• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Courageously Creative

Be more creative in your own way

  • Home
  • FAQ
  • About
  • David’s Artwork
  • Blog
    • Creating
    • Inspirations
    • Innovation
    • Competitiveness
    • Food
    • Risk taking
    • Painting
    • Future
  • Book

Is One Night in Bangkok Enough? Using the Rule of 10 to Double Your Experience

April 7, 2011 By David Goldstein

TravelogOne reason we travel is to gain inspiration. We take in the sights and smells, clear our minds, and begin to see things differently – But we are all short on time, so how long does it really take to absorb our surroundings?  And does anyone really need to spend more than one night in Bangkok? To determine the answer for yourself, I’ll give you my secret formula.

Travel is unpredictable. I’m probably the only person to have ever woken up one morning without knowing that by the end of the day, I would be going to sleep 6,000 miles away in New Zealand. Even though I left Auckland the next morning, I still remember my first impressions.  Have you found that when you visit a town for a night or two and keep your eyes open, you can get a real sense for a place that you never would have from any other way? What do you remember from some of your shortest visits?

In order to double your understanding beyond your initial impressions, try to stick around for ten days, meet some local people, and get immersed in some kind of activity. I’ve learned more about the Caribbean people from trying to get a flooded underwater camera repaired at the harbor than I ever did from other travelers on a dive boat.  What events have caused you to learn something unexpected from spending 10 days in a foreign location? The rule of ten follows and another doubling of knowledge comes after the first 100 days -think about the last time you moved to a new home, did it take about three months to get mostly settled?

If you are logarithms enthusiast, you may appreciate the name I gave to this phenomenon “the Log of Travel,” which states: To double the value of your initial experience, you need to increase the duration of your stay by 10.

As the moss begins to grow, there are fewer novelties and it takes longer to get much of a gain. The next doubling  takes about three years, and may involve  finding a job, making some friends, and subscribing to the local paper before we can reach another plateau. After that, I have not tested this on mice, but I suspect the next doubling  will probably take three decades. Maybe this is the amount of time it takes to truly master your craft too. To truly get inspired, talk to a centenarian, but that’s another story.

Everyone says to travel to gain new inspirations – but few think about the effect of the length of their stay. Please double check my math and comment about how travel has inspired you!

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Mika Castro says

    December 15, 2011 at 4:38 am

    I like the idea about getting an inspiration. When you are going to a trip somewhere, It assures everybody to gain energy and focused minds because of different places. It will surely helps a lot.

Primary Sidebar

Creative You ORDER NOW:
amazon
Barnes and Noble

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

Subscribe to the Blog by Email:

Archives

RSS Creativity, Innovation News

  • Art 120 Announces We Make 2025: A Celebration of Creativity & Innovation - chattanoogapulse.com
  • Latin America’s AI Art Renaissance: Safeguarding Creativity, Embracing Innovation - LatinAmerican Post
  • Student Art Exhibition at Getty Center Celebrates Creativity, Innovation, and the Power of Art and Science - dusd.net
  • Muralist Mila Sketch Celebrates a Decade of Creativity in Austin - The Austin Chronicle

Copyright © 2025 · Privacy