- Mar 15, 2003
- 12,668
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Firstly, I'm being a bit tongue in cheek with this post. I'm not white but I love a white person, and the usual words of a bigot apply "I have a lot of white friends," but I ask this question not as a bigot but because I'm genuinely curious.
My best friend (and best man at my wedding) is currently back packing through Europe, with no timeline and no real plan. Him and his gf (also a close friend) had good jobs and quit them and are blowing through a lot of cash now, living in shitty hostels and roaming around without knowing any language other than English. This is not an isolated case- it seems like backpacking through Europe is sort of a coming of age ritual for a lot of people I know. Why?
I love going on vacations, sure. But spending weeks or months hopping from shady situation to another doesn't interest me. Hell, their pretentious travel-blog is full of how miserablely rain soaked their experience has been, and how they're running out of money and frustrated (well, duh).
So what's the deep down reason behind this rite of passage? My theory is that the children of immigrants, like myself, have ethnic traditions and culture up the wazoo, and young white americans often lack that, just growing up "White 'Merican"- is the whole Europe thing about finding your roots?
My best friend (and best man at my wedding) is currently back packing through Europe, with no timeline and no real plan. Him and his gf (also a close friend) had good jobs and quit them and are blowing through a lot of cash now, living in shitty hostels and roaming around without knowing any language other than English. This is not an isolated case- it seems like backpacking through Europe is sort of a coming of age ritual for a lot of people I know. Why?
I love going on vacations, sure. But spending weeks or months hopping from shady situation to another doesn't interest me. Hell, their pretentious travel-blog is full of how miserablely rain soaked their experience has been, and how they're running out of money and frustrated (well, duh).
So what's the deep down reason behind this rite of passage? My theory is that the children of immigrants, like myself, have ethnic traditions and culture up the wazoo, and young white americans often lack that, just growing up "White 'Merican"- is the whole Europe thing about finding your roots?
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