How to travel - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

How to travel

Some advice as the world jets off

Word reaches me that much of the civilian population, as a result of having school-age children, must take their holidays in the summertime. I never know how much to believe these occasional dispatches from the frontline, such as the persistent rumour that some people make use of their home kitchens. Regardless, this might be a good moment to share with readers a few thoughts on how to travel. 

First, the journey itself. Carry-on is a mistake. The time saved in baggage claim at the other end isn’t worth the stress of finding overhead storage space. Even for business class passengers, with their dedicated lockers, it is still better to move around an airport unencumbered. This is meant to be a break, not arm day. Also, dress smartly. A jacket and formal shoes will win you (undeservedly) better treatment, including during any brush with officialdom. You will stand out all the more at this time of year, when most travellers are got up like John Candy in Summer Rental.

And so to the destination. What have I learned over the years about how to get the most from a trip?

Do more writing than reading. Keep a journal while abroad. At no other point in the year are you able to look at your own life with such detachment. The geographic separation from home is hard to simulate. So is the introspection that often sets in during air travel. (The so-called Mile Cry Club.) You need not diarise the rest of the time — I don’t — to scribble copiously, and penetratingly, during these few weeks. As nice as it is to work through a reading list while away, that can be done at home. The self-scrutiny can’t. 

YouTube is the best travel aid in the world. For each destination, down to the neighbourhood and sometimes the street, there is a video or entire channel. If the presenter is a nuisance, just mute them. The point is to see the physical reality of another place in high definition. This can’t be gleaned from even the finest, VS Naipaul-grade travel writing. Or from TV shows of the Alan Whicker and Anthony Bourdain type, which are too generalist, if not also too staged. (A star with a professional camera crew can’t move through a place without subtly warping it.) Then there is the matter of up-to-dateness. Mainstream content takes a while to come out. A YouTuber’s walk through a street can be live.

It is better to be merely ignorant of a place than confidently wrong about it

Beware the “authentic” experience. This is the ultimate intellectual trap. At least in countries with a decent-sized middle class, “real” life will be less distinctive than the visitor hopes or imagines. In much of south-east Asia, it is authentic behaviour to spend time in malls. First, because these are air conditioned. Second, because countries with fresh memories of being poor tend not to regard material consumption with ennui or distaste. By all means, in Bangkok, ride the canal boat. But don’t kid yourself that it is truer to local experience than taking mass transit from a suburban new-build to a nine-hour office shift. In a Gulf city, do visit the “old town”. But remember that it is the old town precisely because it is divorced from how lives are lived now. 

If an Asian visitor cycled through Paris in a striped top and an onion necklace, saying “ooh là là” at intervals, we wouldn’t think, “There goes someone who has mastered the local culture.” We’d know that real Parisians are doing banal things. But westerners, especially the educated ones, can make the same error of over-romanticisation in other places. It is the supposed suckers in the tourist traps who are often clearer-headed about what they want and are getting out of their trip.

It is a point that flows into the largest of all lessons about travel. Don’t expect it to be educational. At worst, it can go the other way, in that you over-index what you happen to see in person. (“I went to Russia and it was sweetness itself,” was a widely heard sentiment between the 2018 World Cup and the war in Ukraine.) It is better to be merely ignorant of a place than confidently wrong about it. If you travel a fair bit, those who don’t can go all sheepish and deferent around you. This advantage is unwarranted, which isn’t to say I make no use of it.

Email Janan at janan.ganesh@ft.com

Find out about our latest stories first — follow FT Weekend on Instagram, Bluesky and X, and sign up to receive the FT Weekend newsletter every Saturday morning

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

科技巨头的业绩越来越亮眼,却越来越无用

Meta、Alphabet等科技巨头的增速亮眼,但它们的估值系于一个难以回答的问题:谁将赢得AI之战。

存储芯片制造商寄望AI热潮让行业摆脱盛衰周期

市场预期,这个长期受盛衰周期主导的行业,或许正在摆脱过去的剧烈波动。

美国数据中心引发的巨大分歧

美国许多农村社区对AI基础设施本能地抵触,这使它们与白宫立场相左。

咖啡、燃料与住房:特朗普面临通胀难题

美国总统在伊朗发动的战争加剧了美国的生活成本危机。

伊朗强硬派就对美谈判问题爆发内斗

尽管该政权领导层极力展示团结,但议员们在有关德黑兰核计划的谈判问题上已产生严重分歧。

伊朗战争表明拉丁美洲的原罪已成过去

莫伊内斯:过去30年里,每次石油冲击都会击垮拉丁美洲的债券,但这一次却没有。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×