>>2818721
Pragmatism before dogmatism. Compromise with the system is more sensible than combat against it, yet compromise doesn't mean complete surrender. Of course you have to knuckle down and do as you're told to get paid at work, or to cross an ocean in an airplane. But the moment you quit your job and then step off the plane, the whole ordeal is forgotten and you set out doing what you really wanted to do with your life. You want to insist that a rebel can never compromise with the system, but that is patently false. Rebels compromise with the systems they are rebelling against all the time; they cede some of their autonomy in exchange for certain privileges.
>the way it's supposed to be enjoyed
There is no "supposed to". My route will intersect with the beaten path of the toorist herds from time to time, but it always diverges again. Autonomous movement is the ultimate expression of freedom and singularity. Peer pressure has no effect on me; it never has and never will, because I refuse to acknowledge any other human as a peer.
>muh miserable
Did you really fall for the delusion that a person must be 100% positive and never express a negative emotion about anything? That naive mindset is how you get taken for a fool and make terrible blunders. If you're young, it's excusable, because being young and bold and foolish is an essential part of the maturing process. You learn painful lessons from your mistakes and become a harder, wiser man who trusts his instinctive aversion / contempt reactions to steer him clear of potential threats to his mind, body or wallet.
>>2818623
Do the math. 1.6 hours of labor per travel day x 266 travel days = 425 hours of labor for this trip.