I like my hotel here in Phuket. When it was constructed about 20 year ago or so they didn't include any doors or fences. It's open 24/7 and there's always somebody to take care. See below a picture of the night guard.
When we lived in my wife's village we had no door. We were completely open to the outside world and sometimes it felt like we were on display. Luckily though, we had shutters that we could bring down at night-time.
In 2009 I decided to radically change my life in the Netherlands and become what I call an I-nomad or information technology driven nomad.
I gave up all belongings besides easy to carry luggage with bare essentials.
I-nomads usually live in guesthouses or hotels, being able to move anywhere at any time they choose. What's the point you may wonder; the answer for me is simple: feel free, feel happy. This is a personal perception, since most people will experience happiness in a more conventional setting.
My life style is often being referred to as Perpetual / Permanent Traveler / Tourist, which is.....is, OK is fine with me. I-nomads are mostly in possession of a laptop, netbook or alike to manage the necessary income derived from royalties, web-publishing, financial investments or similar means which can be controlled remotely to maintain their self-imposed lifestyle budget.
Currently I am traveling through South-East Asia and since more than two years together with my companion and fiancee Polly.
You may contact us here.
When we lived in my wife's village we had no door. We were completely open to the outside world and sometimes it felt like we were on display. Luckily though, we had shutters that we could bring down at night-time.
ReplyDeleteHi Paul, so you didn't make big sounds at night, did you? :-)
ReplyDelete