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I fondly remember the confusion I felt when I first met someone who wouldn't trade passports with me. I thought, “I've got more wealth, more freedom, more opportunity than you'll ever have — why wouldn't you want what I've got?” I assumed anyone with half a brain would aspire to the American Dream. But the vast majority of non-Americans don't. They have the Bulgarian Dream, or the Sri Lankan Dream, or the Moroccan Dream. Thanks to travel, this no longer surprises me. In fact, I celebrate it.

I was raised thinking the world is a pyramid with us on top and everybody else trying to get there. Well into my adulthood, I actually believed that if another country didn't understand that they should want to be like us, we had every right to go in and elect a government for them that did.

While I once unknowingly cheered on cultural imperialism, travel has taught me that one of the ugliest things one nation can do is write another nation's textbooks. Back in the Cold War, I had a Bulgarian friend who attended an English-language high school in Sofia. I read his Soviet-produced textbooks, which were more concerned about ideology than teaching. He learned about “economics” with no mention of Adam Smith. And I've seen what happens when the US funds the publishing of textbooks in places such as El Salvador and Nicaragua, with ideological strings attached. The economics of a banana republic are taught in a way that glorifies multinational corporation tactics and vilifies heroes of popular indigenous movements. I think most Americans would be appalled if we knew how many textbooks we're writing in the developing world.

On the road, you learn that ethnic underdogs everywhere are waging valiant but seemingly hopeless struggles. When assessing their tactics, I remind myself that every year on this planet many languages go extinct. That means that many heroic, irreplaceable little nations finally lose their struggle and die. There are no headlines — they just get weaker and weaker until that last person who speaks that language dies, and so does one little bit ethnic diversity on our planet.

I was raised so proud of Nathan Hale and Patrick Henry and Ethan Allen — patriotic heroes of America's Revolutionary War who wished they had more than one life to give for their country. Having traveled, I've learned that Patrick Henrys and Nathan Hales are a dime a dozen on this planet — each country has their own version.

I believe the US tends to underestimate the spine of other nations. It's comforting to think we can simply “shock-and-awe” our enemies into compliance. This is not only untrue…it's dangerous. Sure, we have the mightiest military in the world. But we don't have a monopoly on bravery or grit. In fact, in some ways, we might be less feisty than hardscrabble, emerging nations that feel they have to scratch and claw for their very survival.

We're comfortable, secure, beyond our revolutionary stage...and well into our Redcoat stage. Regardless of our strength and our righteousness, as long as we have a foreign policy stance that requires a military presence in 130 countries, we will be confronting determined adversaries. We must choose our battles carefully. Travel can help us understand that our potential enemies are not cut-and-run mercenaries, but people with spine motivated by passions and beliefs we didn't even know existed, much less understand.

Growing up in the US, I was told over and over how smart, generous, and free we were. Travel has taught me that the vast majority of humanity is raised with a different view of America. Travelers have a priceless opportunity to see our country through the eyes of other people. I still have the American Dream. But I also respect and celebrate other dreams.

About This Entry

You are reading "The American Dream, Bulgarian Dream, Sri Lankan Dream: Celebrate Them All", an entry posted on 05 June 2009 by Rick Steves.

8 replies to this entry. Add your comment below.


Comments  [ top ]

Thank you Rick for saying so clearly what I believe. So many of us have blindly accepted what we have learned in textbooks and what we are told about others coveting our way of life. I can't wait to travel on our first Rick Steve's tour this fall. Travel surely does enrich our lives. Hopefully our presence also adds to the richness of those we visit.

Posted by: Martha Moore - Jun 05, 2009 3:54 PM
Ric, I just got married and my wife is from Alexandria, Egypt. She came to the US to study. She was born in the US and is a US citizen but moved to Egypt when she was three years old. When she came back to the US two years ago, she had heard about all of the wealth, shopping, infrastructure, cleanliness, freedom, etc. Now that she's been here a few years, gone shopping, seen the mega/mini mansions, driven our 5 lane highways and overpasses, walked the city streets and witnessed the election of an african-american president, I thought she'd be hooked. After all, Egypt isn't the most prosperous country, there are no mega malls really, their roads and bridges are modest in comparison, their homes are typically much older and probably more in need of repair, their cities aren't the cleanest and they have a dictator they have to take care not to criticize. I thought she'd would never want to go back. Boy was I wrong. While she values her US passport and knows many Egyptians who are envious of her for it, she also realizes that her "life" in Alexandria was actually better for her. She often tells me that her family doesn't have alot of money, but as small business owners, they earn a decent living, while they don't have big shopping malls, the products there are of the highest quality, costing a fortune if sold in the US, the roads in Egypt are ok in comparison, her family home is paid off and was made to last 500 years, not 50 like ours, her city was founded in 332 BC and Atlanta was founded in 1822, so a little extra dirt is reasonable, and while I have a freely elected president, my 75 hour work week really gives me the freedom to sleep in on Saturday, go shopping on Sunday and quietly take our annual two to three weeks vacation. She's grateful for her US education and passport, but she can't help but prefer the pleasures of life on the Mediterranean, here "Egyptian dream" and her time to enjoy it! Oh, she says her library is better than mine too!

Posted by: Ptolemy - Jun 06, 2009 8:00 AM
Rick, thank you for encouraging us to travel and experience that other people, lands, and cultures indeed share a common thread with us. If we can't travel, we can still open our minds to that awareness by learning and listening to our other brothers and sisters in the world.

Posted by: Jeannette Palfy - Jun 06, 2009 11:45 AM
Speaking of Bulgarian and American Dreams, can we combine them? It would be my dream come true to find some good Bulgarian food in the US- I'm still looking... Now that they sell Leffe and Chimay in nearly every beer distributor in the US, I guess my Belgian-American dream has come to pass.

Posted by: Tom - Jun 07, 2009 2:13 PM
We have a military presence in 130 countries???

Posted by: Karen - Jun 08, 2009 4:05 AM
Misleading, Rick. First, we are in many of those countries because they have asked us to be. Second, impression can and often are wrong. In my extensive travling, which includes working side-by-side with those from other countries, it is very apparent that many if not most of the impressions non-U.S. citizens have of the U.S. is just as skewed as many Americans impressions of the rest of the world. Many Europeans get their impressions of the U.S. from the NYT on-line, which is about as accurate a protrayal as us getting our impresssion of Russia from Pravda

Posted by: Alan - Jun 08, 2009 7:04 AM
Honestly, I don't know that I want the American dream any more either. Our national debt is in the trillions. Our sulture is consumed with materialism, greed, and information. We've become more technology and media driven than we have family and people driven. We have everything now, access to everything, more obese and out of shape, with more money than ever. Yet are we happier? Divorce rates are going up as are depression, suicides, and broken lives and families. I say all this to agree with you that there are many countries that have slowed down and still value their paseos, time with families, and the little things. I have greatly appreciated some of the things I have seen from people in Europe. Bigger, better, and more doesn't make life more fulfilling. Travel has taught me that.

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