I might have been born in a hovel but I am determined to travel with the wind and the stars.
I’ve three children, three grandchildren, I work, I travel, and I’m very happily married. I’m very satisfied and happy with my life and there really isn’t anything I want.
The Travel Channel named me the professional fun seeker, and that’s exactly what I am.
Things like chatbots, machine learning tools, natural language processing, or sentiment analysis are applications of artificial intelligence that may one day profoundly change how we think about and transact in travel and local experiences.
In my early years, I would travel 56 km. from home to the training institute and back every single day.
People in the CIA, they marry each other. They’re like actors! We have to travel without much warning to far-flung places, and it’s very hard to communicate what our experiences are like to those in the outside world.
Southeast Asia has a real grip on me. From the very first time I went there, it was a fulfillment of my childhood fantasies of the way travel should be.
Working is actually a pleasure. It’s just very time-consuming. It’s a way of life. I find that I can work when I travel and work when I run. There is nothing like, on a rainy day, to work.
I like to sit down, relax, have a cup of coffee on the terrace and read a book. I like to travel the world – and I’m lucky to see so much through cycling.
The family is something you are always missing, but it has to be like this. It is not easy for any manager to be with your family, in your house, and working at your nearest club. So you have to travel.
I travel a lot for work, so downloading books is easier than carrying them around.
What I do miss is foreign travel, because there really is no substitute for showing up somewhere and representing the United States.
Travel is impossible, but daydreaming about travel is easy.
I like to read, walk, cook, and travel to cities. We live in the country, so we miss museums and the bustle of city life.
Cancer and its aftermath changed my outlook in a profound way. I’ve become less of a hermit, and I travel more.
My most prized possession is my pillow. I can’t travel or sleep without it. And it’s, like, this really thin down pillow that really doesn’t do anything, but it’s weird: if I don’t have it, I’m constantly thinking about not having it.
Just to travel is rather boring, but to travel with a purpose is educational and exciting.
People have to make journeys, what we want is people to have alternatives in public transport so that they can make a choice about the sort of way in which they’re going to travel.
I am a passionate traveler, and from the time I was a child, travel formed me as much as my formal education.
In my free time, I do travel, watch films and learn on the go.
I travel a lot. If you look at my suitcase, everything is extremely well-packed and well-folded; people who travel with me are impressed at how organized I am. Some would refer to me as a maniac for this.
The whole object of travel is not to set foot on foreign land; it is at last to set foot on one’s own country as a foreign land.
Every day is intense and alive, whether it’s travel, work, even down time, which there is so little of.
I’d like to work with Bjork if I could get in the studio with her. We could probably travel to a different planet, you know what I’m saying?
I travel seven months a year, so it’s a lot of hotels and airplanes. I teach about three hours a day. I always go for a run. I try to lift some weights if I have the time and the strength. But running and teaching, that’s my life.