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Revenge Travel?

“Revenge is like a rolling stone, which, when a man hath forced up a hill, will return upon him with a greater violence, and break those bones whose sinews gave it motion.” ~ Jeremy Taylor

I cringe when I hear the term “revenge travel.” The phrase seems wrong on so many levels. Primarily, it runs counter to the reason I travel…it seems imbued with a bit too much anger. With millions of passengers striking out on “revenge travel,” a certain amount of mayhem seems inevitable.

All of this leads me to the near heretical question: “Should a travel consultant be recommending travel right now?” Is the best advice for many of your clients to delay travel, for now, to wait until the Revenge Purge ends or at least subsides?

Naturally, the best recommendation depends on the client. Some will want to exact their revenge now, and waiting will diminish the sense of fulfillment that revenge apparently delivers. For some, however, travel now will run counter to their expectations. The trip they have waited for two years to happen will stare back at them from the abyss of this summer’s chaos and will eventually haunt their travel advisors’ dreams.

In any event, no client should leave home without being fully informed of what to expect. We are, after all, travel advisors, and telling the full tale is part of the job. In all fairness, I have heard people tell of recent trips with no problems, of luggage arriving when and where it should, of no delays, cancelations, or hassles. I would never discourage travel, but I would want to fully inform my client of the possibilities. I would want to make all of the wise recommendations for stacking the odds in their favor: early flights, direct flights, extra connection time, carry-on of essentials, luggage tracker tags, travel insurance, Plan B, Plan C, etc.

And to those clients of real sensitivity to disruption, I would recommend alternatives to the most traveled destinations, to alternative locations, and even then with all of the necessary precautions above.

To quote The Godfather’s Hyman Roth, “This is the business we have chosen.”

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