italdesign
Level 2 Member
I have two fundamental travel aspirations:
- See the world.
- Get good value out of miles & points.
Bangkok street food
The obvious answer is: No. I’d just been too wrapped up in my miles and points bubble. As I began to venture away from my beaten path, into corners of the world without premium cabin and/or chain hotels, I found the missing pieces I’d been longing for. A new world opened up to me – of meeting people, encountering unspoiled kindness, and seeing the world more authentically.
Ironically, this “new” world was closer to how I traveled before the hobby, where I didn’t have points, traveled frugally, stayed in simple lodges, and bonded with more people. Being a points traveler opened up the world of luxury travel, but it also made my experience more insulated and one dimensional.
I adore this quaint small town Quebec B&B, stayed before the hobby.
The Great Paradox, then, is that my idea of seeing the world is now at odds with points maximization, especially hotel points. A recent example illustrated this plainly. As I walked down the tranquil cobblestone lane of old town Mostar one morning, hundreds of years of history in plain sight, I noticed a sign that I should normally be happy to see, but in this case triggered an innate “oh no”. What I saw was a chain hotel sign, staking its ground, likely to forever change this relatively unnoticed and unspoiled tourist town. It’s the inevitable as travel becomes more accessible and unspoiled places are discovered. The pool of such places is shrinking every year. But imagine this: an obsessive points junkie sees a future redemption, instead of excitement, feels concern for the locale. That’s how travel has changed me, and I’m glad.
To be clear, my position isn’t that chain hotels have no place in the world; they clearly do. I don’t even have a problem with their presence in “unspoiled” places. It’s the effect (usually adverse IMO) they have on the locale that I dislike (see: The Tourism Life Cycle). I understand not every resident shares this sentiment – some want more globalization, and sometimes that can be good (often not). That’s fine, and it’s even inevitable as I said. I’m just glad I got to see it now.
Historic Mostar
At the same time, the shallow part of me is letting myself be restricted somewhat by airline miles. I really want to visit Africa, but it’s not the most comfortable ride in the sky or the easiest redemption using the miles I have. I can make it work, but inertia has thus far kept me going back to familiar continents. I can imagine that if I didn’t have miles and the desire to maximize the value, it could be easier to prioritize Africa. I need to remind myself that I’ve never regretted choosing a less developed place (yet). Indeed, those have been some of my most rewarding trips thus far.
Having said that, I’m not giving up on miles and points. This blog is named Points Adventure, after all. There’s definitely a place for chain hotels in my travel rotation. What I’m finding is they work well for me in cities and resort towns – when I want those. Airline miles continue to be useful in getting to most places I want – I just need the will to sometimes stand up to the value maximization part of me.
I loved Bosnia and Herzegovina – more coming in a future post
In a Nutshell
I love hotel redemptions and have upcoming posts dedicated to them, but seeing the world requires going beyond them. Evolving from unison to paradox to balancing act, my aspirations to see the world and use points have, for now, found a way to co-exist.
The post The Great Paradox of My Travel Aspirations appeared first on Points Adventure.
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