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Gifts for the going-abroad
Story and photos by MELISSA HENNING
So your best friend tells you she is headed to South Africa for a
year, the man in your life tells you his company is shipping him to
France for the next four months and you are stuck at home. Your face
flashes shades of envy green. After the initial shock wears off, you
set aside your jealousy and realize you want to say “Bon Voyage”
with a gift that says “Don’t forget me when you’re
gone.” But what? This is worse than shopping for birthdays and
Christmas combined—you have no idea what to get. There are no
scripted fallbacks, like a watch or flowers, and the time until takeoff
is ticking away. Here are a few suggestions that will help you look
smart and insightful in the eyes of your favorite traveler.
1. Give green - or whatever the local currency color may be.
This is my favorite thing to do for globetrotters before they leave.
Giving a small amount of the local currency is an ideal way to ease
the stress of stepping foot on foreign soil. This one can take a little
planning; usually you have to go to the main branch of a large bank,
or the airport in your area to exchange to a foreign currency, but
it’s worth the hassle. After getting off a long flight, the
last thing you want to have to do is search for an ATM so you can
grab a bottle of water. There’s nothing more frustrating than
having a thirst-quenching beverage stare you in the face as you reach
into your pockets only to produce quarters when a single euro is all
you need. When I got of the plane at Gatwick airport in England, the
first thing I did was hightail it to the loo - little did I know you
had to pay for the potty in England. If not for the one pound I had
been given the day before I left, there could be lasting bladder damage.
2. Think small, think light.
Whatever you might have
in mind, make sure it can be packed easily. Often when people are
traveling for an extended period of time, they have literally weighed
their suitcases, made highly selective choices about what is an absolute
necessity, and there is no way they’ll bust open their precisely
packed bag to try and fit a 18 x 24 framed picture of you into the
mix.
3. If one picture is worth a thousand words, two pictures
are worth...
While the large framed portrait of you would
never work in practice, the idea wasn’t all bad. Pictures can
be small, light and a great way for those traveling to keep you close.
When my best friend was a foreign exchange student for a year, we
knew homesickness would eventually set in; so before she left, we
made her small simple photo album: just a few pieces of paper bound
with ribbon using pictures gathered from all her friends. She was
able to flip through it whenever she missed us, and, best of all,
it slid right inside of her suitcase.4. And all the rest… There
are always other items that make good going away gifts: international
calling cards, travel books specific to the place your explorer is
headed, a travel journal to record the experience, or a St. Christopher’s
medal to wish safe travels are just a few examples.
Being the one that gets left at the gate when the plane takes off
pretty much sucks, but deep down, I like to believe we all wish those
boarding the plane the best experience possible. Giving something
that will make the trip that much easier for them, hopefully, will
make you feel like a memorable part of their trip, and not so green
with envy that you knock them over, steal their ticket and board the
plane yourself. |
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