“Day 9: No matter where I turn, all these dang roads keep leading back to… Read the postVisiting Rome: Autumn Pangs
“A wise European traveler trusts fallback plans, explicitly and often.” – Old Sean A Series… Read the postVisiting Sorrento: Strike of the Dewdrops
“The vast majority of us haunt the world our ancestors built, not the other way… Read the postVisiting Pompeii: Ashes to Amore
“One of he real wonders regarding traveling is the profound defiance of diminishing returns. There… Read the postVisiting Naples: Rambunctious Crossroads
“How much of human history has been eaten by the slow, enfolding jaws of Earth?… Read the postVisiting Portici: The Unfamed Ash
“And walking along those old roads and feeling their pulse is a treasure, for these… Read the postVisiting The Appian Way: Half-Steps to History
“It’s a city duly made eternal. Its imprints through histories can never be forgotten nor… Read the postVisiting Rome: Speak to Me, Ye’ Ruins
“I see your skyscrapers, your restaurants, your cafes and supercities. But where are you keeping… Read the postVisiting Bahrain: Flyaway Thoughts
“Gone a dollar, gone a dime, gone a costly weekend of time. But methinks it… Read the postVisiting Abu Dhabi: Begone, Me Money
“For all of recorded human history, a patch of desert has been an intergenerational tourism… Read the postVisiting Cairo: Amid the Pyramids
“Traversing the world is a method for uncovering simple truths inside one’s self. For example,… Read the postVisiting Al Hofuf: Sandstone Desert in the Oasis
“It was my first time seeing skyscrapers braced against an Arabian desert. There is something… Read the postVisiting Kuwait City: Awaiting Kuwait
“I’ve found that living in countries rapidly investing in their own development and growth is… Read the postVisiting Al-Kharj: Bright ‘Till Twilight
“I believe humans take righteous pride in all they’ve built. But there are towers and… Read the postVisiting Jeddah: The Healing Vaults
“It’s sometimes hilariously difficult to ask a local about their country’s history. There are things they… Read the postVisiting Diriyah: A Prayer at a Crossroads