Traveling Light

The Dark Side of Travel Romance

Mon Apr 10, 2:42 PM ET

When it comes to the ways of love and romance, no aphrodisiac is quite so potent as travel. On the road — freed from the dull routines and restrictions of home — you become more open, more daring, more willing to seize the moment. Away from home, the people you meet (be they locals or fellow travelers) seem sexier, more exotic, less repressed — and this makes you feel sexy, exotic, liberated. Freed from your past, happily anonymous, and filled with a sense of possibility, you are never more willing (or able) to fall headlong into a love affair.

The only downside is this: Don't try to rekindle things when you get home. It simply doesn't work. Ever. Regardless of how great you and your lover felt in Rio; regardless of how seamlessly the two of you bonded in Paris; regardless of memories you cherish from Koh Samui, you are only inviting heartbreak if you try to resume the romance in Hackensack or Burbank or Minnetonka.

I used to wonder why this was the case — why, after sharing intense travel experiences, my relationships with the intriguing women I met in Cuzco or Tel Aviv would sour into a series of uninspired e-mails, awkward phone calls and (on occasion) anticlimactic reunions. Why would everything change once we'd stopped traveling?

I finally got a clue to the problem several winters ago in Thailand, when I met a Belgian lass I'll call Katia. Willowy and doe-eyed, with a sexy pout and effortless European grace, Katia would have been out of my league back home — but in the colorful madness of Bangkok, we somehow fell into an easy love affair.  Together, we took a train down to Khao Sok National Park in southern Thailand, where we stayed in a tree-house hotel, swam the jungle-rivers, drank Mekhong whiskey, and shared the stories of our lives. After a week, when it came time for Katia to fly back to Brussels, I felt like we had really connected — that our time together had amounted to something special.

Katia must have felt the same way, since — over the course of the next several weeks — she told me how much she missed me, how much she cared for me, and how much our time together had meant to her. When she eventually invited me to join her in Brussels for Christmas, I didn't hesitate:  I bought a plane ticket and flew out as soon as I could.

Once I arrived in Brussels, things fell apart almost immediately. When I tried to put my arm around her as we walked to meet her friends at a bar, Katia curtly warned me not to touch her in front of her friends ("They know I'm not sentimental like that," she told me). Once in the bar, Katia continually scolded me: for eating too much; for not sitting up straight; for not asking her friends the right kind of questions. For some reason, I'd suddenly become an embarrassment to Katia — an uncultured American fool who couldn't do anything right.

The disappointment went both ways:  Back in Thailand, Katia was laid-back and affectionate, and she'd talked about her passionate calling to design jewelry; in Brussels, I discovered that she was a shrill busybody who used her art studio mainly to play computer games. When we visited Belgian museums, Katia sneered at my ignorance of art history; when I read a book on the train to Louven, she scolded me for not looking out at the scenery; when we ate dinner with her parents, she lost her temper when I didn't pay enough attention to the conversation (which, I reminded her, was mostly in Dutch). In Thailand, Katia had found pleasure in the simplest moments; in Brussels, the only times she seemed remotely satisfied were when we were arguing.

After a week of being trapped in a small Brussels apartment with Katia, I had a realization:  despite everything that had happened between us in Thailand, she was still complete stranger to me. I had fallen for Thailand as much as I'd fallen for Katia, and she had done the same. The world we'd experienced together as travelers was, in many ways, a transient fantasy — and the mountaintop experiences we'd shared in Asia amounted to a sandcastle by the time I'd arrived in Europe.

Indeed, if the anonymity and renewal of travel makes love bloom easier, returning to the noise of your home-life makes road-romance reunions that much harder. Despite all the memories you've shared on the road, you can't pick up the relationship where it left off, because that place is now thousands of miles away.

Last summer, after having not communicated for four years, Katia sent me an e-mail suggesting we meet up and talk. We met — as friends — in Paris, and I felt like I got to know my old Belgian lover for the first time.

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TIP SHEET

"A Few Humble Pointers Regarding Road Romances"

1) Don't take your romantic cues from an online travel columnist.

Having shared my own story, I'll confess I'm hardly qualified to advise on romantic matters. Be wary, but follow your heart.  

2) Seriously, don't take your romantic cues from an online travel columnist.

I'll reassert that that reuniting with your lover after a distant road romance often amounts to meeting up with a stranger — but really: Don't let me stop you from trying anyway.

3) Be aware of the cultural factors behind road romances.

Culture is instinctive — not intellectual — so don't think your travel lover will have the same gut-level assumptions as you (even if she or he is from your own country). The exotic appeal of a person from Buenos Aires or Tallinn (or Missoula) might add to the romantic attraction, but this will also add to the romantic complications.

4) Be smart.

Protect yourself against sexually transmitted diseases.  Just because travel allows you to throw romantic restraint to the wind doesn't mean that you should throw safety to the wind as well. 

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Comments

Join the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.

in one word.... it's just wonderful story, and a good commun sense advice !!!!
Posted by chelitob@sbcglobal.net on Wed, Apr 12, 2006 1:32 AM ET
in one word.... it's just wonderful story, and a good commun sense advice !!!!
Posted by chelitob@sbcglobal.net on Wed, Apr 12, 2006 1:32 AM ET
Hummm, Last time I was in Thailand like you I fell in love only to look down and say to my lovely partner "Hey is that a Skeeter on my Peter will you whack it off please" Which ended both of us in Jail for indesent exposure! Didn't think Thailand had such a law! Go figure
Posted by boxdoc4u on Wed, Apr 12, 2006 12:04 PM ET
I love how the Fantasy vs. Reality is played out! Who hasn't been on vacation and thought "I should just stay here"? But then the reality of making a living and eating hits. Been there, done that.
Posted by amethyst680 on Thu, Apr 13, 2006 8:20 AM ET
Hey ... I gotta tell you, I met a beautiful Hong Kong girl while traveling down the Baja Penninsula in Mexico. We met, fell in love, and are now married. Yes, there was an adjustment necessary, but our love was very real, and we were both willing to make the adjustment. That was more than 6 years ago. We just had our first baby 3 months ago, and are very happy. FOLLOW YOUR HEART!!
Posted by montanasoftware on Thu, Apr 13, 2006 1:48 PM ET
PS: I'm from Missoula
Posted by montanasoftware on Thu, Apr 13, 2006 1:49 PM ET
I'm from New York City, my wife from Berlin, Germany. We met as two backpackers getting off a train in a tiny town in Queensland, Australia in 1988. We are married 13 years now and live in Florida. We met through a couple that my wife met while traveling in China. I met the same couple for one day while traveling in Bali. They told us, seperately, places to see in Australia. The guy from the couple we met (raised in New Jersey and living in Boston, MA) later met a girl from England that he married and has a child with. They live in England. Follow your heart and use your head. It can work!
Posted by copell2 on Thu, Apr 13, 2006 3:57 PM ET
I feel in love twice in one week, Once at the Monte Carlo terrmas and once at the Lumas terrmas. You have to love Brasilian women.
Posted by deji_odun on Thu, Apr 13, 2006 5:05 PM ET
I am from Canada. Travelled to New Zealand in 1988 and met my soul mate there and we have been together ever since. We have lived in Australia & N.Z.& returned to Canada 14 yrs ago where we have decided to live returning often to N.Z. & Australia to visit his family downunder. I too believe in 'following your heart' - Life is short. Live your life to the fullest!
Posted by kiwi.joy@rogers.com on Fri, Apr 14, 2006 1:13 PM ET
I wish I could add to the good-luck stories, but my experience matches Rolf's article. I've tried to start serious relationships in 3 different countries on separate trips, but after 3 reunions, I have stories very similar to the ones in the story. Definitely take your romantic cues from an online travel columnist!
Posted by holastefan on Thu, Apr 20, 2006 6:18 AM ET