Travelling Without Moving

The
title of this article, Travelling Without Moving, was taken from the
Jamiroquai’s album released in 1996. Why I choose this phrase as the
title of my new article? Here’s the story.

 

 

 

One
fine day, like usual, I was trapped in the middle of long line of cars
somewhere in Jakarta, and I’ve got nothing to do about it, so I
listened to the radio and there was a phone conversation between the
announcer and a lady. The topic is about memorable places that you’ve
experienced.

 

 

 

I
didn’t notice nor follow all the conversation, but then the announcer
asked the lady, “So, what is your hobby?”. The lady on the other side
answered, “Travelling”. “Really? You mean to the exotic places, like
those backpackers?”, said the announcer.

 

“Hmmm, not really. I like to go to the shopping mall or just hanging out with my colleagues afterwork on Friday night”.

 

 

 

What
the…? Travelling and window shopping are two different things!!
Travelling in this context means that you have to make a journey, a
quite long one, to find new experience. I’m not talking about making an
80 kilometres journey a day to catch your workplace. That’s what I do
everyday, and still I didn’t call myself a “traveller”! How come she
can call herself “traveller” if all she can do is just walking three
hundred metres around the corner of her office to buy a cold cup of
mocca frappucino in Starbucks and spend her salary on Mango sack dress?

 

 

 

It’s
not that I don’t like that kind of lifestyle. I watch movies at cinema
once a week, buy Rockport shoes because they just fit my feet, and wear
Oakley glasses to protect my eyes from that harmful uv light. But I
will not consider myself as a “traveller” if I never been to Poso Lake,
watch people from Nias Island jump over a 2,5 m rock lively, take
pictures next to the skulls of the dead in Torajanese graveyard –or
gravecave, and feed the orang-utans in Bukit Barisan mountain directly
from my own hands.

 

 

 

That’s
the problem of today’s people. The hectic citylife, the consumerism
that all the TV stations offer, and misleading in basic education
teaching system lead us to become a “one place” person, a person who
doesn’t have the curiosity of Indonesia’s cultural differences, a
person who always thinks that pizza is much tastier than blakutak (I
bet not many people know what “blakutak” is), and a person who doesn’t
even know on what island Gorontalo is.

http://an69a.blogspot.com

One Response to “Travelling Without Moving”

  1. d i c k y Says:

    I reckon that you mentioned the travelling without moving as the one which represent one hell of a morning trip on one hell of a hectic irrationalistic highway connecting that “pondok gede never never land” to the existed land.. hehe.. rumah lu masih di jauhan sono Ngga? :)

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