The Art and Value of Journaling as You Travel

Travel can make you a poet. Travel can be spiritual. You meet people on the road you’d never meet otherwise. Traveling rearranges your cultural furniture and challenges truths you assumed were self-evident and God-given. By traveling, you learn not only about the people and places you visit — you learn about yourself. You risk coming home filled with ideas that might challenge your neighbors and loved ones. And you get a strange joy out of sharing them.

But without capturing your thoughts on paper, the lessons of travel are like shooting stars you just missed…and butterflies you thought you saw. Collecting intimate details on the road, and then distilling them into your journal, sharpens your ability to observe and creates a souvenir you’ll always cherish.

rick steves journaling

Choose your travel journal carefully. I prefer a minimalist journal: light, yet with stiff enough covers to protect the pages and to give me something solid to write on (since I often write on the fly without a convenient table). I like invitingly empty pages — not pages decorated with extra literary frills and verbose doodads. It’s my journal, not someone else’s chance to decorate my observations with cute quotes, clever tips, and handy reminders. I use black ink or a mechanical pencil. Nothing should compete with the simple words. Avoid spiral notebooks — they fall apart quickly. A bound book will become a classic on your bookshelf.

The key to good journaling is being both observant and disciplined…to take the time to notice what you’re noticing, and then to jot down your thoughts. I use a tiny, pocket-sized notepad to capture the moment right there. Then, when I have time, I pull out my actual journal, sort through those notes, and organize them into something vivid and fun to read.

Thinking back, it seems I’ve always had a desire to capture my discoveries and eureka moments in a journal. On my first trip (as a 14-year-old), I collected and logged my experiences in a file of a hundred postcards, each numbered and packed with my notes.

Every trip I took inspired my passion for filling up an “empty book,” even back when I was simply a footloose, fancy-free vagabond with no intention of being a travel writer. The flight over came with a ritual personal inventory of where I was at psychologically as I began the trip, and the flight home came with a similar introspective wrap-up. And each night in between, I wouldn’t drift off to sleep without collecting my day’s experiences, discoveries, and thoughts into that book. The book, which started empty, always came home full.

Hiking deep into a misty English moor as a teenage traveler, I wrote, “Long-haired goats and sheep seem to gnaw on grass in their sleep. We were lost in a world of green, wind, white rocks, and birds — birds singing, but unseen. Then we found the stones. Standing in a circle as if for endless centuries — not moving — waiting for us to come. And in stillness, they entertained. After being alone with our private stone circle, Stonehenge — with its barbed wire, tour buses, and port-a-loos — won’t quite make it.” It was on the boat to France the next day that I worked on those rough notes, and realized that finding hidden bits of Europe and bringing them home through my writing was what I wanted to do for a living.

Now, three decades later, I still snare those happenings as they flutter by, eager to see what I can build with all that fun raw material. On my last trip to Helsinki, I was so flustered by the language barrier in an extremely local sauna that I didn’t know how to get a dry towel. Sitting in the corner to air dry, I decided to pass the time observing and jotting down ideas for my journal:

“People look more timeless and ethnic when naked with hair wet and stringy. The entire steamy scene was three colors: gray concrete, dark wood, and ruddy flesh. Surrounded by naked locals (each with a tin bucket between his legs — used to splash cool water on his face), there was absolutely no indication of what century I was in. But from the faces, it was perfectly clear: this was Finland.”

With those notes, I can stoke those memories and revisit that sauna for the rest of my life. Enjoy the physical act of putting pen to paper, and gathering new experiences, lessons, thoughts, and feelings while they are fresh and vibrant.

If your life is a canvas, travels bring new color. And journaling is like being a painter who stands back every once in a while to both understand and enjoy the art as it unfolds.

High in the Himalayas, a Tiny, Shiny Black Leech Sucked My Blood

Just minding my own business in a Nepali jungle — high in the Himalayas — I was marveling at how tasty yet ugly a little banana was, even though it was giving me a bad case of chalky mouth. Then, a tiny, shiny, black leech decided to suck my blood. Determinedly, he came at me — head over heels like an evil slinky. He was oh so slow…but he just wouldn’t stop. I kept blaming my paranoia, but I was very scared nevertheless.

I have a lot of people interviewing me about drug policy reform lately. I thought this interview, by James McClure of Civilized, was particularly well done — and it includes stories I’ve never told of Himalayan travels. If you’d like a 20-minute primer on what’s happening with marijuana legalization lately, and my take on the related challenges for elections in 2016, you might find this interview worth listening to.

rick steves eating biscuit

When there are monkeys around in Kathmandu, hold your biscuits close.

rick steves and tailor

When traveling, whether in South Asia as a backpacker or in Europe decades later, your travels go better when you go local.

Rick steves on farm

In South Asia as a backpacker, I’d connect with locals at any cost  even if it meant doing a little yard work.

Happy European Easter — Our New TV Special Debuts!

Easter-dvd-flat.jpg

It’s Easter, spring has sprung, and on Sunday Christians around the world celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus. The last year has been full of Easter for me and my TV crew, as we’ve been busy producing our new “Rick Steves’ European Easter” special for public television. The show — filmed in Spain, Slovenia, Italy, Switzerland, and Greece — will air on most stations this weekend (check for your local listings). If it’s more convenient, you can watch the Easter special online. One way or another, if you want to inject a multicultural dimension to your Easter celebrations this year, there’s no better way to spend an hour. I hope you enjoy the special — and I hope it brings more meaning to this season. Happy Easter!

What Does the Travel Alert Mean?

Grand Place Brussels

Following yesterday’s attacks on Brussels, the US State Department issued a travel alert for Americans regarding “potential risks of travel to and throughout Europe.” Does this mean we should stay home?

In a word: No. This is a travel “alert,” not a “warning.” The State Department reserves “warnings” for serious business: It means, essentially, “Don’t go there.” But an “alert” just means “Be careful.” According to the State Department, “We issue a Travel Alert for short-term events we think you should know about when planning travel to a country.”

Isolated terrorist events — 2004 in Madrid, 2005 in London, 2012 in Boston, 2015 in Paris — are as tragic as they are impossible to predict. With this alert, the State Department is simply confirming something we already knew: Going forward, it’s possible that there will be more terrorist events in Europe (just as it’s possible here in the United States).

Also, at frightening moments like this one, keep in mind that there’s an important difference between fear and risk. As the State Department recommends, while you’re traveling, be vigilant. Be aware. Exercise caution. But at the same time, don’t be terrorized. That’s exactly the response the terrorists are hoping for.

Brussels — and the rest of Europe — are, if anything, safer today than before yesterday’s attacks. Security everywhere will be on high alert. But, unfortunately, many Americans will cancel their trips to Europe. As a result, ironically, they’ll be staying home in a country that loses dozens of people each day to gun violence.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to the people of Brussels, the victims, and their loved ones. As for me, I’m flying to Lisbon in ten days. And later this summer, I’m booked to fly out of the same Brussels airport that today is a shrine of grief and tragic bloodshed. Am I allowing myself to be terrorized by the terrorists? Hell no. It all comes back to my firmly held belief that the best way for Americans to fight terrorism is to keep on traveling.