Robert Louis Stevenson