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The Point of Travel

2m 51s501 words61 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

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What's the point of travel?

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It's to help make us into better people.

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It's a sort of therapy.

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Without anything mystical being meant by this,

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all of us are, in one way or another, on what could be termed "an inner journey."

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That is, we're trying to develop in particular ways.

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In a nutshell, the point of travel

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is to go to places that can help us in our inner evolution.

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The outer journey should assist us

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with the inner one.

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Every location in the world

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contains qualities that can support

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some kind of beneficial change inside a person.

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Take these 200 million year old stones in America's Utah Desert.

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It's a place, but looked at psychologically.

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It's also an inner destination,

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a place with perspective,

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free of preoccupation with the petty and the small-minded.

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Somewhere imbued with calm and resilience.

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Religions used to take travel much more seriously than we do now.

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For them, it was a therapeutic activity.

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In the Middle Ages,

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when there was something wrong with you,

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you were meant to head out for a pilgrimage

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to commune with relics

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of a saint or a member of the holy family.

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If you had toothache,

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you'd go to Rome, to the Basilica of San Lorenzo

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and touch the arm bones of Saint Appolonia, the patron saint of teeth.

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If you were unhappily married,

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you might go to Umbria

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to touch the shrine of Saint Rita of Cascia, patron saint of marital problems.

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Or, if you were worried about lightning,

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you were sent to Bad Münstereifel in Germany

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to touch the skull of Saint Donatus,

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believed to offer help against fires and explosions.

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We no longer believe in the divine power of journeys

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but certain parts of the world still have a power to change and mend the wounded parts of us.

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In an ideal world,

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travel agencies would be manned by a new kind of psychotherapist.

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They'd take care not just of the flights and the hotels,

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they'd start by finding out what was wrong with us

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and how we might want to change.

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The anxious might be sent to see the majestic, immemorial waves crashing into the cliffs on the west coast of Ireland.

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People a bit too concerned with being admired and famous

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might be sent to contemplate the ruins of Detroit.

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Someone out of touch with their body

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might be recommended a trip to Porto Seguro in Bahia in Brazil.

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Nowadays, too often,

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we head off without fully knowing what's wrong with us

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or precisely understanding how our chosen destinations meant to help us.

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We should become more conscious travellers

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on a well articulated search for qualities that places possess,

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like calm or perspective,

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sensuality or rigor.

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We should follow old-fashioned pilgrims

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in striving to evolve our characters

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according to the suggestions offered up by the places we've been to.

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We need to relearn how to be ambitious about travel,

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seeing it as a way

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of helping us to grow into better versions of ourselves.

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