I could never travel without planning every second of my trip. Here’s why I finally stopped

It is sure to say that the Globetrotter 2025 goes through something account. For the first time, we are starting to wonder not only where we want to go, but what we are looking for. “I am on vacation to relax and have fun, not get bored more than I would do it compared to a regular day,” shares Maitreyi Bhatia, who recently passed her honeymoon to explore the Prague-Vienne-Budapest circuit. She and her husband had signed up for a visit to the first day of Prague, but realized that they were too shifted to take advantage of it and allowed themselves to withdraw halfway. “My work is sufficiently exhausting,” adds Bhatia, echoing what seems to be a universal feeling of late capitalism and insecurity of work. “I want to come back under tension, no more exhausted than I was before coming here.”

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Photographed by Avani Rai

This feeling of feeling has been preparing for years, and slow trips have gone from a hashtag to a word in marketing in which tourist advice is more and more leaning. Even if the most recent season of The white lotus takes place in Thailand, which happens to be the Drestin of 2025, it is revealing that rather than rushing to discover their environment, we see the characters sitting near the swimming pool, sipping cocktails and experimenting the native culture by real links of creating characters with the inhabitants. The myore-based therapist, Akhila Phadnis, believes that travel no longer concerns the prestige associated with the geotague of an exotic location on your Instagram message or to make a rare Michelin-Star meal. It is a question of exploring, if only temporarily a new way of life. Staying in an airbnb, doing your own laundry, shopping and learning to navigate the public transport system probably provides the most authentic information on the functioning of other cultures. “The Indians spend statistically the least time on personal care,” explains Phadnis. “The possibility that you can make chores like laundry and grocery after a full day of work and still having time for other things is a breathtaking concept for us.”

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