Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - In the 19th century, several French men liked to travel everywhere. Why did the doctor say they were ill?

In the 19th century, several French men liked to travel everywhere. Why did the doctor say they were ill?

In the 19th century, several French men liked to travel around, but doctors said it was a disease. Because at that time, travel was not common, and society required men to bear the burden of family at home instead of wandering outside. When many men wander around aimlessly, they will be regarded as a kind of mental illness by doctors and called vagabonds.

there was no tourism industry a long time ago. When the first person who began to travel around appeared in people's field of vision, people regarded him as a monster and put him in an insane asylum many times, but after he was released, he would still wander around, and people could do nothing about him. This man's name is Dada. He is a worker of a gas company. Because of an accident, his head was slightly injured, which made him have a hobby of traveling. He fled from the gas company several times. When people found him, they asked him why he came to this place, but he didn't even know why. So people took him back to see a doctor, who diagnosed him with a mental illness, which caused him to wander around aimlessly and take pleasure in it. Over the years, he has traveled to different cities, and he has been cycling between being arrested and fleeing, but his love for travel has never diminished. Some people even wrote a book called "Walking Man" for him.

Terribly, after that, more and more people in France began to suffer from this mental illness, and these people were all men. This phenomenon caused an uproar in France, people were shrouded in fear, and the number of people suffering from this disease suddenly increased, so in France at that time, this disease was regarded as an epidemic and contagious. As long as this kind of sick person is found, he will be put into an insane asylum for treatment. It has been more than twenty years since France came out of the haze of this disease.

Now, people are beginning to realize that tourism is only the yearning and pursuit of freedom, and it is only a way for people to get rid of their physical and mental fatigue, and it is not serious enough to be called a disease. Now we call such people tourists.