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“I shall bring only one guide book, not one for each country that I MIGHT see.”
“I accept that I will come home wearing something I didn’t take and will have lost/traded/burned much of what I did take.”
For female travelers and, okay,
occasional male,
“I will not bring high heels or a gaggle of make-up.”
Admittedly, chanting these mantras will not bringing you immediate enlightenment. Fret, not. You can always throw items away or send them home in a box to your parents/friends/parole officer. For
resourceful backpacker, it is not unheard of to send particularly smelly/discolored/toxic clothing to an ex-girlfriend/ex-boyfriend/little brother. Follow these practical guidelines and you will soon happily be speaking in a loud voice to make foreigners understand you.
The Evidence
This is
hard part for most travelers to wrap their minds around. You will forget those special moments of your trip when you met
hunk Sven or babe Svenetta from Sweden and had a romantic evening/danced
night away/got arrested in Ios/Ibiza/the airport. Maybe not immediately, but you will eventually forget.
You will also forget or lose
contact information of people you meet, despite meticulously writing it down on
back of a coaster/napkin/your hand in a bar/poetry reading/jail at three in
morning. Surprisingly, said coaster/napkin/hand often survive
night/day/weekend and get deposited in your already trashed backpack. Of course, their presence is often forgotten when you later put a Oktoberfest mug/wet towel/toothbrush in. The extra padding at
bottom of your pack is specifically designed to deal with
decomposing result. Still,
information is gone and so is your future with Sven/Svenetta.
To properly record
magical moments of your trip, you must take a diary or journal. Don’t worry, you can burn it later before you get married/your parents get nosey/you have kids. You want a journal in a water/beer/sweat resistant case. Of course, I prefer a Nomad Travel Journal, but just make sure you take something. When you have some extra time in
bus/train/jail cell, you can record how you got there and
people you met.
Trust me, when you, Sven/Svenetta and your nine children are sitting on
porch 10 years later, you will greatly enjoy reading your journal. Of course, that assumes you didn’t burn it.

Rick Chapo is with Nomad Journals - Preserve the experience with writing journals for traveling, hiking, rock climbing, fly fishing, bird watching and more.