Off The Grid: 5 Sensations Everyone Should Experience

Controlling a human body is an awesome experience.
Unlike other animals, we talk and live long after we stop reproducing. We wear dapper clothing, are remarkably brave and dexterous (which allows us to do amazing things like this), and we can even make fire. Like Remy says, “Humans don’t just survive—they discover, they create!”
In addition to the things we create, numerous sensations define our experience. Turning a pillow to the cold side, for instance. Quickly taking shelter to avoid pelting rain or peeling protective plastic off new electronics. But there are deeper, if not more universal, feelings than those. Excluding the obvious (yes, sex!), here are five physical sensations every human should experience, many of which are facilitated by travel.
Going Too Fast
Something frightful happens the moment we realize we’re traveling too fast for our own good. Usually the blood drains from our face. Maybe our palms sweat. When this happens, “Now I’ve done it” is often the first thing we say to ourselves. Obviously, this feeling happens at varying speeds. For my buddy John, it’s downhill skiing over 75 miles per hour on a snowboard. For my neighbor Roman, it’s needling 150 mph on his Honda CBR1100. Whatever your tolerance, there’s something invigorating about speeding.
Testing Your Might
Also called “setting a lofty goal and achieving it,” this euphoric feeling can only happen after overcoming a physically or mentally grueling challenge. And it usually requires some level of mastery, practice or conditioning. This could be finishing a marathon, backpacking Southeast Asia, or even turning in a really good workout. Or it could be overcoming a sketchy situation or communication breakdown while traveling abroad. Whatever it is, testing your might takes guts. Feeling those guts is ineffable.