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What is true tourism?

Life is travel. Every day when you open your eyes, you will see everything you don’t see at first glance. Everything and every scene is what you get from traveling.

It's just that you take it for granted, and you are responding to other people's words. Traveling is to go from a place where you are tired of life to a place where others are tired of life.

Nowadays, life is getting richer and many people travel domestically and abroad.

Having said that, what is true tourism?

The tour is divided into stages. In the first stage, check in and take photos.

I just want to go everywhere and see everything new. It doesn’t matter where I live or eat, as long as I go to a few more places. That’s what most people say the world is so big and I want to see it.

The second stage is in-depth tourism.

This is the way most travel enthusiasts do, to delve deeply into the customs and customs of a place, slowly taste it, and feel the beauty of an area with their heart.

Get together with the local children, chat with the adults, chat and drink tea with the old people, and experience life like an aborigine.

The third stage is vacation travel. The complicated world can no longer make you feel exciting. You have a better understanding of local customs. When you go out to travel, checking in and taking pictures is tacky. In-depth travel is tiring. Only vacation travel can make yourself comfortable and happy.

Feel relaxed and happy.

That is how most wealthy people spend their time.

Traveling is really an exciting idea for everyone. We all claim that we are traveling, and from time to time we have the idea of ??giving up school and work to travel, but when you are limited by heavy work and study, and limited wages,

How can we still have a casual trip with pocket money?

Just imagine, when you use your savings accumulated for a year to prepare for a trip to Japan, you get up in the middle of the night to grab cheap air tickets. In order to be clean, you spend a lot of time in panic researching whether the hotel is worth booking, reading guides, exchanging foreign currency, learning languages, and making calls.

The world, and kicked people to make shopping lists and max out their credit cards. However, after all this was done, in those places that were described as fairy-like and illusory by various travel guides and travel notes, all you could see were heads one after another in front of them.

The bustling shopping resorts are crowded with people shopping overseas, and loud shouts in Chinese can be heard every minute. The popular attractions recommended by all guides have an average queue of three hours each, and those that look like they are about to swallow their saliva.

Japanese delicacies only exist in other people’s travel notes.

Those cabins that looked like furniture from the Meiji period in the photos when booking have turned into small dark rooms similar to capsule hotels. The only gain from the trip is probably to buy various items for relatives and friends, but they are still running back and forth.

I don’t know how many times I have shopped around to buy the most cost-effective thing.

This is not a person’s experience. The current travel situation is to get on the bus to sleep, get off the bus to take pictures, and when you come back, you don’t know anything.

In short, true travel starts from the heart, not seeking scenic spots, but seeking openness.

Even a tree on the roadside, a flower on the roadside, or even a blade of grass can make you moved. Only then can you realize the natural state of mind that you have never had before.

, but it is a small emotion that bursts out suddenly due to extreme expectations.

This feeling will never be forgotten for a long time. Maybe you just want to go out, maybe you just got on the bus, maybe you just got off the plane.

What is true travel?

It is a yearning, a feeling that comes from the heart, from bottom to top, and penetrates the whole body.

The meaning of traveling is not to tell the world that I have been here.

As Li Bai said: The one who is heaven and earth is the reverse journey of all things; the one who is bright is the passer-by of all generations.

First of all, prepare material reserves before traveling, including money and body. You must have enough money to make a poor family rich.

Taking good care of your body and being tired from the journey is the key.

If you don’t have good legs and feet, you will be disappointed when you see the beautiful scenery.

Secondly, it is spiritual reserve.

I think it is very important to have a detailed understanding of the human geography of that place and to do enough homework.

If you really want to go there, it will bring you spiritual satisfaction after going there.

Again, don’t follow the trend, go to the places you like to go. It’s really boring to follow the tour groups.

Fourth, simply keeping a diary every day can record your feelings at that time, because many emotions are fleeting.

Take my own experience as an example.

In France, Normandy is a favorite among American tourists. They can feel the greatness of their motherland and pay tribute to the heroes who died on D-Day.

Because I particularly like World War II movies, I read a lot of books about the Normandy invasion, such as The Longest Day.

Full of curiosity and awe about this largest battle in the history of World War II.

So I went to France, especially to Normandy, and saw Omaha Beach, the vertical cliffs, and the remaining solid German bunkers.

War memorials, U.S. military cemeteries, etc., the tragic scenes seem to be right in front of you, and you can't help but burst into tears, remembering the heroes. This kind of shock cannot be captured by books and movies.

This kind of spiritual satisfaction is unparalleled!

I admired Madame Curie very much, so I went to the Panthéon to pay her respects. The sentence I remember most clearly is that this is a man's world and she is the only woman.

Admiration arose spontaneously.

For another example, visiting Hugo’s former residence, Balzac’s former residence, and commemorating Molière at Lachaise Cemetery all gave me a deeper understanding of the great writer’s works.