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# The Ultimate Benefit of Travel
The true ultimate reward of travel isn't checking off destinations, taking photos, or buying souvenirs.
It's that **it secretly extends your subjective lifespan**.
Most people experience the same sense of collapse after age 35:
"How did I get old in the blink of an eye? I was just in college yesterday, and now I'm suddenly approaching 40 or 50?"
This isn't an illusion—it's your brain's time-encoding mechanism at work.
Psychological research shows:
**The subjective length of time depends primarily on the density of novel information your brain receives.**
When you live year after year in a highly predictable repetitive pattern (office → home → office → home, endlessly scrolling your phone, ordering takeout, binge-watching shows), your brain activates "**compression mode**"—similar experiences get filed away as a bundle, taking up almost no space in memory. So you feel like "I did nothing all year, and it just passed."
Conversely, when you frequently throw yourself into **unfamiliar times and places**:
- The first time you smell the crisp pine scent of a high-altitude plateau
- The first time you're on a foreign street where you can't understand a single conversation, yet feel inexplicably at peace
- The first time you can't communicate verbally and resort to gestures to order food that you have no idea what it will be
- The first time you get lost in a strange city at dawn, only to stumble upon the most beautiful sunrise
These **high-density novel signals** force your brain to continuously create new "memory slots," with each day broken down into more and more detailed memory units.
The result:
Over the same 365 days,
**a repetitive pattern might leave only 3-5 memory anchors;**
**a high-frequency travel pattern might leave 30-50, or even more.**
So in retrospect, you'll be stunned to discover:
"Wow, I actually went through so much that year?!"
From a retrospective perspective, your life has been **subjectively extended**.
An even harsher truth:
People don't age because of biological years—they age because of **exhaustion in perceiving time**.
When you can't find fresh excitement in anything, when every day feels like copy-and-paste, when you've already foreseen how you'll spend the next decade—
that's when true "aging" begins.
And frequent, **quality travel**is precisely the most potent "**subjective anti-aging medicine**" humanity has discovered:
- It costs are manageable (you don't need to travel the globe; you can start with nearby unfamiliar towns)
- It works instantly (a single 3-7 day deep experience can noticeably extend your sense of time)
- It compounds (higher frequency means stronger effects, with accumulated amplification)
So next time someone asks you "what's the point of traveling," you can calmly tell them:
"I'm using it to extend my life."
Not my biological life, but my **perception of how long I've truly lived**.
And that might be more valuable than gaining 5 extra years of existence.
When was your last trip that made time slow down?