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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Show & Tell

â
The Bowery Presents
RMH
hello vonnie
we're not kids anymore.

blake kathryn
will byers stan first human second

gracie abrams
trying on a metaphor
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Noah Kahan

@theartofmadeline

titsay
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@lisping-virtue-blog
i looked super cute yesterday
i looked super cute yesterday
I donât know whatâs going on but I like it
relationship goals
I donât know whatâs going on but I like it
relationship goals
follow for sexual texts
i love bread and i dont care what happens to me because of it
âWhy donât you ever smile, Aidan?â
How I Afford Travel
Badass trips on a not-so-badass budget.Â
Many travel blogs are written by people whoâve sold all their possessions and have taken a huge plunge into the world of long-term travel. This can sound expensive at first, but when you consider that you donât have rent or a car payment in this lifestyle (or much room to carry any possessions), it can actually be very cheap to live this way, provided you can work a little along the way, or do some kind of virtual freelancing or contract work.
Iâm not one of those people.
I do have rent to pay, and a car payment, and bills, and the trappings of a fairly typical middle class young urban professional life. I have a cat. I work in a cubicle. I like some amount of routine, and sleeping in my own bed. I have a ladder to climb, that I want to climb.Â
I also donât have a ton of free income to spend on travel.
Despite all this, in the past 2 years Iâve managed to visit 9 cities in 4 countries (Colombia, Jordan, Egypt, Spain) and very soon Iâll be off to visit 7 more cities in 3 countries (Italy, Croatia, and Spain again â I love Spain), a 17 day trip; a few weeks after I return, Iâm off again on a small trip to Mexico for a wedding. When Iâm done, thatâs 16 cities, 7 countries, in just 2 years. Not much for the permanent nomad, but a lot for someone whoâs expected to be at work by 8:30am every weekday.
When people find out how much I travel, some imagine I must have a lot of spare income or be a trust fund baby. I keep encountering this perception â especially among Americans â that travel is this huge undertaking that is incredibly expensive. Well, it sure can be, if you choose to make it that way. But if you step outside this perception, and do some research, youâll find that it really doesnât have to be that way. Travel can be affordable, if you plan for it and prioritize it in your life.
Hereâs how I do it:
1. Flights. By far, this can be the single most expensive purchase of your trip. A coach round trip ticket from the US to Europe usually runs anywhere from $700-1200 on average, depending on the season. The trick is: donât buy your ticket with actual money. Buy it with fake money called points or miles. A few years ago, I strategically opened 2 different credit cards (one an AmEx, one a British Airways Visa) with unusually crazy high enrollment bonuses. Within just a few monthsâ time I went from 0 miles to 50,000 AmEx points (redeemable for airline miles on at least a 1:1 basis) and 100,000 British Airways miles. Keep in mind, BA is part of the OneWorld alliance, so I can book with other airlines using these miles. In just a few monthsâ time, with 2 credit cards (that didnât hurt my credit, by the way) I earned enough miles to take 3 international round trip flights â without ever stepping on an airplane. I got the AmEx points simply for opening the card, and I earned the BA miles after spending $2500 in 3 months, which wasnât that hard for me because I strategically put ALL my expenses on the card for 3 months.Â
The trick is knowing which cards to open. These cards usually arenât well advertised, so youâll have to do your research. A few good resources to get you started: Unconventional Guides: Frequent Flyer Master by Chris Guillebeau. This is actually the first resource I used to learn more about travel hacking. If youâre a total newb, as I was, this is the best introduction to the world of frequent flyer miles that exists. But itâs not overly simplistic; there are a ton of insider tricks and tools in here that I havenât even taken advantage of yet. This guide is the reason I earned 150,000 miles without stepping foot on an airplane. FrugalTravelGuy.com This is a great blog for those interested in staying up to date on the latest frequent flyer news and credit card offers.
FlyerTalk.com This is a forum for the serious hardcore travel hackers â the credit card âchurnersâ who sometimes earn up to 1 million miles a year doing this. FlyerTalk can be intimidating at first if youâre new to all this, so Iâd recommend starting from the top and working your way down.
2. Rooms. Very rarely do I stay in what most Americans think of as a âhotelâ when I travel abroad. Many travel hackers and frequent business travelers are loyal to a certain brand of hotel, especially those with their own reward points systems, which earn them free stays (and yes, there are credit cards for this too). These can be a great value and I do participate in a few programs like Hilton HHonors for stateside bookings. For my international trips, however, I prefer everyday price flexibility, so I book a variety of inexpensive, off the beaten path accommodation types  â and none of them involve splitting a room with strangers, camping (not counting the bedouin camp I stayed with in Petra, which I did for the experience and not the savings), or couchsurfing. A lot of people associate budget travel with roughing it, but it is possible to be comfortable. In fact, by avoiding the beaten path, I usually have a less expensive, equally as comfortable, and more interesting cultural experience. Most of my international trips have involved staying at a combination of private rooms at hostels, small independently owned hotels, bed & breakfasts, and private apartments.
Hostelworld.com This room search and booking site will expand your idea of what a hostel can be. Often youâll find that smaller, inexpensive and independent hotels will list rooms on Hostelworld even if they have a website and brand themselves as a hotel or bed & breakfast. You can search for rooms nearly anywhere in the world, filter by room type (most hostels have private bedrooms, some with private bathrooms and some with shared bathrooms), location (thereâs a handy map view), price and more. Itâs also low risk - you just pay a small 10% down payment when you book and the rest when you check in. Iâve stayed in some very nice hostels for a fraction of the cost of an equal quality hotel and itâs one of the first places I look when I start planning a trip.
Booking.com This is a rising star in the online travel booking world for hotels. Based in Amsterdam, they are one of my top sources for rooms in Europe (though they offer rooms in several other parts of the world too). Booking.comâs strength is their breadth of rooms available; you can find a variety of low-cost, tiny, independently owned hotels that will be difficult or impossible to find elsewhere. They even offer free cancellation on many rooms. Their pricing also cannot be beat â sometimes I even find rooms that are less expensive than hostels!
Airbnb.com I am a huge fan of this service. A major disruptor to the online travel booking industry, Airbnb offers you the ability to reserve a room in a private apartment directly through someone who lives and is local to the place youâre going. You can book entire apartments or just spare bedrooms, allowing you the choice between having a cozy place all to yourself or staying with â and getting to knowâ a local, something that may not have happened otherwise (and my most memorable trips have been those in which I connected with locals while I was there). A few other perks can involve more amenities than a budget hostel or hotel may offer, such as the ability to wash your own laundry or cook your own food if you need to (it is an apartment, after all). I travel for 2 weeks at a time when possible (more on that later), and I pack only a carry-on. After a week like that, a washing machine is an unexpectedly welcome blessing. Youâll also get to feel more like a local, even if you never meet your host. Youâre staying in a neighborhood, not a commercial, touristy zone. Thereâs a lot to be said for that. Finally, I love their website. Not only very easy to use and socially integrated, the design is beautiful. I love flipping through the home slideshow of gorgeous apartments on offer. Itâs interior design porn at its most authentic â these are real peoplesâ homes!
3. Timing and trip length. I would be remiss to say that the above 2 factors are the only methods I use to travel to so many places affordably. The fact is, I can say I fit in 16 cities and 7 countries in 2 years because of how many of those cities and countries I manage to pack into a single trip. In 2011, I did only a 1-week trip to Colombia. In 2012, I did a 17-day trip to Jordan, Egypt, and Spain. This year, Iâll do another 17-day trip (thatâs essentially 12 vacation days) to Italy, Croatia, and Spain. Considering all the places within those countries I travel to in each trip, I typically pack up and move on every 2-3 days. Thatâs not a lot of time in each place! Just enough to visit the major sites, take in the atmosphere, and decide if Iâm intrigued enough to return someday to make a longer trip of it.
This pace is not for everyone, but it works for me. Iâm restless, and like squeezing every drop out of my precious vacation days. Plus, nothingâs worse than booking 5 days in a place youâve never been, only to arrive and find out youâre bored after 1 day and itâs too late to make any changes. I intend to see the world, and I have to do it in 2 weeks per year. So, I compromise. It can be a little tiring, but I donât take these trips necessarily to relax â I take them to recharge in other ways. Travel is my passion and I crave new cultural experiences. My worldview has expanded a little more each time I set foot on US soil again; this is creative fuel to the fire of everything I do, from painting to marketing strategy. Thatâs why Iâm determined to prioritize it, even with a limited budget. For those whoâve also been bitten by the travel bug, you get it. The rest of the world will go on thinking that weâre rich, and I suppose thatâs fine.
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UPDATE: Wow, this is officially my most popular blog post ever! Thank you all for reading and sharing with your friends. I received a ton of follow-up questions about specific credit cards and mileage reward programs, and I did my best to answer them in a new article, âHow I Fly Around the World for Next to Nothing.â Check it out!
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At the Hotel Oriental Rivoli in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt. Somewhat fancy, resort-style digs. About $60/night.
these are great and i thought the first two were part of the same comic
Brilliant from start to bottom
my dog just had surgery to get a nipple removed and when she came home after the surgery she immediately walked to the window and she has been staring out of the window for like half an hour now thinking about her new life with one less nipple
when will my nipple come back from the war
iconic