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Top 25 Travel Tips for 2021

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Top 25 Travel Tips for 2021

Solo Travel (man)

After traveling the globe for the past 23 years, I've learned a lot about personal safety when traveling - especially solo. Here are my top 25 safety tips for avoiding trouble on your trip:

  1. Beware of scammers, pick-pockets and getting robbed.
  2. Write down emergency contacts with phone numbers and email addresses.
  3. Keep copies of your ID, credit cards and passport somewhere safe other than your wallet / purse.
  4. Check the State Department website before you travel internationally.
  5. Lock up your valuables.
  6. Get travel evacuation insurance.
  7. Be careful of not getting sick.
  8. Don't drink un-bottled water.
  9. Ask locals for advice.
  10. Register with your embassy.
  11. Email your itinerary to family or friends.
  12. Don't share too much personal information with strangers, including where you're staying or your itinerary.
  13. Don't do stupid things for photos.
  14. Splurge on extra safety
  15. Be aware of the cultural implecations of your clothing; try to blend in, not stand out.
  16. Stay "tethered" to your bag.
  17. Learn basic self-defense.
  18. Be situationally aware.
  19. Tell your bank and credit card companies where you'll be traveling.
  20. Hide emergency cash - you will almost always need it.
  21. Use ATM's wisely.
  22. Stop using your back pocket.
  23. Travel in numbers when possible.
  24. Pack a first aid kit.
  25. Trust your instincts!

Bonus for Women: The travel safety tips I've listed above are equally important for both men and women; I don't think the ability to travel safely has anything to do with gender.

Unfortunately, women are victims of violence everywhere, including here in North America. Women worried about beign assaulted or harrrasedmight prefer to visit a local street festival or market or nightclub in a grup rather than alone.

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Tips To Prevent Date Rape

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Tips To Prevent Date Rape

Rapists are not always strangers or anonymous attackers. When someone you know - a date, steady boyfriend, casual friend or partner - forces you to have sex, it's still rape.

The Bureau of Justice reports that seven out of 10 victims of sexual assault know their attacker.

Preventing Date Rape

There are several things you can do to protect yourself when you are dating:

  • Do not let alcohol or other drugs decrease or interfere with your ability to take care of yourself and make sensible decisions.

  • Do not accept beverages from someone you don't know and trust. Always watch your drink and never leave it unattended, at any time.

  • Follow your instincts. If a place or the way your date acts makes you nervous or uneasy, get out. If you need to call a friend to escort you home, don't hesitate to do so.

  • Check out a first date or a blind date with friends. Meet in and go to public places. Don't leave a social event with someone you have just met or don't know well.

  • Carry money for a phone call, taxi, ride sharing service or, better yet, take your own car.

  • Have a personal protection app like Virtual Halo on your smartphone so you can let your emergency contacts know if you’re in a dangerous position along with your exact location.

What to do when someone you care about has been sexually assaulted

When supporting a survivor of sexual violence, don't be judgmental or take control away from the victim. Try to communicate the following ideas to the victim which will greatly assist healing.

  • "I'm glad you're alive."

  • "It's not your fault."

  • "I'm sorry it happened."

  • "You did the best you could."

The following guidelines will also help to build a sense of trust and safety in the survivor.

  • Let the victim make his/her choices

  • Be a good listener.

  • Try to minimize the number of times the victim must tell what happened.

  • Always respect the survivor's confidentiality.

If you have been raped...

  • Get medical attention as soon as possible.

  • Do not shower, wash, douche or change your clothes. Valuable evidence could be destroyed.

  • Don't isolate yourself. Don't feel guilty and don't try to ignore it. Rape is a crime and should be reported.

  • Get counseling to deal with the emotional trauma.

  • Call your nearest rape crisis center.

If you think you've been assaulted while under the influence of a drug such as Rohyponol or GHB, seek help immediately, try not to urinate before providing urine samples, and, if possible, collect any glasses from which you drank.

What are "date rape" drugs?

Rohyponol ("roofies," "roopies," "circles," "the forget pills") works like a tranquilizer. It causes muscle weakness, fatigue, slurred speech, loss of motor coordination and judgment, and amnesia that lasts up to 24 hours. They look like an aspirin - small, white and round - and are colorless and flavorless. When dissolved in liquids, they can take effect in as little as 20 minutes.

GHB (also known as "liquid X," "salt water," or "scoop") also causes quick sedation. Its side effects include drowsiness, nausea, vomiting, headaches, dizziness, coma and death. The drugs most common form is a clear liquid, although it can also be a white, grainy powder.

Both of these powerful sedatives are illegal if possessed in New York State, especially if used in the commission of a sexual assault.

If you think you've been assaulted while under the influence of Rohypnol or GHB, seek help immediately. Try to save your urine in a clean glass container, as well as any glasses from which you may have drank.

Rohyponol and GHB are called the date rape drugs because when they are slipped into someone's drink, a sexual assault can take place without the victim being able to remember what happened.

The myths - The truth

  • "It can't happen to me." 
    Anyone can be sexually assaulted. Studies show that victims range in age from infancy to people in their nineties, and include people from every racial, economic, religious and social background. Each minute, 1.3 women are raped (National Victim Center and Center for Crime Victims Treatment and Research, 1992).

  • "She asked for it." 
    No one asks to be sexually assaulted. Nor does anyone's behavior justify or excuse the crime. People have a right to be safe from a sexual violation at any time and place, and under any circumstance. The offender, not the victim, is responsible for their actions.

  • "Most offenders are men who differ from the victim in race or ethnicity." 
    Over 90% of sexual assaults occur between people of the same racial or ethnic background.

  • "Most sexual assaults are committed by strangers at night in out-of-the-way places." 
    Familiar people and places are more dangerous. As many as 80% of sexual assaults are committed by someone the victim knows (FBI statistics). Over 50% of sexual assaults occur in the home and as many occur during the daytime as happen at night.

  • "Only women can be raped." 
    The FBI estimates that as many as one in ten men are victims of sexual assault. Other researchers estimate that between one in four and one in seven male children are sexually abused.

Resources:

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