How to waste money before the trip even starts

May 7, 2010

Have you ever wasted money when traveling, and just kicked yourself for it? Anyone who has traveled extensively, no matter how careful they are, has spent some serious cash when it wasn’t even warranted.

For budget travelers, it’s one of the most annoying and even devastating things that can happen.

There’s something worse, though: wasting a bunch of money before the trip even begins.

I've never been so excited to see my passport. My dad looks excited too.

I’ve never been so excited to see my passport. My dad looks excited too.

I did that before the two-week trip to Mexico that Masayo and I have been planning. This tragic tale proves that you can be too relaxed in your approach to travel. I hope you are more careful and aware than I was!

The night before we were to fly out from Florida, where we were visiting my dad, I got my papers in order and realized that I’d left my passport back in Georgia.

You can’t fly internationally without a passport.

Masayo, enjoying an extra day at the beach.

Masayo, enjoying an extra day at the beach.

Some frantic phone calls and emails were exchanged (curse Continental Airlines’ website and unhelpful help line), and I found that I was going to have to pay $150 extra per seat to change our tickets. Plus I’d have to pay my mother to overnight my passport here, immediately. Plus our hotel room in Mexico City, booked through Agoda.com, is non-refundable so I have to pay it all. Plus Agoda is taking an extra $15 just for the fun of it.

Plus, our trip will be two days shorter, and our ride to the airport won’t be available on our new departure day so we have to pay for a shuttle service.

Me wearing the sand dunce cap, waiting for the trip to start again.

Me wearing the sand dunce cap, waiting for the trip to start again.

All told, I am paying over $400 extra, all because I didn’t bother to make sure I had my passport until a few hours before the flight.

Stressful blood sugar

Amid all this confusion I was an hour late taking my nightly Lantus shot and ended up high. Despite a Novolog injection to bring me down, I was still 212 the next morning. That’s what emotional stress can do to BG.

Be careful and try to take things in stride: use diabetes to adopt a stress-free attitude out of necessity.

Everyone else in this tale came through for me, fortunately: my mom sent the passport to me through Federal Express; they delivered it very quickly, and everything was finally ready to go.

There’s something about having very little money that seems to spread. When you’re of lean means, your mind can get foggy and you make dumb mistakes that end up costing you more.

I guess things could be worse.

An extra day here. I guess things could be worse.

But why not try to make a positive out of a negative? Things could always be worse, and I mean that in an optimistic, not pessimistic way. We’ll have two fewer days in Mexico, but that’s two more days hanging out on the beach in Sarasota. I’ll miss the money, but at least the trip isn’t totally canceled.

How have you spent unnecessary money for traveling? How did you feel about it? I hope time removed the sting for you.

Thanks for reading. Suggested:

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Support independent travel content

You can support my work via Patreon. Get early links to new videos, shout-outs in my videos, and other perks for as little as $1/month.

Your support helps me make more videos and bring you travels from interesting and lesser-known places. Join us! See details, perks, and support tiers at patreon.com/t1dwanderer. Thanks!