

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

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

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.

