A traveler without observation is a bird without wings.
How many times have you heard from your friends and family that “you are so lucky to travel”, “you are having a perfect life”, “your life is wonderful, every day is stress-free” and “you don’t need to worry about anything”?
They all wish they could swap with you, but not many of them realize how stressful, exhausting, dangerous and uncomfortable traveling might be. There is a lot of risk we, whether full-time or part-time travelers, take every single day when backpacking through South-America, Asia, Africa or even Europe.
Of course nobody can see it when when looking through our photos of beaches, pictures of delicious food and us smiling with locals and beautiful landscape in the background, posted on social media channels.
In today’s post I would like to share our “bad” travel experiences to prove not everything is so perfect as it looks like when you travel.
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Toggle1. Sickness
Yes, traveling is so much fun. You might have a blast every single day meeting different people and experiencing new things. Everything might go smoothly and you may enjoy every single second of it until you… get sick. Nobody likes to be sick, right? But it feels even worse when you are alone in a foreign country, you don’t speak the local language, you are not insured and you are seriously sick (and I’m not talking about having a cold or a running nose here).
So far, it happened to us 4 times – twice to me, twice to Cez. My first time sick was back in 2011 when I firstly came to China. While sleeping in my bed at night, I was bitten by a toxic spider and my whole neck and face got infected by the poison. I was transferred to the hospital within a few hours after the bite, got some painful injections and I was prescribed some medicines I had to use for the next 2 months until I fully recovered. My whole body was swollen, I had a rash all over my body and I sometimes could not breath properly. Luckily, I recovered within 2 months and the wounds disappeared after 4 months.
The second time I got seriously sick was again in China (guess it’s been unlucky place to me), in around April 2012 when I passed out during one of my jogging sessions at school I was working in at that time. I was given a drip in one of local hospitals that made my body shiver and when I woke up after few minutes (with bruises all over my body after reanimation) I was told I was clinically dead for 42 seconds (this is exactly what you want to hear right after you regain consciousness, right?).
Cez suffered from dengue fever (infectious tropical disease caused by the dengue virus and its symptoms include fever, headache, muscle and joint pain) while in Cambodia and he seriously injured his knee during one of his classes in China.
How do you feel when you get stuck abroad seriously injured or sick? Although we are both tough people, these 4 times made us realize how fragile and unpredictable our lives were. We missed our friends and families, but we luckily had each other’s support. Let’s imagine someone traveling solo getting a food poison, malaria or even something worse. It is not much fun then, huh?
2. Missing home
When you live in China, a country not necessary familiar with Christmas, Easter and other common (for us) holidays you celebrate annually in your home country, there are moments when you miss home terribly. You wish you could just teleport yourself back home in the blink of an eye and share the happiness with the loved ones. Instead, you are working your ass off to be able to support your travels and carry on making your dreams come true (which is amazing, I’m not complaining here).
There are moments during your travels that you miss your family and friends and you feel kinda guilty for missing out another wedding of your cuisine, your mom’s birthday or the birth of your niece. Calling home helps a bit to leverage this feeling, but it’s just not the same as being there in person.
3. Tiredness
Think of all of these hours spent on the train, at the airport and on local buses. Wasn’t it exhausting? Gosh, traveling is tiring! You can feel absolutely knackered after 10 hour overnight bus ride or your 8 hour flight back home.
Think of how many times you got stuck at the airport as your flight was delayed or how many times you had to wait for the next bus to come as the last one just left. There are times when you don’t take a shower for a day (or even longer), you sleep on the floor or you don’t sleep at all feeling frightened you might get robbed while asleep!
4. Risking your life
When you travel and you are not very familiar with local areas, customs, prices, etc., you might often become a target of local scams. It is ok if you get ripped off from time to time when buying some food and souvenirs, but sometimes things might get more complicated. Think of all solo female travelers who hitchhike at night or have to take an overnight local bus but they have no clue where they are going. There are moments when we need to trust some random people we meet in the middle of night and hope they can help us out find the right direction without robbing us or worse!
Me and Cez are extremely open people who enjoy interacting with locals a lot. We rarely turn down dinner or lunch invitations and often get invited by locals to their homes. What if these people were psychos or murderers? We could get easily killed and nobody would even know where our bodies were buried (I guess I’ve watched too many horror movies). The point is that we take a risk every single day when being on the road, doing some extreme sports we never had a chance to try back home or trusting random people.
5. Dirt and stench
Everyone’s travel style is different. There are some travelers who like to travel in a very posh and expensive way, stay in glamorous hotels and drink a glass of champagne before their bedtime. There is nothing wrong with that, but for me and Cez (as you know we call ourselves tramps not without a reason) every single dollar counts when it comes to spendings and controlling our travel budget. We travel under $25 a day and we mean it. Due to our budget limit, we often need to stay away from high quality hotels and stick to cheap motels or hostels.
We often stayed in very gross, filthy and grubby rooms with no windows or proper toilet. There were days when we had no access to the hot water or internet so taking a shower or contacting our families wasn’t an option.
When you travel cheaply, you become a friend with cockroaches, ants and bed bugs. As first you are shocked and disgusted to see them crawling on the floor of your room, but after sometime you get used to your new roommates, especially in Vietnam, Cambodia and some other south-east Asian countries where the level of hygiene is not and never been a top priority.
To sum up, although traveling is the best thing that ever happened to us, not everything is as perfect as it looks or seems to be. There are some hard moments we all experience during our epic voyages such as feeling lonely, sick, tired or disgusted. At the end of the day though, we all remember the good things and make fun of the bad which makes each journey unforgettable.
Have you ever experienced loneliness or sickness on the road or have any bad travel memories you would like to share?
96 thoughts on “The Other (Unglamorous) Side of Traveling”
Great and scary post if I may add. Getting sick is the worst … being clinically dead, must have been the scariest experience ever …
So true Agness. So true. If I really thought about it, people would ask me, why do you bother travelling when it results in so many problems? I should write about it one day…!
Anyway, in a nutshell: I was ill for a month. I picked up a bug in my Aeroflot plane in Russia and carried it all the way to Vietnam and back. For a month! I had delhi belly in India. Everybody noticed because I turned grey!
I fell off the ski-lift in the Czech Republic and was lucky NOT to have broken my legs. The sign that I had survived was the fact that I was crying. A lot. I never cry!
I missed my night bus and the area was dodgy so I slept in a casino! I paid for a hotel room and when I got there, the hotel was missing! I could go on Agness, but it’s all part of the experience and I love it!
Great article on the other side of traveling Agness. You’ve encountered some pretty scary stuff in your travels. Being sick abroad is not pretty especially with a language barrier added to the mix.
Glad to hear that has not stopped you or hopefully others from not traveling. Every experience is a memorable (perhaps not a spider encounter though) one.
Safe travels!
Guess these made your travel stories more precious :-)
Totally agree, Agness. Travelling, and I’ll add travel blogging too, is not always as it seems. I think it’s important to discuss the down times too. I’ve had illnesses on the road that weren’t pleasant, but being clinically dead for 42 seconds??!! That’s terrifying! Just so glad you’re still here with us, lady!
I never felt homesick but my partner did and it was really hard for me to see that.
For me the hardest part was always having to be thinking ahead – what’s our next step, how do we plan to get there. Balancing that with living in the moment and appreciating where we were…was hard!
You never felt homesick? Lucky you :-)
Traveling can be fun and it can make your life better, but there are a lot of downsides. The most disturbing thing for me is not having a clean room and healthy conditions where I go and where can I stay. That’s why I can;t go in countries like Sri Lanka or Vietnam!
Oh you hit it spot on. I get that ALL the time…that travel is wonderful and glamorous and the perfect life. But the 24hr long dangerous bus rides through Asia, the sickness (my stomach infection for one) that can really do damage, and even just everyday life in new places is stressful. I almost got in a knife fight in a Haitian whorehouse because we asked for our money back after we found out that it was indeed a whorehouse! Or trusting a motorbike driver with your life as he wizzes around through traffic in Bangkok. The attempt at robbery someone tried to pull once and I was lucky enough to see it. Its all pretty crazy and photos may make it seem all marvelous and ideal, but it really tests your limits more than home does.
Oh man, that toilet looks awful!! Haha, but I agree, I think the worst feeling has to be being really sick away from the comfort of your home and those you love and will take care of you. I’d rather deal with the toilet than your jogging situation, YIKES! Glad you’re better!!!
Most of toilets look like that in Asia :-)
I’m so glad you can relate to it!
Great post! Everything you wrote is spot on! It was like recently during our trip to Croatia, where we spent 4 nights on coach buses haha. Not the best sleeping situation but such a fun trip overall. And wow bit by a toxic spider!! :O I hate spiders and that’s always my worst nightmare especially when I stay at a kinda sketchy hostel!
Thank you!
I’ve traveled on the cheap and in luxury and sometimes stuff just happens. Category 5 hurricane in Cancun, Category 5 typhoon in Taiwan, 6.5 earthquake in California, Plane caught fire over the Amazon, chased by an angry llama in Peru, attacked by an angry Falcon in California, ran right into a deer in the pitch dark in Oregon, walked into a grizzly in Alaska, bus caught on fire in Costa Rica. I could go on…sometimes stuff just happens! You live through it, you have great blog stories, you don’t, well…
Before travelling extensively, my girlfriend decided on the region (south east Asia and India) and left me with the freedom of planning the route and lengths of stay. She put two conditions on me: We would stay in rooms with their own,separate toilet and shower, and the room had to have a fan, preferably an overhead fan. She was dead right because the fan prevented mosquitos from landing on us. Oh, and even though we travelled four months at a time, we never, ever caught anything. I put this down to our vegetarian diet since the only time I got the runs was after eating meat.
But it depends. My worst trip was to Morocco where no amount of precaution was a defence against aggressive males, grabbing shop owners, receiving the wrong change, people harassing you non-stop in streets and markets and people trying to sell you drugs or something. It was hell and that awful experience made the rest of the world seem like various degrees of paradise :-)
Sorry about that knee accident and I understand that its not fun and we had few incidents like that. Its part of traveling and sometimes incidents happens and smile and move on. Its a great post and kudos for having the courage to write an article about.
Great article! Hats off to you guys. You are global travel heroes and deserve an award!
Bed bugs and I only went as far as Amsterdam… the Netherlands is too expensive for budget accommodation. Over 50 Euros MINIMUM for a poor quality hotel, the cheapest! Although some campsites are quite good, if you find a nice area…
Hey Agness, I can definitely relate to this post!
I love being able to travel as much as I have but there is no doubt that you always get those days when you crave the comfort of home.
One of my stand out experiences also happened in China (it’s obviously not just you!) when I entered a grimy hostel in the hutongs of Beijing to find that the room I had already paid for was no longer available and was sent to a disused shack out the back. The shower didn’t work, the windows wouldn’t close and there wasn’t even a floor in the room, just a few cracked concrete slabs.
You’re right when you say travel isn’t always as glamorous as you hope!
I am very inspired to my work, the article you created is very good, thank you
Thanks a bunch, Hisam! :)