winetraveller
Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2007
- Posts
- 203
When people ask me what I do for a living I invariably get a similar response, something along the lines of "oh I've always wanted to do that", and "I love to travel, I wish I had your job".
This weekend I've had one of those weekends that most people who crave such an existence would prefer not to think about, and time to think about the downside of "the travelling life".
I'm currently domiciled in my small apartment in Boston, it's pouring rain, and cold outside, and I have nothing to do but work. The amount of time you spend on your own is quite significant. I know one person in Boston, who happens to be my girfriend, and she's away for work this weekend.
I would love to find out the amount of hours other travellers work, I'm sure I'm not alone in that on many occasions you just keep working because there isn't anything else to do (that you want to do on your own) when you have down time.
When you explain to people that you don't get to sight see and most of the time are too knackered anyway they think you're blowing it out of proportion.
Even people in my own company think I swan around the world. Our marketing manager was disavowed of this view when I sent her on a rather punishing (for her anyway) trip to understand some of the markets we work in.
I would love to hear other experiences of the rigours of "the life".
This weekend I've had one of those weekends that most people who crave such an existence would prefer not to think about, and time to think about the downside of "the travelling life".
I'm currently domiciled in my small apartment in Boston, it's pouring rain, and cold outside, and I have nothing to do but work. The amount of time you spend on your own is quite significant. I know one person in Boston, who happens to be my girfriend, and she's away for work this weekend.
I would love to find out the amount of hours other travellers work, I'm sure I'm not alone in that on many occasions you just keep working because there isn't anything else to do (that you want to do on your own) when you have down time.
When you explain to people that you don't get to sight see and most of the time are too knackered anyway they think you're blowing it out of proportion.
Even people in my own company think I swan around the world. Our marketing manager was disavowed of this view when I sent her on a rather punishing (for her anyway) trip to understand some of the markets we work in.
I would love to hear other experiences of the rigours of "the life".