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Good book for photographers - kinda Zen esthetic approach. Every trip is a journey of insightful dimensions.
I loved this book. Taking me through the entire journey of travel, from getting the idea to go somewhere to sharing my experiences with others, the author suggests ways of deepening the experience into something life changing. His exercises can be used for those life journeys that don't involve leaving home as well. All in all it's a terrific read.
You can't simply look at a sunset and be in awe of nature or God. I will not take little spiritual trips across my living room. Well that is the kind of mentality you get with this book. Have you ever met a person where every single thing that happens to them is a spiritual awakening. Learn their culture and a little bit of their language. I will not make little travel shrines.
Fortunately, the feeling passed quickly.
No you need to relate to it and make it a part of you.I am avery spiritual person and love traveling.
And this book is going nowhere near my rucksack.
The kind of person that can't go to the bathroom without making some sort of journal entry of the new vistas they discovered.
I will not follow this persons advice.
I have traveled all over the world and feel complete when I do so.
Reading this book did the one thing I never thought was possible, it put me off of traveling.
Sorry, I am too stoic for this book.I would recommend people read books about the places they want to go.
Don't worry about the trip just go on it.My passport is the only material possession I truly value.
This mix of history and self-help discovery is a fun combination.This is one of the reasons I recommend this book. What we do with this experience, what we come home with emotionally, determines who we are not just as writers, but as people. Dispenza's book and I think that's the point. Ask yourself, which of your senses are stimulated and why, which of your emotions are stimulated and how.
We leave the comfortable and we enter the unknown. There's something both comforting and unsettling in Mr. As writers explore travel writing, which comes in handy when creating fictional settings and bringing physical locations to life in nonfiction, the true key to hooking a reader is creating an experience that makes them feel like they're in the place. Mr. The Way of the Traveler helps you explore how you experience locations.Mr.
We're able to bring readers a deeper experience by understanding how we experience a location. Dispenza writes: "Every time we leave home and go to another place, we open up the possibility of having something wonderful happen to us. When we take a journey we learn about the world and we learn about ourselves. The Way of the Traveler helps writers think in these terms.The text is written from a perspective that embraces armchair travel as well as physical travel. Dispenza's explores the traveler's changes by bringing in the classics through quotes and observations, exploring how writers have used travel and travelers in their texts.
And, he creates some possibilities for travelers by offering suggestions and exercises to try during all the stages of planning a trip, taking your trip, and returning home. Self-discovery through exploration of both the outer world and our own inner world is the underlying theme. When we move out of the familiar here and now, we set in motion a series of events that, taken together, bring about changes at the very root of our being."
We should be challenged and changed by travel and this is a good thing. This then is but the first example of a book devoted especially to the change in the way we travel from a spiritual perspective to the rewards in the concept of self-transformation. His is a not the typical travel book advising on where to travel and what to see or what to do once we reached our destination but a book of insight into the goals, rewards and preparations of travel from an intellectual if not a spiritual point of view. I diligently try to record events and places in a diary and then rely on my memory and recall to share with my audiences my own personal feelings and emotions that I experienced on my journeys.
Generations of travelers ever since have proceeded to record their own traveling experiences. The Way of the Traveler - Making Every Trip a Journey of Self-DiscoveryBy Joseph DispenzaPublished by: John Muir PublicationsSanta Fe, New MexicoReviewed by: Carole Herdegen Editor of www.travelSITE.comIn his stimulating book on the spiritual aspects of travel, Joseph Dispenza has given the reader a new look at the reasons on not necessarily why we travel but how we should travel. And, by doing so, we will discover a new way of looking at the world and everything it offers. Dispenza. The very first sentence of his book, Joseph Dispenza writes, "All travel is inner travel." He asks the traveler to keep a journal, but not ordinary journal.
This sharing of feelings about certain places or encounters with particular individuals is something I frequently do by orally telling my travel stories. I strongly recommend this book for everyone from the armchair traveler to the seasoned adventurer. As far back as 500 BC, philosopher/travelers like Herodotus and Hieronymus of Rhodes traveled great distances recording not only what they saw but what they emotionally experienced. However, these feelings and emotions will diminish if not completely disappear in time unless they are duly recorded. The journal he has in mind is a written record of how we feel about the various things we encounter in our travels.
In reality, it's a "journal of feelings" and not simply a photographic record of people and places visited.Joseph Dispenza concludes that travel becomes so much more meaningful when a common trip of superficial discovery is elevated into a journey of "self-discovery". This was the strong message I got from Mr.
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