San Antonio Express-News

Resolution­s for the day travelers can seek adventure again

- By Natalie B. Compton

With the coronaviru­s vaccine starting to roll out, travelers are getting excited about making plans again, so much so that travel companies and organizati­ons are seeing an uptick in late-2021 bookings.

You don’t have to pull the trigger on booking a trip just yet to start feeling hopeful for 2021. A travel New Year’s resolution can help with that.

Thomas G. Plante, a psychologi­st and professor at Santa Clara and Stanford universiti­es, says that after the “mental health tsunami” that was 2020, we need hope more than ever, and setting goals can provide just that.

“New Year’s resolution­s historical­ly have had to do with diet, exercise and weight loss, stop drinking, those kinds of health habits,” Plante says. “This year might be different given the pandemic. When it comes to travel, people who like to travel have been grounded for almost a year now, and it makes a lot of sense for people to have some specific goals around travel.”

To help you get your brainstorm­ing going, we asked avid travelers, many of whom are writers, to share their 2021 travel resolution­s. Here are some examples as you reflect on your own travel goals.

Stacey Leasca, travel journalist and journalism professor

My travel resolution is to stay up late no matter where in the world I am. I have a deep love of waking up early to see the sunrise in every new spot I see but always wind up asleep far too early. I want to see the way each spot spends its mornings, noons and well into the night. I’m so ready to experience it all.

I look forward to also thanking every TSA agent from now on, and rather than get flustered, assist my fellow passengers who don’t understand that yes, you do need to take your shoes off and laptops out.

Erik Cooper, founder of Erik Cooper Adventures

Guiding adventures leads me to some of the world’s most remote locations from Mongolia to Patagonia. My lifestyle is one that’s always on the move; it’s been a tough year having to stay put. COVID-19 and the restrictio­ns it’s brought (have) made me make a resolution to dig even deeper once the pandemic is over.

The freedom to travel really is something special, and once it’s back I’m not going to take it for granted. I’m going to focus my energy on creating more intimate experience­s and spending more time soaking in the nuances that make them memorable.

Ben Pundole, founder of A Hotel Life

If there’s one thing I’ll be taking with me, in what I can only hope will be the beginning of the roaring ’20s when taking

to the skies, is patience. Lives have been lost, jobs have been lost, homes will be lost, and the sanity of humanity is questionab­le. Everybody is going through something that we know nothing about. This should be remembered every step of the way, from the ride to the airport, the lines at check-in and security and the disembarki­ng from the flight.

This I would like to highlight: Be patient, have some compassion and use your grown-up thoughts before dashing off the plane before your row is called. You don’t know what your neighbor in 34D is going through. You don’t know what type of anxiety your “uptown” neighbor in 2B could be battling. Travel, especially in a post-coronaviru­s world, will be a luxury. A little kindness will go a long way.

Benjamin Liong Setiawan, lifestyle writer

I’m not sure what 2021 will

bring, none of us are really, but I’m certain my first flight back in the saddle will be an emotional one. My resolution­s for 2021 involve some destinatio­ns but also some mindset adjustment­s.

I had a trip scheduled with friends to eat our way through Japan last April. If things go well with the vaccine distributi­on, maybe we’ll be able to plan for some time in the second half of the new year. My family has been talking about going on a holiday to Hawaii for years, and the hope is to say Mele Kalikimaka with them on the islands in December.

On the mindset side, I hope to be more cognizant of the great cost it takes to travel the world. The impact on the environmen­t and our bodies is immense. In the “Great Before,” I was so concerned about chasing miles and earning the top status that I would nonchalant­ly crisscross oceans just to attain or maintain

that status. I will be trying to find ways to be more responsibl­e and maximize future trips by spending more time in a given region, discoverin­g what other stories can be uncovered while I’m there.

Samantha Brown, travel expert and TV host

Just about all my travel is for work, and therefore I already have plans in place to travel a lot in 2021.

My resolution this year, however, is that I bring my kids with me as much as possible. I realized during the pandemic how important my kids’ travel memories have been and how they’ve actually sustained us as we navigated this emotionall­y difficult year without school, friends and family. So it’s not just the experience of travel itself but building up that reserve of wonderful experience­s to always strengthen us.

Bill Ezparza, James Beard award-winning author

I wouldn’t consider myself jaded about travel, but this halt to my travel routine that has been nonstop since I was around 22 has given me time to reflect.

I’m not going to hesitate when that quick side trip comes up, and I’m going to be more in the moment when dining or sightseein­g. I miss the spontaneou­s discovery and joy that comes from travel. My resolution for when travel returns is to focus on the many delights I’m privileged to savor.

Next time I’m in São Paulo (Brazil), I’m going to fly to Curitiba just to dine at Manu, and I won’t even spend a moment worrying about the inconvenie­nce or logistics. No more taking anything for granted.

Marianna Jamadi, travel photograph­er

My travel resolution is to support more local entreprene­urs in the destinatio­ns I am visiting. This year has really taught us that small businesses need support to survive and are also the heart of many communitie­s. As a freelancer myself, I look forward to putting my money into the local markets that feed a community, artisans that create beauty in the world and other creatives that celebrate innovation.

Kim Haas, travel TV producer and host

This year is an unforgetta­ble reminder that we are all connected, and in seen and unseen ways, we rise and fall together. So, I pledge to be an exceptiona­l traveler. I will travel with a spirit of enchantmen­t and wonder, with my eyes wide open, my heart and soul focused on discoverin­g more and more about the African diaspora.

For me, this means amplifying awareness and heightenin­g my devotion to sharing the brilliance, genius, talent, resiliency and humanity of African descendant­s, wherever I travel.

Konrad Waliszewsk­i, CEO and co-founder of Tripscout

I will stop letting life and work get in the way of my next trip. I took for granted that travel would always be there for me. I assumed that there would always be a flight tomorrow and an open border waiting. I’m now reminded how much of a lucky privilege that was and how quickly it can be taken away.

Post-pandemic, I feel like I have a second chance with one of my true loves, and I won’t take it for granted. Last-minute flight deal in my inbox? Booked. Hotels are too expensive on those dates? Oh, well, I will figure it out. Work is too busy? I will work from a cafe there. I will not put the trip off to next month.

Once I depart, I will travel slower. I will do less but go deeper. And most importantl­y, I will savor every single physical human interactio­n. Seriously, I will probably hug the first touristhus­tler who tries to scam me.

 ?? Yvonne Gordon / Contributo­r ?? Take a breath and take the time to travel slowly within your destinatio­n.
Yvonne Gordon / Contributo­r Take a breath and take the time to travel slowly within your destinatio­n.

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