The Joy of the Hard Way: Why I Seek Out Weird Transport
Explore the benefits of slow travel and challenging transportation. Learn why taking the hard way leads to deeper cultural immersion and personal growth.
The friction of movement
Most modern travel is designed to remove friction. We want the fastest flight, the most direct train, and a quick Uber from the airport to the hotel. The goal is the destination. Transit is just a gap in time to be bridged, usually spent in a sterile lounge or on a screen. But when you remove all the friction, you remove the experience.
I have spent the last decade seeking out challenging transportation. I have taken overnight buses in the Andes that smelled of diesel and wet wool. I have used ferry systems in Southeast Asia where the schedule was a suggestion and the seating was a plastic crate. I have walked across borders when official crossings were closed. This is not about masochism. It is about a belief that the most growth happens in the gaps between the landmarks.
When we choose the hard way, we stop being tourists and start being participants. Slow travel is not just about seeing more of the landscape; it is about the psychological shift that happens when you are forced to engage with your surroundings. When a train breaks down in a rural province, you are no longer a passenger in a bubble. You are a human being in a predicament, and that is how authentic travel starts.
The psychology of challenging transportation
Difficulty creates a specific kind of mindfulness. When you navigate a complex transit map in a city where you do not speak the language, your senses sharpen. You notice the cadence of local speech, the way people gesture toward the platform, and the social hierarchies of a crowded bus. This is mindful travel in its rawest form.
In a high-speed world, we have lost the ability to be bored. We view a three-hour delay as a system failure. However, if the journey is the point, a delay is an opportunity. It is a forced pause. It is the moment you finally talk to the grandmother sitting next to you, or notice the way the light hits the mountains outside the window. For those stuck in terminals, I've written an Airport Survival Guide for Long Transit Delays to help shift that mindset.
Challenging transportation removes the illusion of control. Most of us spend our professional lives optimizing and managing. Travel is one of the few spaces where we can surrender to chaos. By choosing the hard way, we practice emotional resilience. We learn that we can handle the unexpected, that a missed connection is not a catastrophe, and that the world is generally kinder than the news suggests.
Cultural immersion through the slow lane
If you fly from London to Bangkok, you have moved your body, but your perspective stays the same. If you travel by land, the transition is gradual. You see the architecture shift, the climate change, and the customs evolve. This is where true cultural immersion happens.
Slow travel benefits show up most in the interactions during transit. The shared struggle of a bumpy ride creates an immediate bond. I remember a twelve-hour journey on a local truck in rural India. We were packed in tight, dodging potholes and dust. There was no air conditioning. Yet, by the end of the trip, I knew the life stories of three farmers and had shared a meal of spiced chickpeas with a stranger.
These moments are invisible to business class travelers. The luxury of a first-class cabin is a wall. It protects the traveler from the grit and noise, but it also protects them from the people. When you use challenging transportation, you operate on the same level as the local population. You share their frustrations and their triumphs. This equality of experience is the only way to genuinely understand a place.
The journey vs destination fallacy
We are taught that the goal is the finish line. In travel, this becomes a "bucket list" mentality: see the Eiffel Tower, visit the Great Wall, photograph Machu Picchu. The destination becomes a trophy.
But the destination is often the least interesting part. The ruins are static and the monuments are crowded. The real story is the conflict between the journey and the destination. The story is the broken axle on the road to the ruins. The story is the midnight conversation in a hostel waiting room. The story is the sheer effort required to get there.
When the destination is easy to reach, it loses value. We value things more when we invest effort into obtaining them. A view from a mountain top is more rewarding after a grueling climb than after a cable car ride. The same applies to travel. The city that requires three different buses, a ferry, and a long walk feels more earned. It feels more real.
Practical applications of a difficult travel philosophy
Seeking the hard way does not mean you must suffer needlessly. It means you should prioritize experience over efficiency. Here are a few ways to do this on your next trip:
Prioritize local transit over tourist shuttles
Instead of booking a private transfer from the airport, take the local bus. Use the metro instead of a taxi. Even if it takes twice as long, you are inserting yourself into the daily rhythm of the city. You will see how locals commute, where they buy coffee, and how they interact. For more tips, see my Practical Guide to Local Transit Navigation.
Embrace the multi-modal journey
Instead of a single flight, combine modes of transport. Take a train to a border town, a ferry across a lake, and a bicycle to your final destination. Each change in modality forces a change in perspective. It breaks the journey into chapters, making the experience feel more expansive.
Set a "friction goal"
Challenge yourself to do one thing per trip that is intentionally inefficient. This could be navigating a city without GPS, taking the slowest possible train route, or finding a destination using only verbal directions. This pushes you out of your comfort zone.
Travel growth and the expansion of self
Every time we face a challenge in transit, we expand our map of what is possible. Travel growth occurs when internal expectations clash with external reality. When you realize you can navigate a chaotic market in Marrakech or survive a rainy night in a remote village, your confidence grows.
This confidence translates back into daily life. The person who can handle a lost passport in a foreign country is less likely to panic during a corporate crisis. The person who has learned to find beauty in a delayed train is more patient with the frictions of human relationships. The hard way to travel is a laboratory for character.
We often talk about "finding ourselves" through travel. But you do not find yourself in a luxury resort. You find yourself when things go wrong. You find yourself in the moment of peak frustration, when you have to decide whether to give up or keep going. By seeking out challenging transportation, you are essentially scheduling these moments of discovery.
The ethics of slow travel
Beyond personal growth, there is an ethical dimension. High-speed, mass-market tourism often extracts value from a destination without giving anything back. Large cruise ships and all-inclusive resorts create bubbles that isolate the traveler from the local economy.
Slow travel benefits the local community. When you take the local bus, you pay a local driver. When you stay in a small guesthouse because you missed your connection, you support a family business. By slowing down, you spend more time in secondary cities that never see the crowds. You distribute your economic impact and create more meaningful exchanges.
Overcoming the fear of the hard way
Many people avoid challenging transportation because of fear. They fear getting lost, being scammed, or feeling discomfort. These fears are valid, but they are often exaggerated by a culture of over-sanitization.
The first step is to start small. You do not need to hitchhike across Siberia on your first attempt. Start by taking a local train instead of a flight for a short distance. Use a physical map instead of Google Maps for one afternoon. Gradually increase the friction.
As you gain experience, you will realize that the "dangers" of slow travel are usually just inconveniences. The "scams" are often just cultural misunderstandings. The discomfort is usually temporary. The reward is a sense of agency and a depth of experience that cannot be bought with a first-class ticket.
The art of the detour
In a world of optimized routing, the detour is a radical act. A detour is a conscious decision to deviate from the most efficient path. It is a choice that values curiosity over the clock.
When you travel the hard way, detours happen naturally. You might stop in a town that is not in any guidebook because the bus broke down. You might spend an afternoon talking to a fisherman because the ferry was delayed. These unplanned moments are often the highlights of the trip. They are the parts of the story you tell years later. This is the core of the art of letting go and finding joy in unplanned travel.
If you only follow the optimized path, you only see what has already been curated for you. You see the version of the country that the tourism board wants you to see. But when you take the detour, you see the country as it actually exists. You see the rust, the laundry hanging over the streets, the quiet dignity of rural life, and the unexpected kindness of strangers.
Redefining luxury in travel
We have been conditioned to believe that luxury is defined by comfort: high thread-count sheets, champagne on arrival, and seamless logistics. But there is another kind of luxury: the luxury of time and presence.
There is a profound luxury in having nowhere to be for six hours while you wait for a boat in a small port. There is a luxury in the silence of a long walk through a landscape that hasn't been paved over. When we stop obsessing over the destination, we reclaim our time. We stop treating our vacation like a project to be managed and start treating it like a life to be lived.
Choosing the hard way is the ultimate luxury. It is the luxury of choosing the experience over the outcome. It is the luxury of being present in the struggle.
Summary of the slow travel philosophy
To embrace the joy of the hard way is to accept that the friction of travel is a feature, not a bug. The benefits of slow travel are found in the tension between our desire for comfort and the reality of the world.
By seeking out challenging transportation, we achieve:
- Deeper Cultural Immersion: Moving at the speed of the locals allows for genuine connection.
- Personal Growth: Overcoming the stress of difficult transit builds resilience.
- Authentic Experiences: The most memorable stories come from the glitches in the plan.
- Ethical Engagement: Slowing down distributes economic benefits to smaller operators.
- Mental Clarity: Forced pauses encourage mindfulness and a break from the optimization mindset.
If you are planning your next trip, I challenge you to find one place where you can introduce friction. Replace a flight with a train. Replace a taxi with a walk. Replace a curated tour with a local bus and a vague sense of direction. Step out of the bubble and into the grit. You will find that the hard way is almost always the better way.