recon
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I hear this phrase used quite frequently, but how true is it really?
Have your travels made you any less provincial?
Have your travels made you any less provincial?
recon said:I hear this phrase used quite frequently, but how true is it really?
Have your travels made you any less provincial?
Not me. For there is another saying: "You can take the zoobie out of the woods, but you can't take the woods out of the zoobie."recon said:Have your travels made you any less provincial?
recon said:I hear this phrase used quite frequently, but how true is it really?
Townsend said:Very true...
loseyourname said:I think it's more true when you live in an actual provincial area, like South Dakota. Growing up around Los Angeles and especially working at Disneyland for two years, I met every imaginable kind of person from every part of the world. That said, I'm sure traveling to other countries would still expand my mind, giving me an idea of what life is like in other parts of the world (aside from what I see in documentaries and my anthropology-buff girlfriend constantly talking about what she learned the other day). If you can't travel, though - sadly, I've never left the North American continent - you can always watch foreign films, read foreign literature, and study foreign mythologies. I do feel like I've learned a great deal from that. Then again, knowing the ritual significance of the symbolism employed by Roman castration cults isn't necessarily going to tell me much about modern-day Italy.
loseyourname said:Just so you know, I wasn't trying to call you provincial.