By Providence Health Care Staffing

January 17, 2024

2410 Views

ADVERTISEMENT

Hobbies to Do in Your Free Time While Traveling

Providence Health Care Staffing provided this article.

As a travel healthcare worker, having the ability to travel the world is one of, if not the biggest perk of traveling for a profession. However, depending on your work and rest schedule, you may find yourself a bit bored at times. Sometimes, being in a new place, away from friends and family, can urge you to fill your time with something a bit distracting or exciting – a new hobby, perhaps. Listed below are six ideas of hobbies you could pick up while on your traveling adventures.

Hobbies for travel healthcare professionals:

hobbies

Photography

Now I know what you’re thinking: you may not have an expensive camera and lighting – that’s okay! If you have a phone, you can capture your moments. When you start taking photos as a hobby, it allows you to see the beauty in little things. Like your brunch and iced coffee, a new street that you’re walking down for the first time in a city that you have never been to, a flower that is growing that doesn’t grow in your hometown. Interestingly enough, when you look back on the pictures you captured, you’ll remember memories that you normally wouldn’t have.

Collecting

Every spot that you go to has something unique about it that it is known for. For example, Georgia has the peach, and Idaho has the potato. Other countries even have these niches as well. To help you remember these interesting places that you go to, try collecting something from each destination. This could be a trinket, a stamp, a magnet, even a rock – anything that you want! Sometimes, just being on the hunt for these collectibles is most of the fun. You will be surprised at the things that you can acquire, and somewhere down the line, your family members may want certain ones.

Cooking

If you are in a new area, take time to figure out what the signature dish is there. Culturally, for years, locations have adapted different food types down the line. Expand your pallet by trying new meals wherever you are. I mean one of the best things about traveling is – the food! Try something that you can’t get at home. Then, make it a goal for yourself to make the dishes that you like so you can enjoy them even when you leave!

Dancing

Dancing, for many of us, is out of our comfort zones. Like many of the things listed, dancing styles also differ culturally.  For example, if you are in Alabama or Arkansas, you may want to try a real square dancing class. Or, if you are in Kentucky, you might try a clogging class. And, of course, it broadens even more when you go out of the country.

hobbies

Traveling can help you broaden your talents. How many of your friends can say they took a real Shag or Polka class? Plus, dancing is proven to be a stress and anxiety reliever as well as a great source of exercise. Even if you aren’t fond of dancing, you don’t have to be perfect at it. It is the mere idea of learning something, getting yourself out there, and moving your bones!

Learning a new language

Whether or not the location that you are in speaks a different language than yours, learning another language can be beneficial to you. Not only is it a great expansion of your mind, but it can connect you to others and their cultures. Apps like Duolingo, Babbel, and Rosetta Stone are features that you can download straight to your phone and allow you to practice linguistics anywhere you are. Learning a new language can open new opportunities for you as well. For instance, you could be an interpreter for spoken languages or even American Sign Language. Overall, learning a new language is beneficial no matter what!

Reading

Reading is a piece of locational art. It’s a physical piece of time-stamped cultural history. I suggest learning about what kind of books and articles stimulate you and making yourself a “TBR” list, which means “To Be Read”. This would be a list of books that you would like to make a goal to read, it could be made on preference, location, history, and so on. Reading is a great escape, and a mind cleanse from reality while you are on assignment. Expand your mind!

Learning and trying new things is one of the most exciting things in life! You work hard as a travel healthcare worker, it is important to find little pieces of pleasure where you can. That could be any hobby, even hobbies not listed here. Remember to take time for yourself and to find new things around you wherever you go, happy hobby-ing!

We hope you found this article on hobbies to do in your free time while traveling helpful. Have you picked up any hobbies while on your travel healthcare adventures? Comment some of your favorite hobbies below.

Our job board is a great place to search for your next travel nurse assignment. We have you covered with our housing page if housing is an issue. You can search for what you are looking for.

If you are a new travel nurse or looking into becoming a travel nurse:

Travel Nurse Guide: Step-by-Step (now offered in a PDF Downloadable version!)

By Andrew Ferguson

February 10, 2018

7954 Views

ADVERTISEMENT

Adventures in Travel Nursing

 I like to quote famous people in my writings. For this article, I’d like to cite a famous author, Hunter S Thompson, who once said, “Buy the ticket, take the ride”. Which, if you think about it, is exactly what travel nurses do. They take the chance of adventures that a lot of people can’t bring themselves to take. The rewards are off the hook, but even so, it takes some bravery, and a lot of gumption to step into the arena.

An assignment can fly by quickly, or it can seem like a lifetime. This can depend on how you feel about your latest job, but a lot of it has to do with how much you like the new town you find yourself calling home. So, therein lies the rub.

How do you handle a dud assignment, when all you want is to earn a living and get your adventures on?

If it’s a situation at work, that’s probably a case for you and your recruiter to handle, or you need advice from a fellow travel nurse. I’ve seen my wife come home in tears, so I know how bad things can get, but I’m going to stick to my area of expertise for this article, and stay out of the hallowed halls of the hospital.

So, the town your working in rolls up its sidewalks at 7:30, and everyone’s over sixty, or under twenty, depending on which demographic you choose to hang with (or in this case, not hang with). It can be rough when you don’t enjoy your temporary hometown. You can’t enjoy your off days, it makes it hard to get anything done, and you feel like you made a huge mistake.

We are a travel nurse family, and that can be a different animal then the single travel nurse, or a family without young children, but some of the following suggestions can be used by anybody that finds themselves in this situation.

1.) Never underestimate how much time you can kill improving yourself.

I’m not implying anyone reading this article needs an exceptional amount of betterment, but I also don’t think anyone doing this kind of work is afraid of a little personal growth. As a matter of fact, I’d say that it’s one of the reasons most of you are doing it. Take advantage of a bad situation, by reading, listening to lectures, or working on a new skill.

2.) You know you’ve always wanted to learn a new language.

You’re a traveler after all. Maybe you’ve always been interested in taking your nursing career in a new direction or starting an exercise program. You could try meditation, take up yoga, or learn to bake. A boring town gives you just the excuse you’ve been waiting for to investigate these opportunities. I would encourage anyone who is, or is with a travel nurse, to start taking pictures and writing down all the cool stuff you’ve seen and done. Sites like the Gypsy Nurse are always looking for new contributors, and if you’ve ever read anything by me, you know they’ll publish anybody!

3.) Remember too, that anonymity is your friend on the road.

Sometimes we’re held back from trying something new or taking adventures by how we think our friends, or family will react to it. Nobody likes feeling judged or being embarrassed, but it helps when the people doing the judging are ones you’re likely to never see again. Try it, and if you succeed, brag. If you fail, learn from it, and move on. Be fearless, and you’ll never be bored.