Seven laws of homesickness and epidemic prevention poems

During the time when we couldn't travel far, we began to travel around the world, filling our inner needs by digging up our past travel memories. We are used to reminiscing with friends about "where did I go today that year" and imagining "where am I going to buy a ticket next?"

Therefore, the new book "Travel Notes of the Waves" published at this node can be called a large-scale "cloud tour" between pages, and every word grows on the emotional point where we call for the distance.

Travel Notes of Waves is the travel notes of Wang Kai, Han Songluo and Nie, three post-70s writers: From a forgotten town on the edge of Lanzhou to a city where the Yangtze River flows; From the ancient silverware shop near the Palace on the Mekong River to the tea party at 4 am on the West Lake; From a bowl of bean soup rice of Sherpa people at the foot of Himalayas in Nepal to frequent encounters in Indian temples; From looking for the real former residence of Zhang Ailing to occasionally seeing the glow of the western regions. ...

The travel ideas and styles of the three authors are quite different, and there is not much similarity between the place where they stay and the corner where they stare. As Han Songluo summed up: "The scenery will vary from person to person."

Travels of the Waves mixes several travel experiences in one book, much like people sitting around talking about travel on weekdays. Obviously, each other is telling completely different anecdotes. Those experiences have their own colorful and rich flavors, but you will never get too much and bored, because travel itself is an aesthetic of "infinite growth".

Perhaps, the tension brought by travel lies between your own treasure and the "teasing" of others. Only when you are fascinated by the mysterious land again and again can your journey extend infinitely inch by inch-not limited to our limited holiday duration and the fixed distance of "origin-destination" on the plane ticket.

Different moods and life experiences determine how travelers "wander around" and make their journey full of color saturation and story capacity. Therefore, readers can meet different lives in the travel notes of the waves.

The traveler, Ni Lao, a senior author of Lonely Planet, has always been a traveler who "consumes the distance to the extreme" in my eyes. Rational and calm mind, good physical quality and tolerance for any environment make Nilao the idol of many backpackers.

In the book, Ni Lao's words will show many novel experiences beyond our usual daily life, especially his extensive and delicate exploration in a foreign country, which is recorded with light weight and rich picture sense, as if playing a vivid documentary to readers.

In Nepal, simple bean soup rice may impress you more than the beautiful scenery of Rizhao Jinshan; Next to the mountaineering base at an altitude of more than 4,000 meters, the price of a bottle of beer can be similar to fried rice, but when you think that these beers are backpackers from Nepal walking step by step, spanning 3,000 meters, you won't feel extravagant.

Nigerians saw the most beautiful fireworks in India on the Nanfeng Expressway in Tamil Nadu. In Shen Si Temple area, severe flash floods made him experience almost the longest hiking trip in his life: a whole 13 hours. When it gets dark, there are still two hours to go. Niro turned on the Kindle's strongest reading light. "With this modern product that can illuminate 5 meters, the pilgrims completed their journey home."

Travel is not only a fresh and exciting gift, but also an ordinary temperature.

In Travel Notes on the Waves, Han Songluo wrote that people love to travel, because travel is a feast for the senses and the saturation of travel is very high. "But in fact, everything within three kilometers of Fiona Fang is nourishing and activating our connection with the world. The opportunity to open the senses is hidden in daily life. "

There are many treasures hidden within 3 kilometers of Fiona Fang. This is another travel "map" provided by Han Songluo in the book.

He shared the interesting concept of "triple map": understanding and punching some classic landmarks and confirming the place of accommodation, which is the first basic map for travel; If you stay for a long time, you will smell more fireworks and there will be a second map. For locals who grew up in Sri Lanka, a city is too attached to your feelings, so you will get the third "heaviest map", and this map will not be lost because of "wandering".

If you care about slow and deep nourishment, then the "information concentration" of travel seems less important. Even if the walking range is limited, it will be moved by ordinary perception.

We are obsessed with some trips, not for leisure and entertainment. There are always some foreign scenery that you accidentally "unlock" when you are on a business trip.

Wang Kai shared his previous business interview experience in Travel Notes on the Waves. The "passing by" of the working mode is a "background" for unintentional gaze. However, such a background will also leave a deep background for some memories. For example, in a heavy interview, when he left, he saw that "the big moon shines heavily on Daqingshan, which is magnificent in other places", and the car running in the dark is as small as an ant.

In such a journey, mountains and rivers seem to be "indifferent", and we are more focused on examining the existing state of some strangers in the world and deconstructing the profound meanings of the words "life" and "survival".

When writing travel notes, Wang Kai's perspective is suitable for readers obsessed with humanism. Even when describing this charming and colorful city, his text reveals a kind of indifference and alienation that belongs only to thinkers.

In Wang Kai's view, travel is a departure from daily life. He tends to travel casually or aimlessly, writing wherever he goes, more like the ancient literary model. When different authors get together, they can write homesickness, romance and pervert together.

Whether it is modern or ancient, no matter how much it accounts for in the "needs of life", travel is also a projection of a certain aspect of our personality: travel may not be an absolute factor that directly affects your current life, but it will always come out when some souls need to breathe freely, teasing you and reminding you of the necessity of this matter.

Even if there are few travelers, the snow-capped mountains in the distance still start a brand-new day in the "chase" of clouds and sunshine; Flowers are still bustling, covered with the long street yard of that ancient town; Xia Feng has experienced elegant tea rooms in the mountains and by the river again and again, but empty cups can always wait for people who drink tea.

Is it homesick, romantic or abnormal? As long as you have experienced it, you will get the puzzle you need. So, why not start "hanging out"?