Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Can travel really open people's eyes?

Can travel really open people's eyes?

It's quite possible.

As the saying goes, read thousands of books and take Wan Li Road. Reading is to broaden one's knowledge and horizons, especially Wan Li Road (tourism).

The book has its own golden house, and the book has its own Yan Ruyu. In the developed online world, it is even more interesting to know the world in one minute.

It is certainly more eye-opening for a person not to travel. Because reading thousands of books is better than taking Wan Li Road!

For example, in the online world, we can easily know the difference between North and South Yuanxiao dumplings, sweet bean curd and salty bean curd, and there are many discussions online, but we are surprised that there is another way to eat them. If we can really travel around the local area, experience and appreciate the local customs, wouldn't we be able to better understand the connotation of the differences and know why?

In the world, there are too many stories we don't know or just heard and hearsay. Experience is the mother of wisdom. It will be more eye-opening if you can visit in person than what you read in books. It is really impossible to have an epiphany on the spot. Reading is certainly a good way to broaden your horizons.

I suddenly remembered a story about Helen Keller I learned when I was a child. Helen Keller is blind. Her teacher wrote the word "water" on her palm, but she always confused "cup" with "water". Miss Sullivan didn't give up on Helen. She took Helen Keller to the house by the well and asked Helen Keller to put her little hand under the water pipe and let cold water drip on her hand. Then, Miss Sullivan wrote the words "water" and "water" on Helen Keller's palm several times. Since then, Helen Keller has firmly remembered it and will never be confused again. Helen later recalled: "Somehow, the secret of language was suddenly revealed, and I finally knew that water was a liquid flowing through my palm."

Although this short story can't answer this question, this is what I want to say. Thanks for reading!