Travel: After European Trip Last Year

Travel

Guest Writer: Shannon Seibert

Post Europe Trip March 2025, final thoughts.

. Orthodox Church Belgrade Serbia

 "Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one's lifetime." Mark Twain

Travel is the most excellent classroom where history comes alive, where art, architecture, food, and culture create new spaces in our minds, and most importantly, where we connect with people outside our little corner of the earth.

7. Shannon in Vienna

I learn, grow, and expand my worldview. My perspectives are challenged. My circle of influence is broadened. It makes me more humble, more grateful, and more curious.

I remember when Americans, as a whole, were proud that we were a melting pot of different people, cultures, religions, and customs. America wasn't just a dream but an IDEA, a way of thinking. We have forgotten and lost our pride in being a melting pot.

Historically, many wars, hate, and loss of life are about rejecting melting pots.

All nations, peoples, governments, and cultures have flaws and flawed histories. They all have their challenges, corruption, and failures. But what beauty do they offer?

3. Memorial in Croatia

What are the lessons they teach?

What can I bring home to improve my own "backyard"?

Here are a few things I brought home this time; some are repeats of previous trips.

1. Slow down. Your work will still be there; no one is coming to take it away.

2. Sit with friends over a cup of coffee or a glass of wine, OFTEN, and for extended amounts of time.

3. Offer signs in multiple languages. In Serbia, signs were offered in FIVE languages to make things more accessible to a wider audience.

4. Church doors had many, many languages. One church had eight languages inscribed on its main doors! Churches offered services in two different languages at every service.

5. City centers are pedestrian, and all shopping is located in one area. Families and friends could gather here; kids ride bikes, and babies learn to walk. City centers are where life happens together.

6. FREE public transportation

7. Every city had a memorial/remembrance of the holocaust (probably the darkest stain on European history). They remember not to be ashamed, not woke, not DEI. They don't want to repeat history! They acknowledge it and REMEMBER so they don't repeat it.

8. There are anti-fascist monuments in every town.

8. Monument against war and fascism in Vienna

9. Focus on doing ONE thing really well. Multi-tasking is overrated and reduces overall quality. Whether it's sausages, pastries, oils, wines, or beer, do that ONE thing really, really well.

4. sunset on the Danube

10. In general, people are people. They want to live in peace, have a secure existence, provide safety and opportunity for their children, worship how they choose, have a trustworthy and helpful government, and live FREELY.

6. Cookies Budapest market

One final story is from Serbia, a place with a corrupt government (per our guide), where votes are bought, coerced, and manipulated. Only 30% support the current administration, but they win elections because of the corruption and false propaganda that is rampant—a fragile "democracy," no doubt.

But Serbia is also a place where 300,000 Russians have resettled and 100,000 Ukrainians have fled since the start of the Ukraine war. We know why the Ukrainians are there, seeking safety. But why so many Russians? Primarily because they have sons who must serve in the Russian military. The parents don't want their sons to die. They are there to save their children's lives; all 400,000 want to save their children's lives. I think all parents can empathize with that.

Shannon Seibert Shannon@smallworldbigfun.com

 

Joanna Seibert  joannaseibert.com

 

1. Orthodox Church in Belgrade, Serbia

2. Church in Sremski Karlovci, Serbia

3. Memorial in Vukovar, Croatia

4. Sunset on the Danube

5. Pecs, Hungary

6. Cookies at the market in Budapest, Hungary

7. Me having champagne in Vienna

8, 9, 10. Monument against War & Fascism in Vienna. 

  • "Gate of Violence": A large chunk of granite with carvings representing victims of the war, including chained laborers, gas masks, and a woman giving birth (symbolizing the rebirth of Austria).