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2.69 MB

Extraction Summary

4
People
3
Organizations
9
Locations
3
Events
2
Relationships
5
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book excerpt / evidence document (house oversight committee)
File Size: 2.69 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a book (likely 'The 4-Hour Workweek' by Tim Ferriss) included in a House Oversight document production. It discusses strategies for traveling with children, overcoming fear of foreign travel (referencing post-9/11 perceptions of New York), and tips for purchasing airfare. While the document bears a House Oversight footer, the content itself is lifestyle advice regarding travel and family management.

People (4)

Name Role Context
Robin Malinsky-Rummell Traveler/Parent
Spent a year traveling through South America with family; provides advice on traveling with children.
Robin's Husband Family member
Traveled with Robin.
Robin's Son Child
Seven-year-old traveled with parents.
Narrator/Author Author
Discusses personal travel experiences, buying tickets at JFK, and writing the book (likely Tim Ferriss based on conte...

Organizations (3)

Name Type Context
AMEX
Credit card company where the narrator filed a complaint.
Virgin Atlantic
Airline used by the narrator to fly to London for $300.
1-800-FLY-EUROPE
Service called by the narrator to book a flight.

Timeline (3 events)

2001
Argentina devaluation riots.
Argentina
N/A
Trip through South America.
South America
N/A
Narrator's attempt to fly standby to Europe.
JFK Airport
Narrator

Locations (9)

Location Context
Place where the subject was most afraid.
Travel destination.
Continent traveled by Robin Malinsky-Rummell.
Country Robin was warned not to visit.
Region where Robin had 'the time of her life'.
Robin's hometown; referenced by locals regarding 9/11 attacks.
Destination for a standby ticket.
JFK
Airport in New York.
Destination of the narrator's flight.

Relationships (2)

Robin Malinsky-Rummell Spouse Husband
traveling through South America with her husband
Robin Malinsky-Rummell Parent/Child Son
traveling through South America with her... seven-year-old son

Key Quotes (5)

"It was perception, not reality."
Source
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Quote #1
"I saw those buildings blow up on TV! I would never go to such a dangerous place!"
Source
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Quote #2
"Don't assume that places abroad are more dangerous than your hometown."
Source
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Quote #3
"This is not a book on budget travel."
Source
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Quote #4
"This often requires more self-control on the part of the parents than the children."
Source
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Quote #5

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,418 characters)

begets success.
She was most afraid in Singapore, and in retrospect, it was where she had the least reason to be worried (she took her kids to South Africa, among other places). She was scared because it was the first stop and she was unaccustomed to traveling with her kids. It was perception, not reality.
Robin Malinsky-Rummell, who spent a year traveling through South America with her husband and seven-year-old son, was warned by friends and family not to visit Argentina after their devaluation riots in 2001. She did her homework, decided that the fear was unfounded, and proceeded to have the time of her life in Patagonia. When she told locals that she was originally from New York, their eyes widened and jaws dropped: "I saw those buildings blow up on TV! I would never go to such a dangerous place!" Don't assume that places abroad are more dangerous than your hometown. Most aren't.
Robin is convinced, as are other NR parents, that people use children as an excuse to stay in their comfort zones. It's an easy excuse not to do something adventurous. How to overcome the fear? Robin recommends two things:
1. Before embarking on a long international trip with your children for the first time, take a trial run for a few weeks.
2. For each stop, arrange a week of language classes that begin upon arrival and take advantage of transportation from the airport if available. The school staff will often handle apartment rentals for you, and you will be able to make friends and learn the area before setting off on your own.
But what if your concern isn't so much losing your children but losing your mind because of your children?
Several families interviewed for this book recommended the oldest persuasive tool known to man: bribery. Each child is given some amount of virtual cash, 25-50 cents, for each hour of good behavior. The same amount is subtracted from their accounts for breaking the rules. All purchases for fun—whether souvenirs, ice cream, or otherwise—come out of their own individual accounts. No balance, no goodies. This often requires more self-control on the part of the parents than the children.
How to Get Airfare at 50–80% Off
This is not a book on budget travel. Most of the cost-cutting recommendations found in such guides are designed with the binge traveler in mind. For someone embarking on a mini-retirement, an extra $150 for hassle-free airfare amortized over two months is a better deal than 20 hours of manipulating frequent-flier points on an unknown airline or chasing questionable deals.
Following two weeks of research, I once bought a one-way standby ticket to Europe for $120. I arrived at JFK brimming with enthusiasm and confidence—look at all these schmucks paying retail!—and 90% of the "participating" airlines refused my ticket. Those that didn't were booked for weeks solid. I ended up staying in a hotel for two nights for a $300 tab, filing a complaint with AMEX, and eventually calling 1-800-FLY-EUROPE from the JFK terminal in frustration. I bought a round-trip ticket to London on Virgin Atlantic for $300 and left an hour later. The same ticket cost more than $700 a week earlier.
After 25 countries, I've found a few simple strategies that get you 90% of the possible savings without wasting time or producing migraines.
1. Use credit cards with reward points for large muse-related advertising and manufacturing expenses.
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