Close Menu
RiderTourist
  • Home
  • Flights
  • Hotels
  • Tours
  • Car Rentals
  • Taxi
  • eSIM
  • Blog
    • Travel
    • Destinations
    • Vacations
    • Adventure
Our Posts
Adventure

National Parks Grand Circle Road Trip

Travel

Avoid These Common Bridal Stress Traps for Your Big Day – Beauty That Walks

Vacations

15 Unforgettable Trips for People Over Age 50

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Important Pages:
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Affiliate Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Affiliate Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
RiderTourist
  • Home
  • Flights
  • Hotels
  • Tours
  • Car Rentals
  • Taxi
  • eSIM
Blog
RiderTourist
Blog
Home » How Traveling the World Helped Me Turn My Life Around
Vacations August 27, 2025

How Traveling the World Helped Me Turn My Life Around

Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
How Traveling the World Helped Me Turn My Life Around
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

Why you can trust TravelFreak
  • 15+ years of travel experience
  • 550+ products tested
  • 50+ countries visited

We hold ourselves to a rigorous editorial standard. Financial incentives don’t sway our recommendations—experience and data do.

Read Our Editorial Policy

How Traveling the World Helped Me Turn My Life AroundHow Traveling the World Helped Me Turn My Life Around

Since I’ve been taking a little bit of time off from traveling, I’ve had a chance to sit still and to ponder a lot of the hows and whys of how I got to where I am today. It’s been a complicated, but fulfilling six years of travel, and looking back, I’m amazed at how far I’ve come.

The truth is that I was a nightmare of a child. Even well into my twenties, I had a knack for getting into trouble.

Between high school and college, I attended six different schools.

It’s not that I traveled a lot, or that my parents moved for work, it’s that I couldn’t stop getting kicked out of school. I was a smart kid (I ultimately graduated with cum laude distinction), but something about the rigidity of the schooling system just didn’t work for me.

I was different and the “system” couldn’t meet my needs. I was bored and desperate for something more, so I rebelled. Looking for ways to fulfill myself, all I did was end up getting into trouble.

Enjoying the views on the island of SantoriniEnjoying the views on the island of Santorini
Enjoying the views on the island of Santorini

I graduated from college (remarkably) in the middle of the recession, and short-term contracts were the only thing I could find. I worked the 9-5 lifestyle for just under a year before deciding that the professional workforce just wasn’t for me. So I flew to the other side of the world.

Looking back at it all, I don’t exactly have a track record of sticking around.

Six years later not much has changed. I’ve been to more than 30 countries and I still can’t even answer the question, “Where do you live?” (which, I’ll be honest, is kind of annoying). But I’ve learned to adapt, and I relish the alternative path that I ended up taking. It transformed me, and I now live a life that’s full of possibility.

A lot happened in those six years of travel. I didn’t just grow up, but I turned my life around. Whereas I was once just spinning my wheels, traveling the world gifted me an extraordinary opportunity to grow.

I Changed My Definition of “Normal”

The fact is, I’ve always been one to reject the status quo and I’ve always seen the world a little bit differently than the rest of my peers. I never quite fit in, and though I struggled with that for many years, I’ve not only become okay with it, but I’ve learned to truly love that about myself, and wholeheartedly embrace it.

From an early age, my “problem” was that my personality didn’t mesh with the idea of what normal life was supposed to look like. Society and other people told me that who I was was wrong.

But there is nothing wrong with me—my mother was good at making sure I knew that. I was just different, and hell, I still am. Nothing about this life I’m living fits the definition of normal.

In the past six years, since I started traveling, I’ve completely changed my definition of “normal.” Having seen the world, I recognize that there is really no such thing. I gave my myself the life I needed, rather than forcing myself to conform to the life that everybody else wanted me to have.

Manto de la Novia in Baños, EcuadorManto de la Novia in Baños, Ecuador
Manto de la Novia in Baños, Ecuador

I Learned Lessons the Hard Way

Traveling the world became the platform for me to learn life lessons that I otherwise wouldn’t have been able to learn. When you continue to make the same mistakes time and time again, as I did, the lessons obviously aren’t sticking.

The things I learned while traveling were framed in a way that I could understand them. Alone on the other side of the world, life lessons become intensified. You need an “all in” mentality to deal with the hardships because without it, you are in every sense of the word, royally, monumentally, unquestionably fucked.

Your sense of survival is quite literally the only thing keeping you alive. You are left to your own devices, and if you fail to support or nurture yourself in the way your mind and body needs, there is nobody else there to do it for you. There is no backup plan—there is you in the world, and you learn that the world can be a very unforgiving place.

I Built a Small Business

When I left home at 24, I hardly understood credit and I definitely didn’t understand the value of a dollar. I was reckless. I spent $9,000 in two months backpacking the East coast of Australia like it was nothing. But then I was broke, and real life hit me like a bag of cinderblocks. I had to figure something out.

My mother offered to pay for my flight home, but despite being broke and alone, I declined. The way I saw it, I got myself into the mess, so it was up to me to get myself out. And I got to work.

That work fueled a fire in me. I was forced to find a way to make money in an unfamiliar environment—I had to figure out how to make something from nothing. I learned how easy it is to spend a dollar and how difficult it is to make one.

Since then, I’ve worked my way through multiple countries, and I’ve built an online business that lets me work from anywhere in the world. I partner with awesome travel companies, which means part of my job description includes staying in amazing hotels and doing cool stuff all over the world.

I would never have had the discipline to do this six years ago. In a way, I was forced into it, but I learned that, especially given my track record, working for anyone other than myself simply wasn’t an option.

Exploring Brussels, BelgiumExploring Brussels, Belgium
Exploring Brussels, Belgium

I Ditched the Idea of Entitlement

As a white kid from the suburbs, I grew up with a sense of entitlement. I had a comfortable childhood that I took for granted. Solo travel put me in a place, mentally, where I had to come to terms with what I had, and most importantly, what I definitely wasn’t owed.

Nobody in the world owes me a thing, and coming to terms with that was probably the hardest lesson I had to learn. Whatever I got, I earned. I worked hard to survive (literally). Some days, I barely scraped by with a grilled cheese sandwich and a hard boiled egg for dinner.

But you know what? I earned that grilled cheese sandwich, and I’m proud of it.

I learned that, given who I am, I’m going to have to work harder than most to get the same things. And when you’re out there on your own, it doesn’t really matter what your neighbor has. It matters what you have, and it matters how comfortable you are with how much, or how little, that amounts to be.

It’s funny because most people think the past six years of my life were part of an extended vacation. To be honest, for a while, that’s what I thought it was, too (and it was, at times). But all-in-all, that couldn’t be farther from the truth.

Traveling has taught me to grow up. At times it was more than difficult, but I’m thankful for each and every single lesson I learned along the way—I am the man I am today because of it.

READ NEXT: Do Something Worth Dying For

About the Author

Jeremy Scott Foster

Jeremy Scott Foster is an adventure-junkie, gear expert and travel photographer based in Southern California. Previously nomadic, he’s been to ~50 countries and loves spending time outdoors. You can usually find him on the trail, on the road, jumping from bridges or hustling on his laptop working to produce the best travel and outdoors content today.

More Articles »

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
Previous ArticleOsun Osogbo Sacred Grove – A UNESCO World Heritage Site
Next Article The 25 Most Beautiful Places In The World

Related Posts

Vacations

21 Best Places for Waffles, Chocolate, Frites, and Beer in Brussels

Vacations

Losing a Year of My Life to Lyme Disease

Vacations

My 6 Most Inspiring Moments From the Road

Vacations

How To Save $34,000 in 10 Months by Working Abroad

Vacations

How Travel Makes You a Better Person

Vacations

15 Breathtaking Things to do in Yosemite National Park

Vacations

17 Cool Places to Visit in the US in 2020

Vacations

Top 10 Most Dangerous Islands on Earth

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
Categories
  • Adventure (35)
  • Culture (11)
  • Destinations (135)
  • Travel (149)
  • Vacations (40)
Top Posts
Destinations
Destinations April 1, 2025

Top Tourist Attractions in Morocco: Exploring the Rich Culture

There are so many beautiful tourist attractions sMorocco, a vibrant and diverse country in North…

21 Best Places for Waffles, Chocolate, Frites, and Beer in Brussels

September 1, 2025

Grab Philippines Celebrates Earth Day 2025, Kicks Off Mangrove Planting Project in La Union

April 24, 2025

The 11 Best Delsey Luggage Pieces, Tested & Reviewed

August 23, 2025

The 10 Best Carry-On Luggage of 2025, Tested and Reviewed

May 12, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get The Latest News, Updates, And Amazing Offers

Search and compare prices from hundreds of travel providers with one easy search. With our advanced search technology, you’ll find the best prices on hotels, flights, and much more.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Main Menu:
  • Home
  • Flights
  • Hotels
  • Tours
  • Car Rentals
  • Taxi
  • eSIM
Blog Categories
  • Adventure (35)
  • Culture (11)
  • Destinations (135)
  • Travel (149)
  • Vacations (40)

Subscribe

Get The Latest News, Updates, And Amazing Offers

© 2025 RiderTourist.
  • Home
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Affiliate Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.