Anna Hart shares her tips on how to choose a travel companion.
Of the scraps of well-worn advice that adults bestow upon students, "Make friends out of flatmates, not flatmates out of friends" haunts me because of its pertinence to travel. What we look for in a travel companion differs hugely from what we look for in a friend.
Think of yourself as a film director casting two wildly different parts. That wickedly sarcastic, downbeat friend who makes you laugh like nobody else might be the one you position yourself next to in the pub, but in the chaos of a Bangkok bus station, you'll wonder what possessed you to team up with such a glum, useless companion.
And that soft-hearted best friend you call when you want a 90-minute analysis of a single text message from a guy on Tinder? She'll end up driving you bananas as you tour the temples of Angkor Wat with her and her bundle of neuroses. Travelling is stressful and exhausting, and the dream travel companion combines an upbeat outlook, practical mindset and calm exterior.
Here are five questions I ask myself about any potential travel companion: