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.i am not a very adventurous person on the job.
.i am not a very adventurous person on the job.




.i am not a very adventurous person on the job.
  1. .I AM NOT A VERY ADVENTUROUS PERSON ON THE JOB. HOW TO
  2. .I AM NOT A VERY ADVENTUROUS PERSON ON THE JOB. TRIAL

I over-planned parts of my trip, under planned entire months that we spent aimlessly wandering, signed us up for difficult (and expensive) multi-day treks that we weren’t physically prepared for, got miserably sick in almost every country we visited, filed several expensive claims with our travel insurance company (bless them), and a year later, we returned home to a handful of defaulted student loans and a jarring disconnect between the life we’d been leading for the past year and the reality we’d returned to.īut a few years later, I look back on that crazy, disastrous trip and truly say that it changed my life in so many wonderful, unexpectedly amazing ways.

.i am not a very adventurous person on the job.

Honestly, I had no idea what to expect… and I made just about every rookie mistake. And that was all BEFORE I actually got on the plane!

.I AM NOT A VERY ADVENTUROUS PERSON ON THE JOB. HOW TO

( Also, I was planning a wedding at the same time – which I strongly recommend NOT doing.)įrom figuring out how to pack my entire life into a backpack, to mentally preparing to leave my comfort zone & the life I’d spent years building, to the terrifying prospect of actually quitting my job – every single step was a milestone. The year before I got on that plane and left was a whirlwind of trip planning, packing, coordinating logistics, and difficult conversations. Quitting my job to travel for a year was the scariest – and most exhilarating – thing I’ve ever done in my life. Towards the end of our year-long honeymoon in Mexico City, Mexico, looking as put-together as we possibly could after a year of backpacking! The Reality Of Quitting Your Job To Travel

.i am not a very adventurous person on the job.

So without further ado, here’s all the stuff that nobody tells you about quitting your job to go travel! We’ve got a few pieces of information – some useful, some completely useless – to pass along to anyone considering quitting their jobs and taking a grown-up gap year to travel. Now that it’s really and truly over, we want to share some of our learnings.

.I AM NOT A VERY ADVENTUROUS PERSON ON THE JOB. TRIAL

Through trial and error ( OK … error and error), we learned that we weren’t the kind of travelers we WANTED to be at all. We spent a year navigating through foreign places together, attempting adventurous activities and totally falling on our faces time after time ( lookin’ at you, waterfall rappelling catastrophe, Machu Picchu fail, and disastrous French road trip). My search history was filled with questions like “how to quit your job and travel for a year” and “will I regret quitting my job to travel”.įinally, I set a date to realize my dream: in five years, I told myself, I’m going to quit my job and travel.Īnd so for five very long years I waited and schemed and plotted and saved and met a cute guy and invited him along on my trip and then married him.Īnd then it was time. I daydreamed all day long and planned all night (by that I mostly mean I spent a lot of time on Pinterest pinning travel inspiration). For years, all I wanted to do was leave my job in corporate America and go off an amazing journey, traveling all around the world and having incredible adventures. It’s been a few years since we quit our jobs, hopped on a plane, and left for our year-long honeymoon. Travel Essentials We Bring on Every Trip.30 Things No One Tells You About Backpacking in South America.32 Things Nobody Tells You About Long Term Travel as a Couple.

.i am not a very adventurous person on the job.

  • 30 Things Nobody Tells You About Quitting Your Job to Travel.





  • .i am not a very adventurous person on the job.