01
You have four days in a country you’ve never visited. Your instinct is to —
Map every hour. Four days means four cities, a dozen must-sees, and a spreadsheet you built two weeks ago.
Find one beautiful place — a pool, a terrace, a harbor — and stay there. You’ll explore when you feel like it.
Ask a local where tourists never go, then go there. The plan is to have no plan.
Sit with the discomfort of not knowing. You came here to be changed, not entertained.
Find where the locals eat breakfast. Everything you need to know about a place is on its plates.
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02
The moment you remember most vividly from your last trip —
Standing at the last item on your list, satisfied. You did it.
That afternoon you did absolutely nothing and felt completely restored.
Something raw and unplanned — a storm, a wrong turn, a view no guidebook mentioned.
A conversation, or a silence, that made you see yourself differently.
A meal — the smell of it, the table, the person who made it.
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03
You’re at dinner in an unfamiliar city. You —
Already have a reservation at the place you researched three weeks ago.
Ordered room service and ate on the balcony in a robe. Zero regrets.
Walked until something smelled right, then sat down without reading the menu.
Ate alone at the bar, journal open, watching everyone and thinking too much.
Asked the server what their grandmother makes at home, and ordered that.
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04
Your ideal hotel —
Central location. Walking distance to everything. You’re not paying for a room you’ll barely use.
A pool, a spa, a very good bar, and staff who remember your name after day one.
Remote. Dramatic. Possibly difficult to reach. That’s the point.
Somewhere quiet enough to hear your own thoughts. Simple, intentional, unhurried.
Has a kitchen, or is walking distance from a market. Bonus if the chef will talk to you.
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05
Someone asks what you got out of your last trip. You say —
“I saw everything. Here — I have photos of all of it.”
“I finally slept. I came home actually rested for the first time in years.”
“It was intense. Beautiful and hard and completely worth it.”
“Something shifted. I can’t fully explain it yet.”
“I ate things I’ll be thinking about for years. And I have the recipes.”
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06
Travel, at its best, makes you feel —
Accomplished. Full. Like you used every hour well.
Held. Like the world has been quietly taking care of you.
Alive in a way ordinary life doesn’t reach.
Like you’re finally asking the right questions.
Connected — to place, to people, to something older than tourism.
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07
You come home. The trip was everything it needed to be. What did it give you?
Stories. Evidence. A hard drive full of memories I can revisit anytime.
Rest so deep I forgot I was tired.
A body that remembers — the cold, the altitude, the weight of real beauty.
A clearer sense of who I am, or who I’m becoming.
A new relationship with a place through everything it fed me.
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Your Travel Prescription
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No thanks, I’m just exploring
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