POST EN ESPANOL AQUI : Viajando de manera diferente
POST EN FRANÇAIS ICI:Voyager de manière différente

Trans-Siberian train, 2006
1. Avoid museums.
This might seem to be absurd advice, but let’s just think about it a little: if you are in a foreign city, isn’t it far more interesting to go in search of the present than of the past? It’s just that people feel obliged to go to museums because they learned as children that travelling was about seeking out that kind of culture. Obviously museums are important, but they require time and objectivity – you need to know what you want to see there, otherwise you will leave with a sense of having seen a few really fundamental things, except that you can’t remember what they were.2. Hang out in bars. Bars are the places where life in the city reveals itself, not in museums. By bars I don’t mean nightclubs, but the places where ordinary people go, have a drink, ponder the weather, and are always ready for a chat. Buy a newspaper and enjoy the ebb and flow of people. If someone strikes up a conversation, however silly, join in: you cannot judge the beauty of a particular path just by looking at the gate.
3. Be open. The best tour guide is someone who lives in the place, knows everything about it, is proud of his or her city, but does not work for an agency. Go out into the street, choose the person you want to talk to, and ask them something (Where is the cathedral? Where is the post office?). If nothing comes of it, try someone else – I guarantee that at the end of the day you will have found yourself an excellent companion.
4. Try to travel alone or – if you are married – with your spouse. It will be harder work, no one will be there taking care of you, but only in this way can you truly leave your own country behind. Travelling with a group is a way of being in a foreign country while speaking your mother tongue, doing whatever the leader of the flock tells you to do, and taking more interest in group gossip than in the place you are visiting.
5. Don’t compare. Don’t compare anything – prices, standards of hygiene, quality of life, means of transport, nothing! You are not travelling in order to prove that you have a better life than other people – your aim is to find out how other people live, what they can teach you, how they deal with reality and with the extraordinary.
6. Understand that everyone understands you. Even if you don’t speak the language, don’t be afraid: I’ve been in lots of places where I could not communicate with words at all, and I always found support, guidance, useful advice, and even girlfriends. Some people think that if they travel alone, they will set off down the street and be lost forever. Just make sure you have the hotel card in your pocket and – if the worst comes to the worst – flag down a taxi and show the card to the driver.
7. Don’t buy too much. Spend your money on things you won’t need to carry: tickets to a good play, restaurants, trips. Nowadays, with the global economy and the Internet, you can buy anything you want without having to pay excess baggage.
8. Don’t try to see the world in a month. It is far better to stay in a city for four or five days than to visit five cities in a week. A city is like a capricious woman (or a capricious man, if you are a woman): she/he takes time to be seduced and to reveal him/herself completely.
9. A journey is an adventure. Henry Miller used to say that it is far more important to discover a church that no one else has ever heard of than to go to Rome and feel obliged to visit the Sistine Chapel with two hundred thousand other tourists bellowing in your ear. By all means go to the Sistine Chapel, but wander the streets too, explore alleyways, experience the freedom of looking for something – quite what you don’t know – but which, if you find it, will – you can be sure – change your life.
As an old hippie, I know what I’m talking about…
The text was taken from my book “Like a flowing river”
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there are wonderful advices! I would love to travel alone this year . In this case you are not obligated to behave like your friends expect you to behave , You can release yourself , feel the life around , make plans , just watch at the beautiful seaside and dream .. Thanks for the advices Paolo! You make me feel and see the life in the different direction , not like our politics , tv and people around want us to see it .
Mis saludos de amor-sabiduría en nombre de la Verdad y la Vida de la Fraternidad Blanca Cosmica para el hermano Paulo Cohelo, que sigue cumpliendo una grata misión de enseñanza, a través de sus obras y sus viajes.
Es necesario que Paulo, forme una fundación para el bienestar de los enfermos de cancer, sida o diabetes. Su voz es necesaria entre los millones de pacientes de esas dolencias.
Abrazos fraternales
Ivan Reyes, periodista e investigador peruano.
I really liked this post – but I think it’s extremely hard to travel alone.I left my hometown for two months to study in Berlin. It’s miserable feeling – to see something beautiful and have no opportunity to share the feeling with someone you love. I’m glad it’s just two months. I’ve dreamed about doing master degree in Europe, now my dream is lying in ruins – I can’t live when there isn’t anyone who waits for me at home and where is no one to wait for…
But it tought you to be stronger .
ㅎㅎㅎ I am going to France next year/..ㅋㅋ
Thank you! well.. I already knew your thoughts
Telepathy?^^;ㅋㅋ
However! I have to Louvre~ Orsay~ etc~ !!! must!
bec’I LOVE ARTS SO MUCH
Absolutely agree with you!
I just arrived home from London today! I traveled alone, and had a great time!!! At first it was hard because I missed my boys, but after the 1st day, I got used to exploring the city by myself, and taking pictures all alone! One item off my bucket list: Stonehenge!!! Great spiritual experience!
Estoy totalmente de acuerdo con usted Paulo…. !!!!! ojala que las personas tomen nota de estos consejos…
Thanks Paulo , unknowingly , i had been using some of the tips , now i’ll try using them all
Perfect timing as always…I am traveling now for the next year…all your suggestions are on the money…I have been able to do what you suggested here and do what you suggest not to do on…well some things like using the language barrier to not venture out on my own…and as usual you are so correct…
Sos mi idolo!!!!! Me encantaria conocerte!!! :)
…Si tenes el valor de dejar algo atrás, todo lo que te protege, te consuela, lo cual puede ser desde tu casa, hasta viejos rencores y embarcarte en un viaje en busca de la verdad y hacia el interior o el exterior… Y si estás dispuesto a que todo lo que te pase en ese viaje, te ilumine, y que todo el que te encuentres en el camino te enseñe algo… Y si estas preparado sobre todo a afrontar y a perdonar algunas de las realidades muy duras de ti mismo, entonces la verdad no te será negada.
I liked your thoughts dear Paulo, they are so close to my heart…
A travel blessing
Your gratitude finds goodness
Where ever you go
LoveM
_OOOOooo
_|_____TT__
___________)
O>>>>O>>>O..\
I love the train (drawing), it’s ingenious!
tsaf tsouf tsaf tsouf…
Bless you
Love and Gratitude
Annie
LIke it very much.Thanks.Beautiful words.
Thank you My Dear Ones for allowing me…
To Express myself
A train of air rushing out
Passing your station
Watch the train of thought
It takes you away from here (now)
With constant clacking
Bless you where ever you are or go
LoveM
hmm hmm good
traveling as an open being
allowing for the scrumptious nibbles of life.
We spent 3 weeks in Havana, walking the streets, staying in a cheap walk up hotel. It was a wonderful experience, but ear plugs are necessary to get some sleep. On the other hand, without hiring a guide at the gate, we would not have understood what we were seeing at Tulum.
A blessing for you, because you are (always) travelling: (Irish one)
May the wings of the butterfly kiss the sun,
and find your shoulder to light on.
To bring you luck, happiness and riches
today, tomorrow and beyond.
Love and Gratitude
Annie
Lovely Annie }o{
You really have the happy knack of plucking the heart strings
Opening my hand
Gracefully you float away
Oh butterfly heart
Blessings M:)
Beautiful blessing, Annie :-)
thank you Annie, I love your Irish blessing.
Beautiful.
I was so pleased to read your advice about avoiding museums. I’v always felt a little bit of a phillistine because visiting the museums is supposed to be the ‘done’ thing, however, most of the stuff in the museums are shown in documentaries on tv. Not only do they show the artefacts in documentaries but there are always stories attached to them so thank u for that Paulo Coehlo and I will definately look for your book. The advice you give really appeals to me.
travelling with a local is the best.
Wow!! justo ahora que emprenderé el primer viaje de mi existencia… Mi sueñO… nada de planes y sola!!! :) ahh con miedo, pero todo irá bien!!
thank you Paulo! I agree with all of these and also love just showing up. We shared this link with others on our business page and I am really interested to see what other people give as tips too.
I cc’d you on my comment there as a thank you but you probably get a gabillion of those so it may not reach you :) thank you so much again for sharing these tips with everyone. truly some of the best connections I have made travelling are with people who don’t share my language. It is an adventure to have to use other ways of communication.
Another thing I love is not prebooking any accomodation and just showing up that way you can really try a place on.
Keep on being wonderful, Catherine
p.s. when are you coming over to New Zealand?
I just wish I had yr courage to go somewhere without prebooking any accomodation. So inspired by your comment. Thank you
Love it! I am a passionate traveller and agree one hundred percent with all of this. Thank you for posting Paulo! :)
quiero agradecerte una vez mas en realidad desde que comencè a leer tus libros he viajado contigo en cada uno de ellos eres tan explìcito tan real lleno de sentimientos en los relatos a veces un poco encajoso por obtener lo que deseas pero creeme te pasaste hoy con esos tips de viaje la verdad a mi me gustarìa hacer un viaje sola y poder disfrutar a mi manera pero no puedo hacerlo por mi esposo y cuando viajo con el o la familia siempre tienen sueño o quieren cosas diferentes a las que a mi me gustaria hacer salir para conocer el mundo verdaderamente y a la gente de cada ciudad sin miedo y con el animo de traer nuevas experiencias y conocimientos por que como tu dices no hay nadie mejor para mostrarte la ciudad que una persona que viva allì y se sienta orgullosa de donde vive ojala y pronto pueda hacer un viaje a mi manera y tomarè en cuenta cada uno de tus consejos ya que los siento muy reales y satisfactorios para una alma que le gusten las aventuras y el conocimiento.
While in italy during our last trip, me & my friend used to book late night hotel rooms when we reach train stations at night, where hotel reps usually waits to offer late night passengers lots of good deals to spend the night..that was the fun of unplanned Adventure:)
I agree, except for the mueseum piece, I think this is very individual. I visit the mueseum in my own town, why wouldn’t I visit one in a foreign town. I think its a balance, see a special mueseum b/c you want to not b/c you need to tell other people you saw it or check it off a list to prove you’ve been there.
Chris if you read Paulo words he isn’t saying to not go to mueseums but to be personally be selective when choosing. Take back w/ you the most out of your visit. Life outside the walls is & can open you to many things the normal person doesn’t see… The gate was beautiful, but what I found inside was breathtaking
Wonderful advice, as always, Paulo. It’s funny, I was just thinking this very day that I am not a “museum person”. Perhaps I was picking up on your thoughts. But I don’t go to museums, even in my own town. I don’t feel as if anything of importance is revealed to me there. It is in the living of life that one absorbs and appreciates, as you said. I do love exploring and discovring new places for myself. Love it. G-d bless, as always, Pam
ps. great photo!
exactly vaishali………i agree with u….and Paulo..as always i say……u are great!!!thanx for sharing…..travelling is in a sense knowing our own soul more n more close wen we put ourselves in different conditions and experiences..so the journey is inward….towards the center..
My dear Mr. Coelho – book :Like a following river” is famously book for me:). Inside that book are many good guides for life! That book is alwayz with me:)! Thanks!
With regards, Halina
It is best to read about something you already know, you know?
Reminds me of one of my dreams at night – I was explorer of the earth. But as I am on Alpha Centauri planet, it’s quite simple to say: I’m an Aplha-explorer already! Well, Paulo, if I could (in my littleness) speak to you – to an enormous spirit – in some way, I would just have said: You’re not old and you’re truly a hippie. If you can inspire such tiny and young beings like me, you’re perfectly immortal.
Can I ask you a simple question? I’m afraid you won’t be able to answer it, nor you wouldn’t find it (’cause it’s small like me, perhaps?), but, what if…? I never get up!
So: have you read Le Petit Prince (The Little Prince)?
I love your name, brings some found childhood memories of my favorite book… the one I offer to everybody I love.
The Little Prince – packed with ‘big’lessons for life
Can’t help thinking about the fox and wheat …
Be blessed
this comes in handy Paulo, I’m leaving for 3 weeks Scotland in a few days, and at first I had a few too many options and felt like I was going to loose myself in it…but it feels better indeed to stay in one place longer to really get to know it and it’s people…thanks for sharing your experience with us :-D
EXACTAMENTE NO SE PUEDE JUZGAR LA BELLEZA DE UN CAMINO CON SOLO MIRAR LA PUERTA……… USTED ES UN SABIO Y ME ENCATO ESTO PORQUE REALMENTE DE ESO SE TRATA…GRACIAS LO ADMIRO MUCHO!!
Paulo, me gustan los tips pero no estoy de acuerdo en algunos.. He viajado sola, en grupo y con mi esposo y eso no necesariamente ha sido la diferencia de mis viajes, yo creo que si vas a un lugar es por una razón.. y al llegar a ese lugar o al cumplir ese objetivo, todo vale la pena…Suerte a los amigos que sí visitamos museos!
I guess I read it in one of your books and it gave me the greatest pleasure while travelling.Especially buying newspapers and chatting with ordinary people:) I love these tips!
Wonderful tips that make a lot of sense.I have to disagree about museums, however- I’ve been to Delphi and Athens recently and they were awe inspiring. I have to add though, that it is best to go without a guide into the museums – they usually talk too much and only show what they think you should see. Definitely a yes to befriend local people – they are great for getting to know a city or village.
true, true! i dont & we dont visit museums. we go instead to supermarkets, night markets and all kinds of markets. there you get to see what people eat, what they buy,etc. you also get the chance to talk to them.
Thank you 4 the tip…actually I’m going to Spain with my family, not really familiar and I hated another place, I know it can be nice but I only visiting the same place…my country and here in the Nethelands…I hoping me and my family have a good holidays…Greetings From Holland
Thank you 4 the tip…actually I’m going to Spain with my family, not really familiar and I hated another place, I know it can be nice but I only visiting the same place…my country and here in the Nethelands…I hope we could have a good time with my family…Greetings From Holland
Thank you for the beautiful and spiritual tips…..I love traveling and I have put into practice some of your ideas, but others have been new and intriguing to me, especially the one in which you advise us not to try to see the world in a month. And when I think that I was dreaming of tours in order to see as much as I can in a short time….better stick to my old habit of staying in one place for a longer time and trying to find out things about poeple, places, customs, local food….and just admiring nature….
This month I am going to Greece and I will surely take your precious adice…
Daniela from Romania
thank you! if you come to Vienna I’d love to show you my personal highlights of the city.
take care
Yes to #1! It’s a stale convention going to a museum to understand a country. It’s impossible to synthesize all the information within the time period you are visiting a country and form an opinion of the culture. A bar is so much more efficient mean to the same end!
You`re right Paulo, MY RESPECT.
Fabulous and helpful!!^^
I am actually one of your fan and I love all that you write!! ^^
as a Flower Child in my 50′s who’s travelled many worlds & look s forward to travelling again…I completely agree! Excellent tips Maestro Paulo! Gracias! LOVE Zeeva®
Hippie pIE hOURRAH!
;)
Care for a cakelet?
xx
You are a great man, great writer! I agree with You in all points. Wish You all the best!!!!!
Travel is an extension of yourself.. we seek ourselves in allt he traval.. when we are in the mountains we seek for answers, when we are in the cities we seek for greed.. the journeys never get boring as there is so much we have to explore about ourselves !
completely agree!!
Snr coelho the museums are the foot print of the past and if we wish to understand a city we must go back to beginning of the creation of it. past is the blueprint to the future. cuidate.snr lopez
great you had the courage to mention avoiding museums (unfortunately, usually boring)
Es facinante conocer otras ciudades y costumbres Pablo, pero recuerda que los lugares son como nosotros mismos hay que aceptar y reconocer nuestro pasado, para comprender lo que somos hoy en dia, por lo que cuando viajo, me doy tiempo de disfrutar desde un mercado, hasta un museo, quiza no lo vea por completo todo, pero estare ahi y podre elegir, lo que mas me impacte, aunque sea algo sin importancia para los demas. La idea es dejarse llevar y envolver por el lugar y sus alrededores de una manera relajada,
Great post. I agree with numbers 2-9. But to avoid museums, when a country’s past is so much a part of their present…. Sorry, I don’t agree with number 1
Thats too bad …have you ever heard of the internet…
I would add that the purpose of travel is not to send or bring good stories home. It’s to be there and open, not looking to build a narrative or street cred.
Love your books, Paulo. Had the pleasure of selling some of them when I was a sales rep for Harper many moons ago. Nice to discover your blog, thanks to a friend’s research. Hope you ar well.
A traveler passing through a distant country. Caught by Nyx, god of the night,
found himself in need of where to sleep. From afar, a small campfire appears. Approaching it,
he found a small house, an old man sat at the door with the fire in front of him.
The traveler approached, bowed and made his request to the old man. This one submitted to him
condition: To tell him what he saw during his travels. The traveler was very happy to
share his adventures with this old man, so he moved to his side and began to tell.
Each time the traveler named a place, the old man interrupted him by describing it in
the sharpest details. After a while, impressed, the traveler said the old man:
“You’ve seen a lot! It is I who should make such a request.”
The old man replied: “My son, I never left my little house.”
“So how do you know all these places with such precision?” questioned the young man.
“Through people like you. Every night I light my fire and expect that the road will provide me with history as yours” the old man replied with a smile.
“I had to stay home and do the same. I would not have left my world” replied the traveler.
“No, Absolutely not! It’s through you that the world is discovered, and on your traces, people chose to walk to find their own path and cross a cowardly old man in front of a campfire instead of an abandoned house. ” retorted the old man with bitterness in his voice. “i’ve never been brave enough to leave my world, so i’ve never discovered what the world trully was” he concludes.
A divine moment of silence reigned over the place. Then the young man continued to tell his adventures until Hypnos, the god of sleep, seized them.
In the morning, the traveler awoke. The fire was extinguished, the door of the house locked and no trace of the old man. Then the young man put his bag on his back and left without looking back knowing that such a scene would have done harm to his old friend.
Just went to a temple for a hindu ritual. Was very upset the way caretaker of the temple behaves with the devotees.I felt that The Goddess can never stay in such place. You will never find the peace of mind here,then what’s the use of that ritual and visiting such places? Instead I will prefer a quiet,lonely temple on the outskirts of any village(just an example).-from India
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