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Tim Ferriss · 2022-09-28 · 1h 30m

The Vagabond’s Way, Tactics for Immersive Travel, Pilgrimages, and More — Rolf Potts

Travel writer Rolf Potts returns to discuss vagabonding, attention, slow travel, marriage later in life, and filling the vessel of midlife.

The Vagabond’s Way, Tactics for Immersive Travel, Pilgrimages, and More — Rolf Potts
The guest

Rolf Potts — Author of the bestseller Vagabonding and the new book The Vagabond's Way; travel writer reporting from 60+ countries for National Geographic Traveler, The New Yorker, Outside, and the New York Times Magazine; based on a Kansas farmhouse with his wife, actress Kristen Bush.

The gist

Rolf Potts reconnects with Tim Ferriss nearly a decade after their first interview to explore how travel sharpens attention in an age dominated by the attention economy and the smartphone. He argues that curiosity, slowing down, and embracing uncertainty are the real gifts of travel, illustrated through stories of hostels, homestays, missions like surfing or birding, and getting his ass handed to him at volleyball in Cambodia. Now married after meeting his Kansas-born wife on a dating app during the pandemic, Potts reflects on falling fully in love in his late 40s and on Richard Rohr's idea that the second half of life is about filling the vessel rather than building it. The episode centers on his new book The Vagabond's Way, a 366-day meditation collection inspired by his and his wife's morning reading ritual.

Big reveals

  • Potts reveals that since the 2014 interview he went from bachelor to married, having met his wife on a dating app during the pandemic and traveling internationally with her to Europe for the first time.
  • He pinpoints around 2007, near the time the 4-Hour Workweek came out, as the technological moment when ubiquitous Wi-Fi killed the communal hostel-lounge experience as people locked into laptops then smartphones.
  • Potts discloses he wrecked a motorcycle in Asia in 2019, suffered a concussion, and went through post-concussive depression, which forced him to work through aloneness before meeting his wife.
  • He explains that travel taught him family is a universal core value, leading him about 18 years ago to buy Kansas land jointly with his parents, who became his neighbors for 17 years before moving to assisted living.
  • Potts shares his framing of the second half of life via Richard Rohr's Falling Upward: the first half builds the vessel, the second half fills it, contrasting achievement culture with appreciation.
  • He reveals Tim talked him out of writing a sequel called 'Vagabonding Two,' advising against a junior-varsity version, which redirected him toward the daily-meditation format of The Vagabond's Way.

Things worth remembering

  • Kevin Kelly traveled through Asia for about nine years with 500 rolls of film and one spare shirt after National Geographic rejected him at 17; the project became his book Vanishing Asia.
  • London cab drivers before GPS were said to have the most developed hippocampi in the world, and being lost is reportedly good against neurodegenerative disease.
  • Potts cites philosopher Byung-Chul Han's idea from The Scent of Time that smell is the ultimate slow sense you cannot fast-forward, and that duration matters more than the number of experiences.
  • At a Massachusetts monastery at age 23 on his first vagabonding trip, Potts met an ex-Navy man with a skull-and-crossbones tattoo who taught him the phrase memento mori.
  • In Korea in the 1990s, Potts saw many students expect to enter arranged marriages and treat love as work, which shaped his view of love as something you actively will rather than a fairy tale.
  • Potts had to pay a publisher $100 for six lines of a David Wagoner poem (found via Tim's Five Bullet Friday), noting sermons like Thich Nhat Hanh's are free to quote.
  • John Muir reportedly made a fortune shipping grapes to Hawaii from California before dropping out to explore the wilderness, telling a rich magnate he was richer because he had all the money he needed.
  • Potts notes Sao Paulo removed all outdoor advertising and billboards, which he calls a fascinating real-world example of escaping the attention economy.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

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Guest’s ownBook

Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel

Rolf Potts

“the author of The International bestseller vagabonding subtitle an uncommon Guide to the art of longterm World Travel” — Tim Ferriss 00:00:00
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownBook

The Vagabond's Way: 366 Meditations on Wanderlust, Discovery, and the Art of Travel

Rolf Potts

“his newest book is the Vagabonds way 366 meditations on wander lust Discovery and the Art of travel” — Tim Ferriss 00:00:31
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The 4-Hour Workweek

Tim Ferriss

“that was one of the two books I traveled with in the Years preceding the writing of the 4-Hour Work Week” — Tim Ferriss 00:00:31
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“an eim of some type like gig Sky which actually works really well I use that in in Chile and Antarctica” — Tim Ferriss 00:41:51
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Before Sunrise

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“one of my favorite filmmakers is Richard leater I love Before Sunrise because it's about a guy who meets his true love on a train in Austria” — Rolf Potts 00:58:27
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Little, Big

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Falling Upward: A Spirituality for the Two Halves of Life

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“he has a book called Falling upward which I think the subtitle might be wisdom for the second half of life” — Rolf Potts 01:17:15
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