Esra UÄźurlu is a traveler who has been to 48 countries so far. Contrary to what we are used to, she started traveling not from easy-to-travel European countries, but directly from difficult geographies. Indeed, she has neither visited a European country nor the USA. Because her logic cannot accept spending money and time to get a visa. Countries where life is standard and easy to visit do not interest her either.

I realized how small the world really is when I met traveler Esra Uğurlu five years ago. In 2019, when I was following many travelers, I started to follow Esra. Her posts were very intriguing for me because at that time she was staying in Peru, in a village at the bottom of the Amazon Forest. With her very limited internet, she was reporting from a world we don’t even see in movies.

At the same time, Umut Çor, a friend of mine from university, was on his way to do a real-world tour and coincidentally, she was also a guest of the villagers in a village in the Amazon Forest at the same time. When I realized this, I was so excited that I couldn’t stop myself and asked Esra, whom I didn’t know at all, “Do you know there is another Turk nearby?” and helped bring the two of them together. Esra and Umut continued their journey together for a while and then went their separate ways.

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After this interesting meeting five years ago, I removed many of the travelers I followed from my list for many reasons of my own. However, I never gave up on Esra and started to look forward to each of her travels as if I was going to do it myself. Thanks to her, whenever I asked a question or made a comment about her travels, she never left any of them unanswered. After a while, I started to feel like she was an old friend I hadn’t seen in years, even though we had never seen each other face to face or even spoken on the phone.

Since I decided to interview Esra, I have been thinking about why I am addicted to her travels and most importantly why I feel so close to her and I think I finally found the reason. I think the reason was the sub-messages in Esra’s posts showing that you don’t have to be a crazy, rootless person to travel the world.

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For example, let me put it this way: On the one hand, she is determined enough to reach her goal despite being hurt and very cold during the Everest climb, even though her traveling companions had already given up and turned back, she is bold enough to stay in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, share a table with the sea gypsies of Thailand for days, or be a guest in a house made of mud in Africa. But on the other hand, she is also a person who cannot give up his roots, like us, who prepare meals for her father at home and store them in the freezer before embarking on a long journey and set off to return to Turkey, which she calls “home” every time.