2.) This means that even if you have seen a picture of the Taj Mahal countless times, you never really feel the magic until you actually see it. It's impossible to capture the sounds and smells and tastes and textures in a picture, so when you go to a magnificent place for the first time, you can see it with a new outlook. When you think back to that place, you don't think of the pictures you see, you think of the view and the people and the smells and sounds you experienced. This would apply to me because this is actually how I feel when I go someplace that I have only seen pictures of. When I think of certain places such as San Francisco, I think of the foggy morning I spent with my family biking across the Golden Gate Bridge, not the opening credits of Full House. (Full House is what I used to picture before I actually visited San Francisco. I promise.) Going to a new place makes me look at it differently. I take mental pictures and associate completely different words with them than I would have before I visited, which is how my mind processes looking at things in a new light. (When I think of Santa Fe, I think cold and windy, not sunny and warm, as one would expect. Boy, that was a surprise.)
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| This is exactly what the Golden Gate Bridge looked like on that morning. You couldn't even see the top. |
4.) I do believe that a certain burden rests on each traveler's shoulders and this is precisely it. As travelers, we go places to learn, and it is our duty to share the knowledge upon returning. In addition, friends and family kind of expect the traveler to share his or her new knowledge. What would the point of a carrier pigeon be if no one wanted or needed the information he or she carried? It would be like going to college and then doing nothing with that sought-after diploma that you worked so hard to earn.
5.) "For if every true love affair can feel like a journey to a foreign country, where you can’t quite speak the language, and you don’t know where you’re going, and you’re pulled ever deeper into the inviting darkness, every trip to a foreign country can be a love affair, where you’re left puzzling over who you are and whom you’ve fallen in love with." I absolutely love this quote because it describes traveling in a way I have never seen before. I have never associated travel with falling in love, and this quote showed me how those two parallels can be drawn. It also absolutely sucked me in. I was able to picture it in my head, kind of like a movie. (It sounds weird, but I pictured a bunch of black and white photos of major cities.) Besides, I think it's beautifully written.
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| Paris |
| London |


Great blog! You spoke about something that I am always thinking about. "This means that even if you have seen a picture of the Taj Mahal countless times, you never really feel the magic until you actually see it." You can never capture a moment with a picture, no matter how great of picture you take. I continue to try on every trip I take, but I always return home to the disappointment of the picture not living up to the memory. I think this is what drives me to keep traveling...I want more of those feelings I can only get from being there! Good work.
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