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Anthro on Foot Re-Evaluates the World of Work

Hello!

Knowing what I didn’t like is so important in knowing the job that I like. I don’t think there’s one job that will fulfill all our qualifications, but there will be a few out there where our talents, skills, and interests will converge into one. I acknowledge that the fact that I could have a choice is a privilege, and how I wish I could have said it differently. But this is my experience, and I can only speak of mine.

Growing up, I was trained to believe that work has to be burdensome, should take out the best time of the day to be outdoors (5-to-5), and should dictate my time off. But what I’ve come to know is that work does not have to be that way. It can be done outdoors, and it does not have to punish me when I’m sick or need to care for someone who’s sick. Adults have made the world of work so ill-fitting to the natural ebbs and tides of our everyday.

Disclaimer: the following works for me and may or may not work for you.

I try to diversify my income as much as possible: I do a regular job, writing and editing gigs, initiate side projects, and sell my used stuff. Having several sources of income makes a lot of sense to me for apart from having more potential for savings, I have a Plan B in place in case of unforeseen events. Don’t get me wrong, lean months are a mainstay in my life. But in choosing this path, where my work allows me to spend as much time outdoors alongside as many communities as possible, I know I’m in a place where I’m meant to be.

Sharing with you resources that helped me with work planning + inspiration:

Books: Brene Brown’s The Gifts of Imperfection, Christopher Ryan’s Civilized to Death: The Price of Progress, Emilie Wapnick’s How to Be Everything, The School of Life’s What They Forgot to Teach You at School. For reviews, visit Goodreads and Scribd*.

(*Note: It helps keep this site going every time you sign up from these links. I am a big fan and have been using these sites since 2015. If this blog helped you in any way, it doesn’t hurt to sign up from these links. Thank you!)

P.S. My keys to sustainable work: do what works for you | when faced with difficult decisions, ask yourself why ❤

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Anthro on Foot Goes to Vietnam

Xin chao!

For my travel photos on IG: @anthro0nfoot

Sharing with you resources that helped me with travel planning + inspiration:

Books: Anthony Reid’s A History of Southeast Asia, Peter Haugen’s World History for Dummies, Thomas Suarez’s Early Mapping of Southeast Asia, Wiley’s A Short History of Southeast Asia (Peter Church, ed.). For reviews, visit Goodreads and Scribd*.

Shows: Charles Kimball’s History of Southeast Asia podcast, Geography Now!

Tourism sites: free walking tours, Nomadic Matt, official tourism website

Travel planning sites: Airalo eSIM ($3 discount code: RAIZEL7816)*, Airbnb, Booking.com*, Skyscanner, World Nomads*

(*Note: It helps keep this site going every time you sign up or book from these links. I am a big fan and have been using these sites since 2015. If this blog helped you in any way, it doesn’t hurt to make your booking from these links. Thank you!)

P.S. My keys to sustainable travels: acknowledge that your trip might not go as planned | back up important files before and during travel | bring a portable multi-cooker, coffee/tea press, food containers, utensils, water bottle, water heater, and clothesline rope | bring extra medicines and prescription | bring souvenirs from home for friends you’ll meet along the way | get a local sim card | get travel insurance | have an extra card to be used only for emergencies | learn the language if you deem it necessary | listen to your gut | only bring stuff that you can carry on your own | only go for local food that’s vouched for being clean and safe | record and stay on top of your expenses | stay in accommodations where cooking is allowed | take public transportation | treat everyone and yourself with kindness and respect, as always |treat guidebooks as guides; don’t get boxed by them | visit local cafés | walk as much as you can | wake up early | when faced with difficult decisions, ask yourself why ❤

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Anthro on Foot Goes to Cambodia

Suostei!

For my travel photos on IG: @anthro0nfoot

Sharing with you resources that helped me with travel planning + inspiration:

Books: Anthony Reid’s A History of Southeast Asia, Thomas Suarez’s Early Mapping of Southeast Asia, Wiley’s A Short History of Southeast Asia (Peter Church, ed.). For reviews, visit Goodreads and Scribd*.

Shows: Charles Kimball’s History of Southeast Asia podcast, Geography Now!

Tourism sites: free walking tours, Nomadic Matt, official tourism website

Travel planning sites: Airalo eSIM ($3 discount code: RAIZEL7816)*, Airbnb, Booking.com*, Skyscanner, World Nomads*

(*Note: It helps keep this site going every time you sign up or book from these links. I am a big fan and have been using these sites since 2015. If this blog helped you in any way, it doesn’t hurt to make your booking from these links. Thank you!)

P.S. My keys to sustainable travels: acknowledge that your trip might not go as planned | back up important files before and during travel | bring a portable multi-cooker, coffee/tea press, food containers, utensils, water bottle, water heater, and clothesline rope | bring extra medicines and prescription | bring souvenirs from home for friends you’ll meet along the way | get a local sim card | get travel insurance | have an extra card to be used only for emergencies | learn the language if you deem it necessary | listen to your gut | only bring stuff that you can carry on your own | only go for local food that’s vouched for being clean and safe | record and stay on top of your expenses | stay in accommodations where cooking is allowed | take public transportation | treat everyone and yourself with kindness and respect, as always |treat guidebooks as guides; don’t get boxed by them | visit local cafés | walk as much as you can | wake up early | when faced with difficult decisions, ask yourself why ❤

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Anthro on Foot Goes to the United States

Hello!

For my travel photos on IG: @anthro0nfoot

Sharing with you resources that helped me with travel planning + inspiration:

Books: Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged; Dan Brown’s Da Vince Code, and Angels and Demons; Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven; Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea, For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Sun Also Rises; F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby; Hardy Boys series; Harper Lee’s to Kill a Mockingbird; Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin; Henry David Thoreau’s Walden; Jack London’s The Call of the Wild and Other Stories; J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye; Jean Twenge’s Generation Me; John Irving’s The Cider House Rules; John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and Men, East of Eden, The Pearl; Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women; Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind; Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer; Mary Pipher’s Reviving Ophelia; Nancy Drew series; Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter; National Geographic’s Guide to National Parks; Pearl Buck’s The Good Earth; Peter Haugen’s World History for Dummies; Richard Bach’s Jonathan Livingston Seagull; Robert Frank’s Success and Luck: Good Fortune and the Myth of Meritocracy; Robin Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass; Stephen King’s The Shining, From a Buick 8, The Green Mile; Sue Monk Kidd’s The Secret Life of Bees and The Mermaid Chair; Sweet Valley Kids series (my first insight to American culture as a kid); Teodoro Agoncillo’s A History of the Philippines; Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood; Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. For reviews, visit Goodreads and Scribd*.

Show: Geography Now!

Tourism sites: free walking tours, Nomadic Matt, official tourism website

Travel planning sites: Airalo eSIM ($3 discount code: RAIZEL7816)*, Airbnb, Booking.com*, Skyscanner, World Nomads*

(*Note: It helps keep this site going every time you sign up or book from these links. I am a big fan and have been using these sites since 2015. If this blog helped you in any way, it doesn’t hurt to make your booking from these links. Thank you!)

P.S. My keys to sustainable travels: acknowledge that your trip might not go as planned | back up important files before and during travel | bring a portable multi-cooker, coffee/tea press, food containers, utensils, water bottle, water heater, and clothesline rope | bring extra medicines and prescription | bring souvenirs from home for friends you’ll meet along the way | get a local sim card | get travel insurance | have an extra card to be used only for emergencies | learn the language if you deem it necessary | listen to your gut | only bring stuff that you can carry on your own | only go for local food that’s vouched for being clean and safe | record and stay on top of your expenses | stay in accommodations where cooking is allowed | take public transportation | treat everyone and yourself with kindness and respect, as always |treat guidebooks as guides; don’t get boxed by them | visit local cafés | walk as much as you can | wake up early | when faced with difficult decisions, ask yourself why ❤

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Anthro on Foot Goes to Thailand

Sawatdee khrap/ kha!

For my travel photos on IG: @anthro0nfoot

Sharing with you resources that helped me with travel planning + inspiration:

Books: Anthony Reid’s A History of Southeast Asia, Lonely Planet Thailand, Margaret Landon’s Anna and the King of Siam, Thomas Suarez’s Early Mapping of Southeast Asia, Wiley’s A Short History of Southeast Asia (Peter Church, ed.). For reviews, visit Goodreads and Scribd*.

Shows: Charles Kimball’s History of Southeast Asia podcast, Geography Now!, Pailin’s Kitchen

Tourism sites: free walking tours, Nomadic Matt, official tourism website

Travel planning sites: Airalo eSIM ($3 discount code: RAIZEL7816)*, Airbnb, Booking.com*, Skyscanner, World Nomads*

(*Note: It helps keep this site going every time you sign up or book from these links. I am a big fan and have been using these sites since 2015. If this blog helped you in any way, it doesn’t hurt to make your booking from these links. Thank you!)

P.S. My keys to sustainable travels: acknowledge that your trip might not go as planned | back up important files before and during travel | bring a portable multi-cooker, coffee/tea press, food containers, utensils, water bottle, water heater, and clothesline rope | bring extra medicines and prescription | bring souvenirs from home for friends you’ll meet along the way | get a local sim card | get travel insurance | have an extra card to be used only for emergencies | learn the language if you deem it necessary | listen to your gut | only bring stuff that you can carry on your own | only go for local food that’s vouched for being clean and safe | record and stay on top of your expenses | stay in accommodations where cooking is allowed | take public transportation | treat everyone and yourself with kindness and respect, as always |treat guidebooks as guides; don’t get boxed by them | visit local cafés | walk as much as you can | wake up early | when faced with difficult decisions, ask yourself why ❤

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Anthro on Foot Goes to Macau

Hello!

For my travel photos on IG: @anthro0nfoot

Sharing with you resources that helped me with travel planning + inspiration:

Books: George Wei’s (ed.) Macao: The Formation of a Global City, Thomas Suarez’s Early Mapping of Southeast Asia. For reviews, visit Goodreads and Scribd*.

Shows: Charles Kimball’s History of Southeast Asia podcast, The China History podcast

Tourism sites: official tourism website

Travel planning sites: Airalo eSIM ($3 discount code: RAIZEL7816)*, Airbnb, Booking.com*, Skyscanner, World Nomads*

(*Note: It helps keep this site going every time you sign up or book from these links. I am a big fan and have been using these sites since 2015. If this blog helped you in any way, it doesn’t hurt to make your booking from these links. Thank you!)

P.S. My keys to sustainable travels: acknowledge that your trip might not go as planned | back up important files before and during travel | bring a portable multi-cooker, coffee/tea press, food containers, utensils, water bottle, water heater, and clothesline rope | bring extra medicines and prescription | bring souvenirs from home for friends you’ll meet along the way | get a local sim card | get travel insurance | have an extra card to be used only for emergencies | learn the language if you deem it necessary | listen to your gut | only bring stuff that you can carry on your own | only go for local food that’s vouched for being clean and safe | record and stay on top of your expenses | stay in accommodations where cooking is allowed | take public transportation | treat everyone and yourself with kindness and respect, as always | treat guidebooks as guides; don’t get boxed by them | visit local cafés | walk as much as you can | wake up early | when faced with difficult decisions, ask yourself why ❤