Travelling with Purpose and Intention
Journeys with an agenda beyond visiting tourist hotspots can have long-lasting benefits | Photo: Soly Moses, Pexels

Travelling with Purpose and Intention

From language lessons to outdoor painting, pizza making to yoga practice; what’s your passion, and how can you pursue it through travelling? Instead of sprinting through rigid itineraries or drifting aimlessly through journeys, we can accomplish something special when we set out with a travel intention.

Once upon a time, unless you were a proper adventure traveller, your experience could be largely passive. Fly to the destination, tour the destination, see the sights, take a few photos of the sights and — with any luck — enjoy the weather.

Back in the day, when many people took the first trip outside their native land the package holiday was king. That often included a non-stop itinerary courtesy of a tour company that would shuttle voyagers busily from point A to point B to point C, with room for little else. They were travelling in a pre-planned, carefully organised travel bubble. They were also herded through a selection of ‘must sees’ that someone, somewhere had designated as such.

As far-flung travel became ever more accessible and people’s horizons expanded, more adventurous souls burst that restrictive bubble, shouldered backpacks to trek through continents or crossed borders by rail. They could move with freedom; wandering without the restrictions of somebody else’s plan. But these travelling free spirits didn’t necessarily have any plan; even the most basic.

Though there’s nothing wrong with either of the above approaches, times change and people change along with them.

travelling with purpose
Mario Guerra, Adobe Stock

These days, many travellers don’t just want any old holiday experience. Instead of a trip timetabled to the minute or a freewheeling global meander — they want to truly, actively enjoy it. To make it more meaningful and be more mindful. To participate and engage. This doesn’t require a high adventure threshold or meticulous organisation, but a journey based on intention rather than serendipity.

And what better way to engage and travel with purpose than to follow your personal idea of bliss?

Rather than sticking to a tried-and-true ‘to do’ list in a destination or waiting for travelling inspiration to strike once you arrive (though both are valid options), if you’re a keen stargazer why not plan a visit to a quirky little island to fulfil your dream of visiting a dark sky reserve?

Or perhaps you’ve been promising yourself that trip to get away from it all, and you’re an avid writer who can never seem to find the time to put pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard). Make the trip an oasis for your creativity. We can’t guarantee no writer’s block, but having made the journey with writing in mind might be the spark you need.

A trip can be specifically planned to continue a flamenco dancing education or might include tutoring in the art of Italian cooking. Of course you can learn a lot of these things at home (thanks, YouTube) without the travelling. But whatever the motivation, these priceless hands-on interactions are part of forming a deeper acquaintance with a country, its culture, and its people.

janeb13, Pixabay

Though it has a clear upside for the person making the journey, travelling with purpose and intention doesn’t just benefit the voyager. It can have more far-reaching effects by helping to take the pressure off of overtouristed destinations, while at the same time encouraging visits to smaller, more out-of-the-way towns and villages where local skills, crafts and knowledge are alive and well. Your engagement can keep them thriving.

Choosing holidays based around a particular activity, dedicated to artistic pursuits, or built on intensive learning is a good way to get immersed and achieve a goal. When you follow what may be a lifelong passion, though you may not master plein-air painting in the space of a fortnight or become fluent in the local language before you leave, you still have an achievement to take home with you. Something lasting which will always be part of you.

And by travelling with purpose, instead of just thinking about it or dreaming of it, you actually did the thing — so well done you!

Emily Cathcart

Resonate Team

From her base in Ireland, Emily Cathcart was delighted to join Resonate as a Content Manager and has been revelling in the opportunity to collaborate with writers worldwide ever since. Emily enjoys encouraging authors through the creation process and also helping non-writers to tell their tales — all with Resonate’s ethical principles in mind. When she isn’t busy commissioning or editing, she can be found, camera in hand, seeking out-of-the-way discoveries for her own site that’s literally All About Dublin. And when Emily’s not working on any/all of the above, she’s writing articles and photo essays as a freelance journalist for publications from boutique magazines to national newspapers.

Time to Read:  3 Minutes
Resonate Team: Emily Cathcart
19 July 2024
Category:
From the Editor

Let Resonate Transport You!

Travel the world with the Resonate newsletter.

Highlights include:

  • Interesting stories from people in all corners of the globe
  • Vibrant photos sure to spark wanderlust
  • Ideas on where to go now — and how to do it responsibly
Our Editorial Journey: Helping Tell 100 Stories

From a river in Bordeaux to a chai shop in Jaipur, our mission to help people tell their own stories has taken us far and wide.

Choosing The Road Not Taken: Bin the Bucket List

Why do we follow the same path everyone else does? It's time to take a look at what overtourism means for destinations and embrace alternatives.

Let Resonate Transport You!

Travel the world with the Resonate newsletter.

Highlights include:

  • Interesting stories from people in all corners of the globe
  • Vibrant photos sure to spark wanderlust
  • Ideas on where to go now — and how to do it responsibly

Let Resonate Transport You!

Travel the world with the Resonate newsletter.

Highlights include:

  • Interesting stories from people in all corners of the globe
  • Vibrant photos sure to spark wanderlust
  • Ideas on where to go now — and how to do it responsibly