Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - After the epidemic, will you travel?

After the epidemic, will you travel?

Don’t do guides or go to popular cities, just sleep until you wake up naturally every day, go out slowly, eat and go shopping... Recently, on social platforms and video websites where young people gather, "showing off" The phenomenon of "tourism" is extremely popular. Will you travel after the epidemic? Someone said: Of course I will go! Some people also say, wait and see. Three years into the epidemic, necessary isolation measures and uncertain risks have prevented many young people from traveling. Since December, with the further optimization of epidemic prevention and control policies, people have less concerns about going out, and many people can’t wait to embark on a new journey. However, the current spread of the new coronavirus across the country has also put people’s worries on outings on travel. Causes a lot of trouble. Based on this, "fashion tourism" became popular. Avoid the crowds and go to an "unpopular" place to bask in the sun or look at the stream. When you are tired, you can lie down in a B&B to rest. When you are hungry, you can eat while walking. Although it is a "spare travel", at the end of the year and the beginning of the year, it is a soothing feeling to be able to put all kinds of things on hold and use this "spare" attitude to "empty" oneself and feel the natural and human fireworks. , a good choice for relieving fatigue. In addition, "display tourism" can also avoid the risk of new coronavirus infection caused by excessive crowd gathering to a certain extent and reduce people's worries about traveling. In fact, as early as the National Day holiday, "disguised tourism" has entered the public eye with the craze of "reverse tourism". "Tourism for shams" seems to be a negative and escapist mentality, but it reflects young people's resistance to "social fatigue" in the post-epidemic era. Han Bingzhe mentioned in the book "Burnout Society": Merit society and positive society have led to a mental state of "excessive fatigue and burnout". In fact, contemporary young people are a typical generation affected by this social characteristic. In a busy and fast-paced life, young people lack a window to relieve their feelings of powerlessness, fatigue and anxiety in work and life. Therefore, traveling during holidays has become one of the important forms of self-relaxation for young people. However, affected by the epidemic in the past three years, people have frequently faced uncertain situations such as silence, isolation, and work suspensions. Countless plans have been disrupted time and time again. Every change in epidemic information has more or less affected people's sensitive nerves. , people’s “social fatigue” has intensified. Therefore, faced with never-ending strategies, mixed information between true and false, and uncertainty that is difficult to deal with, young people are increasingly choosing to break away from and escape this "high-pressure state" by "making things worse" without plans or strategies. "Style travel" achieves the goal of putting one's own relaxation and comfort first, not spending too much energy on dealing with uncertainty, being at peace with the situation, moving with one's heart, and releasing suppressed emotions to combat one's "sense of fatigue" . From "socializing in a casual way" to "raising a baby in a casual style" to "loving in a casual style" to "traveling in a casual style", "showing off" seems to have become a classic philosophy of life for contemporary young people. The rise of "display tourism" heralds a new way for young people to fight against "social fatigue". It also reminds people to pay attention to negative emotions and mental fatigue in the post-epidemic era, and enhances young people's sense of gain and happiness.