In a world obsessed with country counting and bucket list achievements, I took a different path. For the past five years, I’ve called Danang, Vietnam my home base – a decision that has fundamentally transformed not just my travels, but my understanding of what travel truly means.
When people hear I run a travel blog, they often ask how many countries I’ve visited this year. Their expressions shift to confusion when I tell them I’ve primarily been in one place. “But aren’t you a traveler?” they ask. It’s a question I’ve asked myself many times, and the answer has evolved into something far more nuanced than a simple yes or no.
Am I Still a Traveler?
There’s a certain identity crisis that comes with slow travel. When you stay in one location for years, the lines between traveler, expat, and local begin to blur. I’m certainly not a tourist anymore, but I’ll never truly be Vietnamese either. I exist in this fascinating in-between space – knowledgeable enough about Danang to guide newcomers through its hidden corners, yet still discovering new aspects of the culture that surprise me.
Perhaps the labels don’t matter. What matters is the continuous curiosity, the openness to experience, and the willingness to engage deeply with a place. By these measures, I feel more like a traveler now than when I was hopping between countries every few weeks.
Watching a City Transform
One of the most remarkable aspects of staying in Danang long-term has been witnessing its dramatic evolution. When I first arrived five years ago, the city was already changing, but the pace of development since then has been breathtaking.
I’ve watched as sleepy beachfront areas transformed into bustling tourist zones. I’ve seen local food spots close and trendy cafés open in their place. I’ve observed the changing dynamics as international influence has grown – for better and worse. Most travelers see only a snapshot of a destination, but I’ve been privileged to watch the timelapse.
This long-term perspective has given me insights no guidebook could provide. I understand not just what Danang is, but what it was and what it’s becoming. There’s something profoundly satisfying about having this temporal context, about recognizing the ghosts of what used to be alongside the present reality.
Deep Cultural Understanding
When you first arrive in a new country, everything feels exotic and new. Cultural differences are noticed but often not truly understood. It’s only through extended immersion that the deeper layers reveal themselves.
After five years in Vietnam, I’ve moved beyond surface-level cultural observations. I understand not just the what of cultural practices, but often the why. I’ve learned to recognize regional differences, generational divides, and class distinctions that would have been invisible to me as a short-term visitor.
This deeper understanding hasn’t always been comfortable. I’ve had to confront my own cultural biases and recognize the limitations of my perspective. I’ve made embarrassing mistakes and had humbling realizations. But each of these experiences has enriched my connection to this place in ways that brief visits never could.
Genuine Local Friendships
Perhaps the greatest gift of slow travel has been the opportunity to form authentic relationships with locals. Not the transactional interactions of tourism, but real friendships built on shared experiences and mutual understanding.
These connections have transformed my experience of Danang. Through local friends, I’ve been invited to family celebrations, learned to cook traditional dishes properly, and gained access to places and experiences I would never have found on my own. I’ve celebrated with them during weddings and festivals, and mourned with them during losses.
These relationships have required real investment – learning enough Vietnamese to have meaningful conversations, showing up consistently, and demonstrating genuine interest in their lives beyond what they could show me about their country. But the rewards have been immeasurable.
The Comfort of Routine in Foreign Places
There’s something magical about having your regular places in a foreign city. The coffee shop where they start preparing your usual order when you walk in the door. The market vendor who saves the best produce for you because you’re a loyal customer. The security guard who gives you a friendly nod as you pass by each morning.
These small routines might seem mundane, but they provide a sense of belonging that constantly-moving travelers rarely experience. There’s a richness in these everyday interactions that can be just as rewarding as checking off famous landmarks.
The Economic Advantages
Let’s be practical for a moment – slow travel can be significantly more economical than constant movement. Long-term accommodations are cheaper than hotels or short-term rentals. You learn where locals shop for the best prices. You’re not paying for transportation between destinations every few days.
Danang offers an exceptional quality of life at a fraction of what I’d pay in the U.S. or even in many other parts of Southeast Asia. This affordability has allowed me to focus on building projects and experiences rather than constantly worrying about depleting my savings.
When a Place Checks All the Boxes
Vietnam, and specifically Danang, simply ticks all the boxes for what I need right now. Affordability, amazing food, beautiful beaches, friendly people, decent infrastructure, and enough of an expat community to have social connections while still being immersed in Vietnamese culture.
When you find a place that satisfies so many criteria, there’s a certain wisdom in staying put. Not permanently, perhaps, but long enough to truly experience it. I’ve come to believe that it’s better to know one place deeply than many places superficially.
The Challenges of Staying Put
Despite the many benefits, this lifestyle comes with significant challenges. The most persistent is the constant questioning of whether I’m missing out. With each stunning Instagram post from a friend in Bali or Portugal, there’s a twinge of travel hunger, a fear that I’m somehow failing at being a “real traveler” by staying in one place.
There are practical challenges too. Visa situations require careful navigation. Financial sustainability demands creativity and hustle. Distance from family means missing important moments back home.
Perhaps the most profound challenge is the question of belonging. I don’t fully belong in the U.S. anymore – each visit home makes that clearer as I feel increasingly like a visitor in my own country. Yet I’ll never truly be Vietnamese either. I exist in this liminal space, neither fully here nor there.
Finding Balance
The solution I’ve found is not to abandon slow travel, but to complement it with occasional journeys. Using Danang as my base allows me to take shorter trips to neighboring countries or other parts of Vietnam, then return to my established home. This provides the excitement of new discoveries while maintaining the depth of my connection here.
I’ve also learned to find the travel experiences within the familiar. Even after five years, there are streets in Danang I haven’t explored, dishes I haven’t tried, and cultural nuances I’m still discovering. By maintaining my curiosity, I can experience the thrill of travel without changing my physical location.
A Different Measure of Travel Success
If I’ve learned anything from my time in Danang, it’s that the value of travel isn’t measured in countries visited or landmarks photographed. It’s measured in connections made, in understanding gained, in perspectives shifted.
By these measures, staying in one place has made me a more successful traveler than I ever was when moving constantly. I’ve traded breadth for depth, and found it to be a worthwhile exchange.
So am I still a traveler? Yes, but perhaps not in the conventional sense. I’m a deep traveler, a slow traveler, someone who values knowing one place fully over knowing many places partially. And that’s a journey that’s nowhere near complete.
Have you ever tried slow travel? How has staying longer in one place changed your perspective? Share your experiences in the comments below.
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