i didn't want to just stick with the travel kind of thing, because not everybody can travel. I think it's really important in a quest to think about what you're excited about and also what you're skilled in. So she realized she had this culinary arts degree, and she decided, well, i can't visit every country in the world, but i'm going to make a meal from everycountry in the world. And so this became her quest. How every week sasha would make w a very elaborate meal from a different country or culture around the world. She ended up cultivating a community built around food and culture and just global awareness and peace. The challenge is that a quest
10 years ago, Chris Guillebeau mounted a quest to do the impossible, to visit every country in the world.
Along the way, he’s been hassled, deported, detained, harassed and threatened. But, far more often, he’s been welcomed and embraced, discovered the brilliance of a deeply connected world, built a global community of unconventional adventurers and, maybe more importantly, he experienced how an intensely challenging, years long quest changes you in ways he likely never saw coming.
Turning 35, Guillebeau completed that quest in April 2014 and writes about this astonishing journey in his new book, The Happiness of Pursuit.
In today’s conversation, we explore this remarkable person and journey. We dive into what led him to mount a quest to do what only a handful of people in the history of the planet have done. We explore the how his experiences earlier in life shaped him and how his decade long quest changed him in ways he never saw coming.
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